Product Blending
Product Blending
Product Blending
Product blending results in increase in operating flexibility and profits for the
refiner.
Aside from the lubricating oil, the major refinery products produced by blending are
gasolines, jet fuels, heating oils, and diesel fuels.
Most of the refineries use computer controlled in-line blending for blending
gasolines and other high-volume products.
To ensure the blended streams meet the desired specifications, stream analyzers
such as boiling point, specific gravity, RVP, RON, MON are installed to provide feed
back control of additives and blending streams.
Computer based optimization programs provide the optimum blend to
minimize the cost and maximize profit. The methodologies in optimization
technique are linear and geometric approaches.
The allowable blending stocks are those with boiling ranges within the
product specifications and the control criteria are to meet Reid vapor
pressure (RVP) and octane requirements.
Reid Vapor Pressure
The amount of n-butane required to give the needed RVP is calculated by:
Vapor pressure blending indices (VPBI) have been compiled as a function of the RVP of the
blending streams and are given
Crude Distillation
The crude towers are the first major processing units in the
petroleum refinery.
These towers are used to separate the crude oils by distillation into
fractions according to boiling point.
Each of the processing units will have feed stocks that meet their
particular specifications.
Higher efficiencies and lower costs are achieved if the crude oil
separation is done in two steps:
Fractionating the total crude oil at essentially atmospheric
pressure
Feeding the high boiling bottoms fraction from the
atmospheric unit to the vacuum unit operated under high
vacuum.
Vacuum tower is employed to separate the heavier portion of the crude
oil into fractions.
Now a days all the crude oils are processing for desalting to avoid
equipment fouling, corrosion and for longer catalyst life.
Desalting Crude oils
Basic principle: Wash the salt from the crude oil with water.
Difficulties:
Efficient and economical water / oil mixing
Water wetting of suspended solids
Separation of wash water from oil