US2843530A - Residuum conversion process - Google Patents

Residuum conversion process Download PDF

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US2843530A
US2843530A US451254A US45125454A US2843530A US 2843530 A US2843530 A US 2843530A US 451254 A US451254 A US 451254A US 45125454 A US45125454 A US 45125454A US 2843530 A US2843530 A US 2843530A
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diluent
hydrogen
cracking
hydrogen donor
donor diluent
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Jr Arthur W Langer
Graham G Wanless
Carl S Carlson
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ExxonMobil Technology and Engineering Co
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Exxon Research and Engineering Co
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10GCRACKING HYDROCARBON OILS; PRODUCTION OF LIQUID HYDROCARBON MIXTURES, e.g. BY DESTRUCTIVE HYDROGENATION, OLIGOMERISATION, POLYMERISATION; RECOVERY OF HYDROCARBON OILS FROM OIL-SHALE, OIL-SAND, OR GASES; REFINING MIXTURES MAINLY CONSISTING OF HYDROCARBONS; REFORMING OF NAPHTHA; MINERAL WAXES
    • C10G47/00Cracking of hydrocarbon oils, in the presence of hydrogen or hydrogen- generating compounds, to obtain lower boiling fractions
    • C10G47/32Cracking of hydrocarbon oils, in the presence of hydrogen or hydrogen- generating compounds, to obtain lower boiling fractions in the presence of hydrogen-generating compounds
    • C10G47/34Organic compounds, e.g. hydrogenated hydrocarbons

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  • This invention pertains to the converting of hydrocarbon oils by hydrogenolysis. More particularly it is concerned with the upgrading of petroleum oils, particularly heavy high boiling oils such as vacuum residua by thermal cracking of the oil in the presence of a hydrogen donor diluent.
  • low value hydrogen deficient oils having coke forming propensities during thermal cracking are converted to more volatile products such as light distillates for use as motor fuels and gas oils suitable as feed stocks for catalytic cracking processes.
  • a process termed hydrogen donor diluent cracking has recently been proposed.
  • a heavy, low value oil is upgraded by admixing it with a hydrogen donor diluent material, aromatic-naphthenic in nature, and thermally cracking the mixture as' in a thermal cracking coil.
  • the hydrogen donor diluent is a polycyclic condensed ring aromatic or an aromaticnaphthenic material that has been especially prepared by partial hydrogenation from selected normally surplusage, refinery streams such as catalytic cycle stocks, thermal tars, etc.
  • the hydrogen donor diluent used has the ability to take up hydrogen in the hydrogenation zone and readily release it to hydrogen deficient oil in a thermal cracking zone.
  • a hydrogen donor diluent is admixed with a hydrogen deficient oil and the resulting mixture is subjected to liquid phase thermal cracking.
  • the thermal cracking the conversion products are continuously removed overhead as vapors.
  • This practice greatly increases the ratio of hydrogen donor diluent to unconverted material in the liquid phase. Consequently, coke deposition is greatly minimized or eliminated and a much more eificient use is made of the hydrogen donor diluent than has been made in previously proice posed processes.
  • the spent hydrogen donor diluent and the conversion products, along with unconverted material have been removed from the reactor as an equilibrium mixture of liquid and gases.
  • the withdrawn materials were then separated to obtain the spent hydrogen donor diluent which was partially hydrogenated and recycled, and the unconverted refractory constituents of the feed, which were also recycled to obtain high conversions.
  • the hydrogen donor diluent has been used inefficiently because of its low concentration and variations in product selectivities were dificult to obtain.
  • the spent hydrogen donor diluent is withdrawn from the reactor as a liquid and is preferably separated in a common separation system, e. g., a fractionator, with the conversion products to obtain the spent diluent for hydrogenation.
  • a common separation system e. g., a fractionator
  • the spent diluent or a portion thereof may also be removed overhead from the reactor as a vapor.
  • Another alternative is to separate the spent diluent, when it is withdrawn as a liquid, from the unconverted bottoms in a separate separation system.
  • a third alternative is that when the spent diluent is removed as a vapor from the reactor, rather than separately hydrogenating the diluent, the total overhead along with the diluent may be partially hydrogenated before separation, thereby regenerating the hydrogen donor diluent.
  • Figure I diagrammatically depicts a preferred embodiment of this invention adapted to the conversion of a petroleum residuum.
  • FIG II portrays the modification of the process of this invention in which the thermal cracking reactor and the product separation system are integral.
  • Charging stocks for the present invention are preferably hydrogen deficient petroleum derived oils, such as crude oils, distillate and residual fractions therefrom or mixtures thereof. Particularly preferred charging stocks are heavy residual oils characterized by API gravities of 5 to 20, Conradson carbons of 5 to 50 wt. per-cent, and initial boiling points above 850 to 1100 F. This invention is, however, capable of enjoying broader applications. Thus, coal tars, shale oils, tars, asphalts, etc. may also be processed by the present invention. It has also been proposed to utilize the HDDC process to extract and concurrently convert oils from shales and sands. As will hereinafter appear, the present invention also has utility in processing such hydrocarbonaceous materials.
  • the prime consideration for the selection of a hydrogen donor diluent is that the diluent should be composed of predominate proportions of aromatic-naphthenic molecules or condensed ring structures having the ability to take up hydrogen in a hydrogenation zone and release it in a thermal cracking Zone.
  • condensed ring structures are relatively refractory and will pass through the thermal cracking zone relatively unaltered.
  • the condensed ring structures are susceptible to being recovered from the reaction mixture and being regenerated by partial hydrogenation.
  • a major proportion of the donor diluent material can be continuously reused, there will normally be some loss of the donor diluent and this loss is made up from extraneous sources.
  • a charging stock for example, a vacuum residuum
  • the blend is passed to a furnace 4 by line 1.
  • the blend is heated to a suitable thermal cracking temperature, at a pressure suffieient to maintain substantially liquid phase conditions.
  • the heated material is then passed by line 5 to a reactor 6.
  • Each of the streams can, of course, be heated separately and passed to the reactor, if it be desired.
  • Conversion products boiling below the initial boiling point of the diluent are removed continuously from the vapor phase of the reactor and sent to a fractionator 8 by line 7.
  • a liquid phase bleed is taken from the bottom of the reactor comprising diluent, products boiling above the initial boiling point of the diluent, and some unconverted refractory constituents of the feed.
  • the liquid phase bleed is introduced into the fractionator 8 by line 9 below the point at which the highest boiling distillate is removed as a side stream.
  • the amount of diluent bled and the amount of diluent makeup depend upon many factors, some of which are the diluent boiling range, the width of the diluent boiling range, the amount of hydrogen carried by the diluent, the residuum to diluent ratio, the cracking temperature, and the aromaticity of the residuum.
  • the spent diluent and the makeup thermal tar is hydrogenated in hydrogenator 18, using conventional methods and using preferably a sulfur insensitive catalyst such as nickel tungsten sulfide, cobalt molybdate, molybdenum sulfide, etc.
  • the hydrogenation conditions are so adjusted that the diluent is only partially hydrogenated. It has been found that substantially complete hydrogenation destroys the effectiveness of the donor diluent.
  • Sutficient hydrogen should be added to the diluent to make it serve effectively as a hydrogen donor but not to convert it substantially to naphthenes.
  • Hydrogen is supplied to the hydrogenator by line 19 and can originate from any convenient source. A particularly suitable source is the hydrogen from hydroforming operations.
  • Spent gas is removed from the hydrogenator by line 20, a portion of which may be recycled by line 21.
  • the partially hydrogenated donor diluent is recycled by line 2 to the furnace.
  • a bleed is provided, by line 15, for the bottoms to prevent build-up of ash contaminants in the system.
  • the amount of the bleed may be as high as 20%, based on fresh feed, but is generally about 1 to 5%.
  • the liquid level in the reactor is maintained at 50 to of the reactor capacity by adjusting pressure, temperature, feed rate, diluent boiling range and the amount of bleed from the liquid phase. Since the diluent cracks to a much smaller extent than the residuum, it is apparent that there is a higher diluent to residuum ratio in the liquid phase of the reactor than in the feed. This results in the most efiicient utilization of the diluent since it is present in high concentration where it is most needed, that is, for the liquid phase cracking of the most refractory components of the residuum needing a hydrogen donor diluent to prevent coking.
  • Table I The range of operating conditions pertinent to this invention are summarized in Table I.
  • Table '1 also presents a specific example.
  • Example 1 1,000 F.+ conversion is defined as: vol. percent fresh feed minus v01. percent of products boiling above 1,000 F.
  • Table II presents an example of the results obtainable by the process of this invention when the process is operated in accordance with the example in Table I, using the particular feed stock indicated.
  • the present process may be used for the mild thermal treatment of petroleum oils in the nature of visbreaking, it is more particularly suited to the substantially complete conversion of heavy oils.
  • the residual oil can be treated at mild conversions, e. g., 50 to 80% 1000 F. conversions, using a high bottoms bleed. The bottoms bleed after removal of the spent diluent can be removed from the process and used as a residual fuel.
  • the donor diluent is taken overhead as a vapor.
  • the oil to be upgraded is introduced into the reactor by line 30 wherein it contacts and scrubs an ascending stream of spent diluent and conversion products. It passes downwardly to the base of the reactor and is mixed with substantial proportions of the hydrogen donor diluent.
  • the liquid undergoing cracking may be heated by any suitable means. For example, a portion of the liquid can be continuously withdrawn by line 31, passed through a heater or furnace 32 and returned to the reactor by line 33. Steam or other substantially inert stripping gas may be admitted to the base of the reactor by line 34. This steam aids in the recovery of the spent diluent from the liquid.
  • the conversion products and the spent diluent after having been scrubbed by the feed, pass upwardly to the fractionating tower and are condensed into various product streams.
  • Light gases, naphthas and heating oils are removed by lines 35, 36 and 37, respectively.
  • the spent donor diluent is removed by line 38 and transferred to a hydrogenator 39.
  • a portion of this spent diluent may be cooled and recycled by line 40 to effect staged heat re moval in the fractionation column;
  • a portion of this spent diluent stream may be bled from the process by line 41 and an equivalent amount of diluent material may be added to the process by line 42.
  • the condensed ring structures in the diluent fraction may be concentrated before or after the addition of makeup thermal tar by an conventional means such as solvent extraction, thermal cracking, etc.
  • Hydrogen is admitted to the hydrogenator by line 43.
  • the hydrogenated donor diluent is removed from the hydrogenator by line 44 and transferred to the heater 32 wherein it is heated to the reaction temperature.
  • a bleed amounting to about 1 to 5% of the fresh feed is withdrawn from the base of the reactor by line 45. This .bleed may conveniently be adjusted such that the heat requirements of the process are balanced by use of the bleed as a fuel thereby eliminating the need for external fuel sources.
  • This particular arrangement having a vapor phase drawoff of the products and of the spent donor diluent is particularly suited to the processing of a hydrogen-deficient oil on a once-through basis.
  • the residuum charged to the reactor can be maintained in the reactor until it is substantially converted to lighter distillates, thus avoiding the necessity for recycle operation.
  • This arrangement is also suitable for extracting oils from shales, tar sands, etc.
  • the solid material can be charged to the reactor and mixed with the donor diluent and thermally treated. The conversion products and spent donor diluent can then be removed overhead, and the spent solid discharged from the bottom of the reactor after being stripped.
  • a hydrogen donor diluent cracking process which comprises admixing a heavy hydrogen deficient petroleum, oil with 5 to 100 vol. percent of hydrogen donor diluent comprising partial hydrogenated predominately aromaticnaph'thenic hydrocarbons boiling above 430 F., the precursor of said hydrogen donor diluent being selected from the group consisting of thermal tars, catalytic cycle stocks, extracts thereof, lube oil extracts and mixtures thereof and thermally cracking non-catalyticaily in a thermal cracking zone the mixture at a cracking temperature in the range of 800 to 1100 F. under liquid phase conditions to obtain to 98% 1000 F.
  • the hydrogen donor diluent cracking process claimed in claim 1 comprising continuously withdrawing liquid from. said thermal cracking zone, separating the liquid to obtain spent hydrogen donor diluent, adding makeup diluent precursor as above described thereto, partially hydrogenating a major portion of the separated material including said makeup diluent precursor to regenerate the hydrogen donor diluent, and returning the material so hydrogenated to said thermal cracking zone.
  • a process for the conversion of heavy hydrocarbonaceous petroleum materials which comprises the steps of: introducing a charging stock and a hydrogen donor diluent boiling in a range within the limits of 430 to 1000 F. into a thermal cracking zone, maintaining said charging stock and said hydrogen donor diluent therein under liquid phase hydrogen donor diluent, noncatalytic, cracking conditions to obtain relatively lighter vaporous products, continuously withdrawing overhead said vaporous products, separately withdrawing liquid comprising spent diluent and unconverted portions of said charging stock from said thermal cracking zone,

Description

July 15, 1958 A. w. LANGER, JR., ETAL 2,84
RESIDUUM CONVERSION PROCESS Filed Aug. 20, 1954 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 H 9. 2256mm l A A m5 mo mozzwwo 1 .EEEE t A 3 ANN J6 m I\ U 36 Al @zEfiI zmoOmo I mmw w All. PIQJ o ARTHUR w. LANGERJn INVENTORS GRAHAM e. WANLESS CARL s. CARLSON BY WmMA MAAM ATTORNEY$ July 15, 1958 Filed Aug. 20, 1954 HYDROGENATOR A. w. LANGER, JR., EIAL 2,843,530
RESIDUUM CONVERSION PROCESS 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 LIGHT GASES 6 NAPHTHAS 1 7 HEATING THERMAL TAR - BLEED RESIDUUM REACT STEAM ARTHUR W. LANGER, Jr INVENTORS GRAHAM G. WANLESS CARL S. CARLSON BYMJM 6. 7t. ATTORNEYS United States Patent RESIDIJUM convnnsroN rnocnss Arthur W. Longer, in, Nixon, and Graham G. Wanless, Wcstiield, N. .l., and Carl .5. Carlson, Crystal Lake, ilk, assignors to Esso Research and Engineering \Company, a corporation of Delaware Application August 20, 1954, Serial No. 451,254
4 Claims. (Cl. 1%.-S0)
This invention pertains to the converting of hydrocarbon oils by hydrogenolysis. More particularly it is concerned with the upgrading of petroleum oils, particularly heavy high boiling oils such as vacuum residua by thermal cracking of the oil in the presence of a hydrogen donor diluent. By the process of this invention, low value hydrogen deficient oils having coke forming propensities during thermal cracking are converted to more volatile products such as light distillates for use as motor fuels and gas oils suitable as feed stocks for catalytic cracking processes. i
A process termed hydrogen donor diluent cracking (I-IDDC) has recently been proposed. In this process, a heavy, low value oil is upgraded by admixing it with a hydrogen donor diluent material, aromatic-naphthenic in nature, and thermally cracking the mixture as' in a thermal cracking coil. The hydrogen donor diluent is a polycyclic condensed ring aromatic or an aromaticnaphthenic material that has been especially prepared by partial hydrogenation from selected normally surplusage, refinery streams such as catalytic cycle stocks, thermal tars, etc. The hydrogen donor diluent used has the ability to take up hydrogen in the hydrogenation zone and readily release it to hydrogen deficient oil in a thermal cracking zone. In this manner of hydrocracking oils, the oil being upgraded, usually a residual oil, is not contacted directly with the hydrogenation catalyst and does not, therefore, impair the activity of the catalyst by contamination. The amount of concomitant light gases and coke produced by this process is relatively small, usually being in the order of about 5 to This technique of HDDC is more fuly presented by co-pending and now abandoned application entitled, Upgrading of Heavy Hydrocarbon Oils, Serial No. 365,335, filed July 1, 1953, by Langer, a co-inventor of the present invention.
In the above-described HDDC processwherein the products, unconverted feed and spent diluent are continuously removed from the reactor as an equilibrium mixture, in order to obtain high conversions, it has been necessary to separate and recycle unconverted materials from the reaction mixture. Further, it has been necessary to use a high hydrogen donor diluent to residuum ratio to prevent coking in the reactor and to secure reasonable conversions. The present invention proposes a novel method of hydrogen donor diluent cracking that overcomes these disadvantages.
According to the present invention, a hydrogen donor diluent is admixed with a hydrogen deficient oil and the resulting mixture is subjected to liquid phase thermal cracking. During the thermal cracking the conversion products are continuously removed overhead as vapors. This practice greatly increases the ratio of hydrogen donor diluent to unconverted material in the liquid phase. Consequently, coke deposition is greatly minimized or eliminated and a much more eificient use is made of the hydrogen donor diluent than has been made in previously proice posed processes. In the previous processes, the spent hydrogen donor diluent and the conversion products, along with unconverted material, have been removed from the reactor as an equilibrium mixture of liquid and gases. The withdrawn materials were then separated to obtain the spent hydrogen donor diluent which was partially hydrogenated and recycled, and the unconverted refractory constituents of the feed, which were also recycled to obtain high conversions. Thus, in the past, maximum use has not been made of reactor capacity. The hydrogen donor diluent has been used inefficiently because of its low concentration and variations in product selectivities were dificult to obtain.
While the main feature of the present invention is a continuous vapor phase withdrawal of the conversion products, other subsidiary features and advantages of this invention are to be appreciated. Preferably the spent hydrogen donor diluent is withdrawn from the reactor as a liquid and is preferably separated in a common separation system, e. g., a fractionator, with the conversion products to obtain the spent diluent for hydrogenation. As an alternative, the spent diluent or a portion thereof may also be removed overhead from the reactor as a vapor. Another alternative is to separate the spent diluent, when it is withdrawn as a liquid, from the unconverted bottoms in a separate separation system. A third alternative is that when the spent diluent is removed as a vapor from the reactor, rather than separately hydrogenating the diluent, the total overhead along with the diluent may be partially hydrogenated before separation, thereby regenerating the hydrogen donor diluent.
It is an object of this invention to convert hydrocarbonaceous materials, particularly petroleum residua to lighter and more valuable distillates. Another object is to propose a hydrogen donor diluent cracking process characterized by continuous vapor phase withdrawal of the conversion products.
These and other objects and advantages will become apparent as this description proceeds and the attached drawings, forming a part of the specification, are described in detail.
In the drawings,
Figure I diagrammatically depicts a preferred embodiment of this invention adapted to the conversion of a petroleum residuum.
Figure II portrays the modification of the process of this invention in which the thermal cracking reactor and the product separation system are integral.
Charging stocks for the present invention are preferably hydrogen deficient petroleum derived oils, such as crude oils, distillate and residual fractions therefrom or mixtures thereof. Particularly preferred charging stocks are heavy residual oils characterized by API gravities of 5 to 20, Conradson carbons of 5 to 50 wt. per-cent, and initial boiling points above 850 to 1100 F. This invention is, however, capable of enjoying broader applications. Thus, coal tars, shale oils, tars, asphalts, etc. may also be processed by the present invention. It has also been proposed to utilize the HDDC process to extract and concurrently convert oils from shales and sands. As will hereinafter appear, the present invention also has utility in processing such hydrocarbonaceous materials.
The sources of the aromatic-naphthenic oil that is partially hydrogenated to secure the hydrogen donor diluent have previously been described. In particular, it has been found that the thermal tars obtained by the thermal cracking of catalytic cycle stocks yield excellent donor diluents. It has also been found, however, that certain lube oil extracts, extracts of catalytic cycle stocks, heavy cycle stocks themselves, or bottoms from catalytic cracking can serve as a source of the donor diluent. In any case,
the prime consideration for the selection of a hydrogen donor diluent is that the diluent should be composed of predominate proportions of aromatic-naphthenic molecules or condensed ring structures having the ability to take up hydrogen in a hydrogenation zone and release it in a thermal cracking Zone. Such condensed ring structures are relatively refractory and will pass through the thermal cracking zone relatively unaltered. The condensed ring structures are susceptible to being recovered from the reaction mixture and being regenerated by partial hydrogenation. However, while a major proportion of the donor diluent material can be continuously reused, there will normally be some loss of the donor diluent and this loss is made up from extraneous sources.
For convenience the pertinent operating conditions applicable to the following description of Figure I are summarized in Table I, presented hereinafter. With particular reference to Figure I, a charging stock, for example, a vacuum residuum, is blended with a hydrogen donor diluent supplied by line 2. and a small amount of recycled bottoms supplied by line 3. The blend is passed to a furnace 4 by line 1. In the furnace, the blend is heated to a suitable thermal cracking temperature, at a pressure suffieient to maintain substantially liquid phase conditions. The heated material is then passed by line 5 to a reactor 6. Each of the streams can, of course, be heated separately and passed to the reactor, if it be desired.
Conversion products boiling below the initial boiling point of the diluent are removed continuously from the vapor phase of the reactor and sent to a fractionator 8 by line 7. A liquid phase bleed is taken from the bottom of the reactor comprising diluent, products boiling above the initial boiling point of the diluent, and some unconverted refractory constituents of the feed. The liquid phase bleed is introduced into the fractionator 8 by line 9 below the point at which the highest boiling distillate is removed as a side stream. Thus both vapor phase and liquid phase products are separated in a single fractionator.
Light gases are removed from the fractionator by line 10. Naphthas are removed by line 11 and heating oils are removed by line 12. A gas oil which contains substantially all of the spent donor diluent is removed by line 13. Heavy gas oilsuitable as a catalytic cracking charging stock can be removed by line 14. The remaining bottoms are removed by line 15, a major portion of which are recycled for further treatment.
Up to about 25% of the spent donor diluent may be bled from the process by line 16. Makeup donor diluent, e. g., thermal tar, is admitted to the process by line 17. This makeup thermal tar is necessary in order to maintain the effectiveness of the diluent to transfer hydrogen. As the thermal cracking occurs, materials not suitable as donors will be cracked into the donor diluent boiling range and will reduce the concentration of the desired condensed ring aromatics, and some of the aromatics will be cracked out of the diluent boiling range. The amount of diluent bled and the amount of diluent makeup depend upon many factors, some of which are the diluent boiling range, the width of the diluent boiling range, the amount of hydrogen carried by the diluent, the residuum to diluent ratio, the cracking temperature, and the aromaticity of the residuum.
The spent diluent and the makeup thermal tar is hydrogenated in hydrogenator 18, using conventional methods and using preferably a sulfur insensitive catalyst such as nickel tungsten sulfide, cobalt molybdate, molybdenum sulfide, etc. The hydrogenation conditions are so adjusted that the diluent is only partially hydrogenated. It has been found that substantially complete hydrogenation destroys the effectiveness of the donor diluent. Sutficient hydrogen should be added to the diluent to make it serve effectively as a hydrogen donor but not to convert it substantially to naphthenes. Hydrogen is supplied to the hydrogenator by line 19 and can originate from any convenient source. A particularly suitable source is the hydrogen from hydroforming operations.
Spent gas is removed from the hydrogenator by line 20, a portion of which may be recycled by line 21. The partially hydrogenated donor diluent is recycled by line 2 to the furnace.
A bleed is provided, by line 15, for the bottoms to prevent build-up of ash contaminants in the system. The amount of the bleed may be as high as 20%, based on fresh feed, but is generally about 1 to 5%. When the process is operated to obtain essentially complete residuum elimination, the minimum bottoms bleed is taken consistent with ash removal and removal of extremely refractory constituents which would eventually deposit as coke in the reactor.
The liquid level in the reactor is maintained at 50 to of the reactor capacity by adjusting pressure, temperature, feed rate, diluent boiling range and the amount of bleed from the liquid phase. Since the diluent cracks to a much smaller extent than the residuum, it is apparent that there is a higher diluent to residuum ratio in the liquid phase of the reactor than in the feed. This results in the most efiicient utilization of the diluent since it is present in high concentration where it is most needed, that is, for the liquid phase cracking of the most refractory components of the residuum needing a hydrogen donor diluent to prevent coking. For example, consider a feed consisting of 50% residuum and 50% diluent. With only a short contact time about one half of the residuum cracks readily and is removed from the vapor phase, thus increasing the diluent to bottoms ratio in the liquid phase from 1 to 1 up to 2 to 1.
The range of operating conditions pertinent to this invention are summarized in Table I. Table '1 also presents a specific example.
Table I Example 1 1,000 F.+ conversion is defined as: vol. percent fresh feed minus v01. percent of products boiling above 1,000 F.
Table II presents an example of the results obtainable by the process of this invention when the process is operated in accordance with the example in Table I, using the particular feed stock indicated.
Table l] Hydrogenated 12.9% West 700/900 F. Inspections Texas Thermal Rcsiduum Tar Diluent Elemental analysis, Wt. percent:
C gas, wt. percent 4 C /430" F.,vol. percent 24 430/700 B, vol. percent 62 900/ 1000 F., vol. percent 22 Bottoms, bleed, vol. percent 2 Although this process was described using a 700/ 900 F. diluent, it is to be clearly understood that any diluent boiling range may be used in the range of 430 and 1000 F. The main requirement is that the diluent consist predominantly of condensed ring, aromatic-naphthenic compounds which are only partially hydrogenated. For eX- ample, When heavy gas oil is desired for catalytic cracking feed stock the process may be operated with a 430/ 650 F. thermal tar diluent. In this case higher pressures would be used in order to take overhead only 430 F.- products, a larger bleed would be maintained from the liquid phase, and a 650/ 1000 F. gas oil would be separated as the major product. The process using a low boiling diluent is flexible as gasoline yields can be maximized in preference to catalytic charging stocks by using a 430/ 650 F. diluent and operating under severe cracking conditions in order to take the major portion of the products overhead. Another desirable alternative operation is obtained by using a diluent boiling in the range 800-1000 F. and taking overhead 800 F.-products, thereby maximizing middle distillate yields.
While the present process may be used for the mild thermal treatment of petroleum oils in the nature of visbreaking, it is more particularly suited to the substantially complete conversion of heavy oils. As an example, however, of a mild severity process, the residual oil can be treated at mild conversions, e. g., 50 to 80% 1000 F. conversions, using a high bottoms bleed. The bottoms bleed after removal of the spent diluent can be removed from the process and used as a residual fuel.
With reference to Figure II, a process will be described wherein the donor diluent is taken overhead as a vapor. As shown, the oil to be upgraded is introduced into the reactor by line 30 wherein it contacts and scrubs an ascending stream of spent diluent and conversion products. It passes downwardly to the base of the reactor and is mixed with substantial proportions of the hydrogen donor diluent. The liquid undergoing cracking may be heated by any suitable means. For example, a portion of the liquid can be continuously withdrawn by line 31, passed through a heater or furnace 32 and returned to the reactor by line 33. Steam or other substantially inert stripping gas may be admitted to the base of the reactor by line 34. This steam aids in the recovery of the spent diluent from the liquid.
The conversion products and the spent diluent, after having been scrubbed by the feed, pass upwardly to the fractionating tower and are condensed into various product streams. Light gases, naphthas and heating oils are removed by lines 35, 36 and 37, respectively. The spent donor diluent is removed by line 38 and transferred to a hydrogenator 39. A portion of this spent diluent may be cooled and recycled by line 40 to effect staged heat re moval in the fractionation column; As before, a portion of this spent diluent stream may be bled from the process by line 41 and an equivalent amount of diluent material may be added to the process by line 42. As an alternative, the condensed ring structures in the diluent fraction may be concentrated before or after the addition of makeup thermal tar by an conventional means such as solvent extraction, thermal cracking, etc.
Hydrogen is admitted to the hydrogenator by line 43. The hydrogenated donor diluent is removed from the hydrogenator by line 44 and transferred to the heater 32 wherein it is heated to the reaction temperature. A bleed amounting to about 1 to 5% of the fresh feed is withdrawn from the base of the reactor by line 45. This .bleed may conveniently be adjusted such that the heat requirements of the process are balanced by use of the bleed as a fuel thereby eliminating the need for external fuel sources.
This particular arrangement having a vapor phase drawoff of the products and of the spent donor diluent is particularly suited to the processing of a hydrogen-deficient oil on a once-through basis. The residuum charged to the reactor can be maintained in the reactor until it is substantially converted to lighter distillates, thus avoiding the necessity for recycle operation. This arrangement is also suitable for extracting oils from shales, tar sands, etc. The solid material can be charged to the reactor and mixed with the donor diluent and thermally treated. The conversion products and spent donor diluent can then be removed overhead, and the spent solid discharged from the bottom of the reactor after being stripped.
While the examples have shown the separation and separate hydrogenation of the spent donor diluent, it is to be appreciated that the total overhead from the reactor can be hydrogenated. This alternative mode of operation will, however, 'be justified in only a few particular applications as the consumption of hydrogen will be relatively greater.
Having described the invention, what is sought to be protected by Letters Patent is succinctly set forth in the following claims:
1. A hydrogen donor diluent cracking process which comprises admixing a heavy hydrogen deficient petroleum, oil with 5 to 100 vol. percent of hydrogen donor diluent comprising partial hydrogenated predominately aromaticnaph'thenic hydrocarbons boiling above 430 F., the precursor of said hydrogen donor diluent being selected from the group consisting of thermal tars, catalytic cycle stocks, extracts thereof, lube oil extracts and mixtures thereof and thermally cracking non-catalyticaily in a thermal cracking zone the mixture at a cracking temperature in the range of 800 to 1100 F. under liquid phase conditions to obtain to 98% 1000 F. conversion of said hydrogen deficient oil while continuously removing gasiform conversion products boiling below the boiling range of said diluent, whereby the ratio of unconverted hydrogen donor diluent to unconverted hydrogen deficient oils in the liquid mixture undergoing cracking is substantially increased and efiicient utilization is made of unconverted hydrogen donor diluent.
2. The hydrogen donor diluent cracking process claimed in claim 1 comprising continuously withdrawing liquid from. said thermal cracking zone, separating the liquid to obtain spent hydrogen donor diluent, adding makeup diluent precursor as above described thereto, partially hydrogenating a major portion of the separated material including said makeup diluent precursor to regenerate the hydrogen donor diluent, and returning the material so hydrogenated to said thermal cracking zone.
3. The process of claim 2 wherein said gasiform conversion products and withdrawn liquid are separated in a common fractionation zone to obtain product fractions and spent diluent, and recycling a major portion of the residue from said fractionation zone to said thermal cracking zone for further treatment.
4. A process for the conversion of heavy hydrocarbonaceous petroleum materials which comprises the steps of: introducing a charging stock and a hydrogen donor diluent boiling in a range within the limits of 430 to 1000 F. into a thermal cracking zone, maintaining said charging stock and said hydrogen donor diluent therein under liquid phase hydrogen donor diluent, noncatalytic, cracking conditions to obtain relatively lighter vaporous products, continuously withdrawing overhead said vaporous products, separately withdrawing liquid comprising spent diluent and unconverted portions of said charging stock from said thermal cracking zone,
passing the liquid so Withdrawn and said vaporous products to a common separation zone, separating therein said spent diluent and adding thereto makeup precursor diluent selected from the group consisting of thermal tars, catalytic stocks, extracts thereof, lube oil extracts, and mixtures thereof, partially hydrogenating said spent diluent and returning the material so partially hydrogenated to said thermal cracking zone.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS Heid Sept. 13, 1938 Pier Aug. 17, 1943 Stewart Aug. 7, 1945 Greensfelder Sept. 2, 1947 Voge et a1. Apr. 19, 1949

Claims (1)

1. A HYDROGEN DONOR DILUENT CRACKING PROCESS WHICH COMPRISES ADMIXING A HEAVY HYDROGEN DEFICIENT PETROLEUM, OIL WITH 5 TO 100 VOL. PERCENT OF HYDROGEN DONOR DILUENT COMPRISING PARTIAL HYDROGENATED PREDOMINATELY AROMATICNAPHTHENIC HYDROCARBONS BOILING ABOVE 430*F., THE PRECURSOR OF SAID HYDROGEN DONOR DILUENT BEING SELECTED FROM THE GROUP CONSISTING OF THERMAL TARS, CATALYTIC CYCLE STOCKS, EXTRACTS THEREOF, LUBE OIL EXTRACTS AND MIXTURES THEREOF AND THERMALLY CRACKING NON-CATALYTICALLY IN A THERMAL CRACKING ZONE THE MIXTURE AT A CRACKING TEMPERATURE IN THE RANGE OF 800* TO 1100*F. UNDER LIQUID PHASE CONDITIONS TO OBTAIN 80 TO 98% 1000*F. CONVERSION OF SAID HYDROGEN DEFICIENT OIL WHILE CONTINUOUSLY REMOVING GASIFORM CONVERSION PRODUCTS BOILING BELOW THE BOILING RANGE OF SAID DILUENT, WHEREBY THE RATIO OF UNCONVERTED HYDROGEN DONOR DILUENT TO UNCONVERTED HYDROGEN DEFICIENT OILS IN THE LIQUID MIXTURE UNDERGOING CRACKING IS SUBSTANTIALLY INCREASED AND EFFICIENT UTILIZATION IS MADE OF UNCONVERTED HYDROGEN DONOR DILUENT.
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Cited By (13)

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US2953513A (en) * 1956-03-05 1960-09-20 Exxon Research Engineering Co Hydrogen donor diluent cracking process
US3252888A (en) * 1962-11-06 1966-05-24 Exxon Research Engineering Co Conversion of hydrocarbons with the use of hydrogen donor diluents
US4065379A (en) * 1975-01-22 1977-12-27 Shell Oil Company Process for the production of normally gaseous olefins
US4294686A (en) * 1980-03-11 1981-10-13 Gulf Canada Limited Process for upgrading heavy hydrocarbonaceous oils
US4434045A (en) 1982-01-04 1984-02-28 Exxon Research And Engineering Co. Process for converting petroleum residuals
US4439309A (en) * 1982-09-27 1984-03-27 Chem Systems Inc. Two-stage hydrogen donor solvent cracking process
US4661241A (en) * 1985-04-01 1987-04-28 Mobil Oil Corporation Delayed coking process
US4698147A (en) * 1985-05-02 1987-10-06 Conoco Inc. Short residence time hydrogen donor diluent cracking process
US20050258075A1 (en) * 2004-05-14 2005-11-24 Ramesh Varadaraj Viscoelastic upgrading of heavy oil by altering its elastic modulus
US20050258070A1 (en) * 2004-05-14 2005-11-24 Ramesh Varadaraj Fouling inhibition of thermal treatment of heavy oils
EP1785468A1 (en) 2005-11-14 2007-05-16 The Boc Group, Inc. Resid hydrocracking methods
US20070158239A1 (en) * 2006-01-12 2007-07-12 Satchell Donald P Heavy oil hydroconversion process
US20110067305A1 (en) * 2009-09-22 2011-03-24 Martin Allan Morris Hydrocarbon synthesizer

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US2326799A (en) * 1938-08-12 1943-08-17 Pier Mathias Conversion of combustible carbonaceous materials
US2381522A (en) * 1944-03-31 1945-08-07 Texas Co Hydrocarbon conversion process
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US2467920A (en) * 1946-08-13 1949-04-19 Shell Dev Production of gasoline

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US2326799A (en) * 1938-08-12 1943-08-17 Pier Mathias Conversion of combustible carbonaceous materials
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Cited By (22)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2953513A (en) * 1956-03-05 1960-09-20 Exxon Research Engineering Co Hydrogen donor diluent cracking process
US3252888A (en) * 1962-11-06 1966-05-24 Exxon Research Engineering Co Conversion of hydrocarbons with the use of hydrogen donor diluents
US4065379A (en) * 1975-01-22 1977-12-27 Shell Oil Company Process for the production of normally gaseous olefins
US4294686A (en) * 1980-03-11 1981-10-13 Gulf Canada Limited Process for upgrading heavy hydrocarbonaceous oils
US4434045A (en) 1982-01-04 1984-02-28 Exxon Research And Engineering Co. Process for converting petroleum residuals
US4439309A (en) * 1982-09-27 1984-03-27 Chem Systems Inc. Two-stage hydrogen donor solvent cracking process
US4661241A (en) * 1985-04-01 1987-04-28 Mobil Oil Corporation Delayed coking process
US4698147A (en) * 1985-05-02 1987-10-06 Conoco Inc. Short residence time hydrogen donor diluent cracking process
US20050263438A1 (en) * 2004-05-14 2005-12-01 Ramesh Varadaraj Inhibitor enhanced thermal upgrading of heavy oils via mesophase suppression using oil soluble polynuclear aromatics
US7704376B2 (en) 2004-05-14 2010-04-27 Exxonmobil Research And Engineering Company Fouling inhibition of thermal treatment of heavy oils
US20050258075A1 (en) * 2004-05-14 2005-11-24 Ramesh Varadaraj Viscoelastic upgrading of heavy oil by altering its elastic modulus
US20060183950A1 (en) * 2004-05-14 2006-08-17 Ramesh Varadaraj Preparation of aromatic polysulfonic acid compositions from light cat cycle oil
US20050258070A1 (en) * 2004-05-14 2005-11-24 Ramesh Varadaraj Fouling inhibition of thermal treatment of heavy oils
US7794586B2 (en) 2004-05-14 2010-09-14 Exxonmobil Research And Engineering Company Viscoelastic upgrading of heavy oil by altering its elastic modulus
US7732387B2 (en) 2004-05-14 2010-06-08 Exxonmobil Research And Engineering Company Preparation of aromatic polysulfonic acid compositions from light cat cycle oil
EP1785468A1 (en) 2005-11-14 2007-05-16 The Boc Group, Inc. Resid hydrocracking methods
US7594990B2 (en) 2005-11-14 2009-09-29 The Boc Group, Inc. Hydrogen donor solvent production and use in resid hydrocracking processes
US20070108100A1 (en) * 2005-11-14 2007-05-17 Satchell Donald Prentice Jr Hydrogen donor solvent production and use in resid hydrocracking processes
US7618530B2 (en) 2006-01-12 2009-11-17 The Boc Group, Inc. Heavy oil hydroconversion process
US20070158239A1 (en) * 2006-01-12 2007-07-12 Satchell Donald P Heavy oil hydroconversion process
US20110067305A1 (en) * 2009-09-22 2011-03-24 Martin Allan Morris Hydrocarbon synthesizer
US8858783B2 (en) 2009-09-22 2014-10-14 Neo-Petro, Llc Hydrocarbon synthesizer

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