AU638410B2 - Apparatus and method for regenerating coked fluid cracking catalyst - Google Patents

Apparatus and method for regenerating coked fluid cracking catalyst Download PDF

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AU638410B2
AU638410B2 AU40600/89A AU4060089A AU638410B2 AU 638410 B2 AU638410 B2 AU 638410B2 AU 40600/89 A AU40600/89 A AU 40600/89A AU 4060089 A AU4060089 A AU 4060089A AU 638410 B2 AU638410 B2 AU 638410B2
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Gary James Green
Tsoung-Yuan Yan
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ExxonMobil Oil Corp
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OPI DATE 22/02/91 APPLN. ID 40600 89 AOJP DATE 28/03/91 PCT NUMBER PCT/US89/03186
PCT
INTERNATIONAL APPLICATION PUBLISHED UNDER THE PATENT COOPERATION TREATY (PCT) (51) International Patent Classification 5 International Publication Number: WO 91/01358 11/18 Al (43) Internatio,.al Publication Date: 7 Februar. 1991 (07.02.91) (211 International Application Number: PCT/US89'03186 Published With international search report.
(22) International Filing Date: 24 July 1989 (24.07.89) (71) Applicant: MOBIL OIL CORPORATION (US/US]; 150 East 42nd Street, New York, NY 10017 (US) (72) Inventors: GREEN, Gary, James 319 Emerald Drive, Yardley, PA 19067 YAN, Tsoung.Yuan 2427 6 3 Fairmount Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19130 (US).
(74)Agents: SUNG, Tak, K. et al.; Mobil Oil Corporation, 3225 Gallows Road, Fairfax, VA 22037 (US).
(81) Designated States: AT (European patent). AU, BE (European patent). CH (European patent). DE (European patent)*, FR (European patent), GB (European patent), IT (European patent). JP, LU (European patent), NL (European patent), SE (European patent).
(54) Title: APPARATUS AND METHOD FOR REGENERATING COKED FLUID CRACKING CATALYST (57) Abstract A continuous regenerator for the two-stage regeneration of hot coked fluid catalytic cracking catalyst, and a method for regenerating coked catalyst by combustion with air and with reduced emissions of nitrogen oxides, or with red,.ced emissions of any two or more of the pollutants which include nitrogen oxides, sulfur oxides and carbon monoxide See back of page WO 91/01358 PCT/US89/03186
I--
APPARATUS IAND METHOD FOR REGENERATING COKED FLUID CRACKING CATALYST This invention is concerned with a counterflow, two-stage riser regenerator for regenerating coked cracking catalysts formed in a fluid catalytic cracking unit. It is further concerned with a method for regenerating coked fluid catalytic cracking catalysts formed in a fluid catalytic cracking unit, which method reduces the emission of one or more of the nitrogen oxides, sulfur oxides and carbon monoxide pollutants with the flue gas.
Fluid catalytic cracking, (hereinafter referred to as FCC), is a well-known petroleum process and need not be described herein in detail. Briefly, the FCC process is operated in a plant comprising a cracking unit that has a cracking zone operating in the absence of added hydrogen and a regenerator that has a regeneration zone designed to combust organic matter. Such plants contain a circulating inventory of solid acidic cracking catalyst which passes through the cracking zone where fresh feed such as a petroleum gas oil is converted to more useful products such as gasoline and fuel oil with concomittant formation of coked catalyst. The coked catalyst is usually stripped with steam to remove volatiles and the passes to the regenerator where the coke is removed by combustion with formation of a flue gas and regenerated catalyst which is returned in continuous fashion to the cracking zone. All references made herein to "coked FCC catalyst" are intended to refer to the catalyst after conventional steam-stripping. Many patents have issued concerned with one or more aspects of the FCC process, some of these dealing with process variations, others with hardware, and others with control of the process, including control of CO emmissions. U.S. 4,159,239, to Schwartz is exemplary of such patents.
Regenerators in FCC plants produce copious quantities of flue gas which are directly or indirectly discharged to the WO 91/01358 PCT/US89/03186 2atmosphere. Because of the large scale that is characteristic of such plants, the environmental impact of the flue gas discharged is of considerable importance. In particular, the discharge of carbon monoxide in excessive quantities, as well as nitrogen oxides and oxides of sulfur have come under scrutiny and one or another of these have become the subject of restrictive legislation.
For convenience, the noxious oxides of nitrogen and sulfur will be referred to herein as NOx and SOx, respectively, and the carbon monoxide as CO.
As much as half of the nitrogen and sulfur in the FCC feed is incorporated into the coke deposited on the catalyst in the FCC reactor. Upon regeneration of the catalyst, the incorporated nitrogen and the sulfur are burned off along with the coke to form
NO
x and SO x which are emitted in the flue gas from the regenerator. In addition, CO can be emitted in these gases as a result of incomplete combustion within the regenerator.
With the changing quality of crude oils available today, FCC feeds often have increased levels of nitrogen and sulfur (as high as 5000 ppm and 2.51, respectively). These levels translate into regenerator NO x and SO x emissions which can be significantly higher than current or proposed limits set by governing municipalities. It is therefore likely that many FCC units will require some control means to meet these standards.
In a typical single-stage regenerator, the operating parameter which most influences N0O and SO x emissions is the excess 02 in the flue gas. Most problematic is that increasing the excess 02, which is desirable to achieve a high degree of coke burnoff and CO conversion, greatly increases the emissions of both NO, and SO x However, it has been found previously that SO x emissions can be significantly reduced under excess 02 conditions by incorporation of a "SOx-transfer agent", such as alumina with the FCC catalyst. The use of alumina for sich purpose is described in U.S. 4,115,251 to Flanders et a1. The use of rare earths on alumina is described in U.S. 4,369,108 to Pertolacini et al.
WO 91/01358 PCT/US89/03186 3-- For these catalysts to perform well it is necessary to maintain a high level of excess 02 3 vol% or higher in the flue gas). For this reason, it has not been possible to achieve a simultaneous reduction in NO x when SO X transfer catalysts are employed; in fact, NO x emissions usually increase.
Most FCC units now use zeolite-containing catalysts having high activity and selectivity. Zeolite-type catalysts have a particularly high activity and selectivity when the concentration of coke on the catalyst after regeneration is relatively low, such as below 0.1 wt%, so that it is generally desirable to burn off as much coke as possible in regeneration. Thus, any solution to the flue gas emissions problem which involves the design or operation of the regenerator preferabl." should favor production of clean-burned regenerated catalyst.
The problem of carbon monoxide emissions has been addressed and a very widely accepted solution has been to include in the catalyst inventory a trace amount of a platinum group metal, as described in the above-cited U.S. 4,159,239 to Schwartz, which promotes the combustion of carbon monoxide in a controllable manner in the dense-phase fluidized catalyst bed in the catalyst regenerator, the dense bed providing an adequate heat sink for recovery of process heat. The wide industrial acceptance of platinum promoted cracking catalysts lies not only with its effectiveness in reducing carbon monoxide emissions, but also because this mode of control fosters clean burning of the catalyst.
This clean burning is effected in part because the recovered heat increases the catalyst bed temperature in a controlled fashion, and also because a higher level of excess oxygen in the flue gas is permitted without danger of encountering afterburning. However, a problem encountered in some cracking operations using metal promoted, complete carbon monoxide combustion-type regeneration has been the generation of undesirable NO x in the flue gas. Thus, we WO 91/01358 PCT/US89/03186 4see another incompatibility of the type in which the abatement of one pollutant, CO, leads to the aggravation of another pollutant,
NO,.
Figure 1 is a schematic drawing of the two-stage regenerator of this invention..
This invention provides a novel, coupled two-stage regenerator particularly suited to the regeneration of hot coked cracking catalyst formed in a FCC unit, the formation of hot clean-burned catalyst being effected with markedly reduced emissions of one or more of NOx, SO x and CO. The concept regenerator, briefly, comprises two riser units that are coupled in such a manner that hot coked catalyst from the FCC unit flows only into the first-stage riser unit, and from there to the second-stage riser unit, while fresh fluidizing gas comprising a predetermined amount of free oxygen flows into the second-stage unit and then passes to the first-stage unit, while regenerated catalyst is discharged from the second-stage unit and flue gas from the first stage unit, all as more fully described hereinbelow.
This invention also provides a novel method for regenerating hot coked cracking catalyst discharged from a FCC reactor. The method requires two stages of regeneration each of which stages produces a flue gas of distinct composition. The method comprises concurrently: passing the hot coked catalyst and first-stage fluidizing gas comprising the second-stage flue gas containing more than 2 volume percent residual free oxygen and excessive NO x to a first-stage riser unit under conditions effective to burn off 10 to percent of the coke whereby forming partially regenerated catalyst and a first-stage flue gas depleted of NO x and containing less than 2 volume percent of residual free oxygen; WO 91/01358 PCT/US89/03186 passing the partially regenerated catalyst and second-stage fluidizing gas comprising fresh regenerating gas containing a predetermined content of free oxygen to a second-stage riser unit under conditions effective to produce regenerated catalyst and a second-stage flue gas containing residual oxygen and excessive NOX; discharging the first-stage flue gas depleted of NOx from the first-stage riser unit; and passing the regenerated catalyst back to the FCC reactor, all as more fully described hereinbelow.
In another embodiment of the process of this invention, hot coked fluid cracking catalyst that includes a SOx-transfer component such as alumina is regenerated by the steps described above and with reduced emissions of both NO x and SO x In still another embodiment wherein the second-stage regeneration is conducted in a full CO-burning mode, reduced emissions of NO x
SO
x and CO are achieved.
The two-stage regenerator of this invention comprises two riser units of substantially conventional design, i.e. each unit consists of a vessel that contains a vertically extended riser pipe including its upper orifice. At or towards the bottom of the riser pipe are means such as a conduit for introducing a fluidizable solid and means for introducing and distributing fluidzing gas, such as a plenum and one or more conduits leading into the plenum and a distributor plate. In the usual operation, gas and solids are introduced by such means and form a dilute phase transport bed within the riser pipe, and this solid-gas dispersion is more or less rapidly discharged from the mouth of the riser pipe depending on the superficial velocity of the fluidizing gas and other recognized factors. Located within the vessel are catalyst-gas disengaging means such as one or more baffles and/or cyclones that effect separation of the suspended solid from the fluidizing gas, allowing the former to collect in the lower portion of the containment vessel WO 91/01358 PCT/ULS89/03186 6and the latter in the upper portion. The upper portion is provided with one or more ports and/or conduits for removing the gas phase from the vessel, and the lower portion with a port or conduit for removing solids. For purposes of this invention, it is preferred that the lower portion of the containment vessel be provided with means for maintaining the separated solids as a dense fluidized bed. This is achieved, for example, by providing a suitably located distributor and conduit for introducing fluidizing gas.
The regenerator of the present invention is distinguished by the manner in which the two riser units are coupled. Although the riser units in general should be located in close proximity, they may be disposed horizontally, vertically, or in any modification thereof with respect to each other, since such disposition is not critical for preseni purposes, and may be dictated by cost, engineering or other considerations. However, the coupling of the two riser units must provide for the counterflow of solids and tluidizing gas between the two riser units, i.e. the trans-port of separated solids from the first-stage riser unit to the second-stage unit, and the r.ransport of the separated gas phase from the second-stage riser unit to the first-stage unit and for its introduction into the first-stage unit as fluidizing gas. While transport of the gas phase is readily accomplished by simple conduits such as by pipes and by maintenance of a suitable pressure gradient regardless of the physical relationship of the two riser units, the transport of the separated solids between the stages, and between the regenerator and the FCC unit, however, will depend on whether or not gravity-assist is or is not available. For gravity-assist transport, seal-legs may be used; and, for transport of solids against gravity, devices such as gas lifts may be used.
As will be more fully described hereinbelow, the regenerator of this invention is particularly well-suited for the regeneration of coked fluid cracking catalyst. In particular, because of the way the two stages are coupled, the regenerator WO 91/01358 WC/US89/03186 7provides for the simultaneous maintenance of two different regeneration environments, one (the first stage) in which regeneration is conducted with a formation of a flue gas that contains very low levels of excess oxygen, and the other 3 econd stage) in which the flue gas contains p more substantial amount of excess oxygen. The regenerator also provides in the first stage for the highly efficient contacting of the excessive NO x in the flue gas from the second stage with the partially coked catalyst in the first stage, which is very effective for the destruction of the excessive NO x formed in the second stage. The second-stage environment is ideal for the complete combustion of CO to CO 2 and is a very favorable environment for entrapment of SO x when the coked FCC catalyst contains a SOx-transfer agent. Thus, the two-stage regenerator substantially removes the limitations imposed by the environment of a conventional single-stage regenerator, wherein suppression of the formation of one contaminant aggravates the formation of another. Another advantage of the regenerator of this invention is that existing single-stage regenerators may be retrofitted with an additional stage to provide the novel regenerator with its attendant advantages.
The regenerator of this invention is contemplated as useful for other applications besides the regeneration of FCC catalysts. In catalyst manufacture, for example, it may be used for the large-scale calcining of fresh catalyst when the heat for such calcining is provided by burning a carbonaceous or hydrocarbon fuel mixed with the catalyst.
In Figure 1 coked FCC catalyst from the FCC unit is introduced into riser pipe 2 of the regenerator via conduit 1.
It is fluidized and mnved upwardly through riser pipe 2 by the low oxygen content flue gas produced in the second-stage riser unit and discharged from vessel 3. The first-stage riser unit and the second-stage unit are delimited by the dashed line a as shown in the Figure. In the first-stage riser unit the catalyst carried by riser WO 91/01358 WO 9101358PCr/US89/03 186 8pipe 2 is disengaged from the fluidizing gas and forms a dense fluidized bed S of partially regenerated catalyst. The disengaged gas collects in vessel 4, fluidization by flue gas from vessel 3 passing via line 16 and valve 17 to sparger 6. The extent of regeneration (coke burnoff) that occurs in the 'I'st-stage riser unit is deterrAined by the 02 content of the flue gas produced in the second-stage riser unit. The 02 content may be adjusted by adding secondary air via line 18 and sparger 6. The level of the dense fluidized bed 5 of partially regenerated catalyst is maintained constant by takeoff pipe 7 and the catalyst passed downwardly via seal leg 8 to riser pipe 9 where it is mixed with oxygen rich fluidizing gas (such as air) introduced via line and 10a and carried over to the dense phase fluidized bed 11 in the second-stage riser unit, where fluidization is sustained by introduction of oxygen-rich gas introduced v.ia line 19, valve and sparger means 12. The level of the dense fluidized bed of regenerated catalyst 11 is maintained constant by takeoff pipe 13, and flows into standpipe 14 which returns the catalyst to the cracking unit. The separated, oxygen-rich flue gas in the upper part of vessel 3 flows from the second-stage riser unit via line 16 and riser 2, where it combines with secondary air introduced via sparger means 6 to form oxygen-poor flue gas which is removed from the first-stage regenerator vessel 4 via line is. The flue gas from line 15 is vented directly to the atmosphere via line 15a, or optionally passed via line 15b to expander 21 for recovery of sensible energy and then vented via line 22.
The method of this Invention is operable with any commercial FCC catalyst composition. Such catalyst comprises an inorganic, porous acidic cracking component such as silica-alumina, silica-magnesia or silica-zirconia. Most modern catalysts comprise a crystalline faujasite-like zeolite as cracking component in an amorphous matrix. Catalyst that contain zeolites are described, for example, in U.S. 3,140,249 and U.S. 3,140,2S3 to Plank et al. The WO 91/01358 PCT/US89/03186 9method of this invention is particularly well suited for operation with catalyst compositions that contain a SOx-transfer agent, such as alumina, as described hereinabove. Another component, which is optional, of the catalyst is a CO-combustion promoter, such as chromium, or a platinum group metal as described in U.S. 4,159,239 to Schwartz, or U.S. 4,290,878 to Blanton. The Rh or Ir catalyzes the reduction of N0O by CO and thereby further enhances the removal of NO x and CO from the system. Such NOx conversion catalysts are particularly effective in promoting NO x redu-tion on the low-oixygen environment of the first stage.
In the method of this invention, all of the hot coked FCC catalyst is passed to a first-stage riser unit operated under conditions effective to remove as little as 10 wt% of the coke and to produce a flue gas that contains less than 1 vol% of excess oxygen. As will be shown hereinbelow, partially regenerated catalyst in an environment of low excess oxygen effectively reduces excessive concentrations of NOx. Since all of the flue gas discharged by the regenerator is discharged from the first-stage riser unit, the NOx emissions from the regenerator are maintained at a low level.
All of the partially regenerated catalyst produced in the first stage is passed to the second stage where it is contacted with fresh fluidizing gas, such as air, to form regenerated catalyst and a flue gas that contains more than 3 vol% of excess oxygen. Such an environment of high excess oxygen favors rapid regeneration, the formation of clean-burned catalyst having less than residual carbon), the suppression of SOx formation in the presence of a SOx-transfer agent, and the substantially complete burning of CO to CO 2 Although such CO burning may occur in the absence of a promoter component such as chromium or a platinum group metal, it occurs in a controlled fashion in the dense fluidized bed of the second-stage riser unit when platinum promoter is present, and the V" presence of platinum suppresses afterburning.
WO 91/01358 PCT/US89/03186 The gaseous environment of the second-stage unit which suppresses the formation of 03 and/or SOx, favors the formation of excessive concentrations of NO. However, since this excess is destroyed in the first stage, it is evident that the two stages cooperate with each other to control CO and SO x emissions in a manner heretofore not achievable.
The method of this invention requires control of process parameters for each of the two units. As will be recognized by one skilled in the art, the interaction of bed temperature, catalyst residence time, the gas flow rate and the concentration. of gaseous oxygen in the fluidizing gas for each stage determine the amount of carbon burned and the concentration of excess oxygen in the flue gas for that stage. For purposes of the present invention, all of the foregoing parameters, with the exception of the concentration of excess oxygen in the flue gas, may have any of their conventional values. These values, however, are chosen in such combination as to limit the coke removal in the first stage to not more than preferably in the range of 10 to 40%, and most preferably in the range of 10 to 30%, and to provide flue gases forhte two stages that have distinctly different contents of excess oxygen.
Experimental observations will now be described that illustrate the importance of the content of excess 02 in the flue gas in controlling noxious emissions. These observations are not intended to limit the scope of the invention, which scope is determined by the entire specification and appended claims.
Experimental All experiments were performed with a commercial, coked equilibrium catalyst having the approximate composition: C 0.73 N (ppm) 305 Pt (ppm) 1.49 Ni (ppm) 950 V (ppm) 880 Cu (ppm) WO 91/01358 PCT/US89/03!86 11-- Experiments were carried out at 650 and 700'C in a continuous fluidized bed unit. 400 ml/min of a nitrogen gas containing 170 ppm by volume of NO was used as a fluidizing gas and passed through a 10 g bed of coked catalyst. NO was chosen to represent NO x in these experiments since it is known that NO accounts for almost all 97%) of the NO x emitted from FCC regenerators. For reference, the gas flow rate corresponded to a WHSV of 2.8 hr-1, similar to that in commercial use.
Identical runs were carried out with fluidizing gas which contained 0.75 volt CO and 0.75 voll 002 in addition to 170 ppm NO. Baseline runs were performed using beds of both clean sand and clean-burned FCC catalyst. Steady state inlet and outlet NO concentrations were measured using a Beckman Model 951A chemiluminescent NO x analyzer.
The results of the experiments, summarized in Table I, show that the reaction of NO with carbon is an important route tr NO destruction under 0 2 -starved conditions. In contrast, the competitive reaction of NO with CO does not contribute to its removal from the system under the same conditions. The data clearly show that substantial reduction of NO occurs over the coked catalyst when no CO is present, e.g. 51% at 700'C. Moreover, no additional NO reduction is observed when 0.75 vol% 00 is added. Negligible conversion occurs under any circumstance with clean sand, while the clean-burned catalyst shows only a small reduction of NO in the presence of CO.
In summary, the collective results demonstrate that contacting of NO and coked catalyst can lead to significant NO removal within an FCC regenerator environment.
WO 91/01358 PCT/US89/03186 12-- TABLE I Inlet Gas Mix A: 170 ppmv NO, balance N 2 Inlet Gas Mix B: 170 ppmv NO, 0.75% CO, 0.75% CO 2 balance N 2 Bed T .C Outlet NO Conc. (ppmv) NO Removal A B A B Coked FCC Catalyst 650 118 118 30 700. 84 84 51 51 Clean-Burned FCC Catalyst 65U 168 151 1 11 700 173 152 0 11 clean Sans 650 166 168 2 1 700 164 163 4 4 A similar serie5 of experiments were performed in which the catalyst was regenerated in a continuous steady-state mode and with different levels of excess 02 in the flue gas. The coked catalyst examined in this study was similar to that described above but it contained 0.86 wt% carbon and 305 ppm nitrogen. Regenerations were carried out at 3 to 4 psig at 650 and 700'C. Inlet 02 concentrations were varied from 1.5 to 12 vol% by appropriately mixing N 2 and hir as the inlet fluidizing gas. The total inlet gas flow rate was maintained constant at 400 cc/min. Catalyst feed rates to the reactor were varied from 0.62 to 1.87 g/min, corresponding to average catalyst residence times of 16 to S minutes. Typizal H20 partial pressures corresponded to 3 to 4 vol% with several runs having additional 1t 2 0 injected into the rector to give 10 to 11 vol% H 2 0. The results of these regtvnerations are summarized in Table III in terms of the observed steady state selectivities for NO, emissions and the corresponding overall coke N conversions are as follows: WO 91/01358 PCT/US89/03186 13-- TABLE II Excess 0 (vol%) less than 1 more than 1 C Burnoff Selectivity for NO Emission g NOx/gC Coke N Conversion to NOx Mx less than 70 less than 0.005 more than 70 0.025 to 0.030 less than 5.4 27 to 33 As can be seen from Table II, operation with low excess oxygen drastically reduces NO x emissions. The results were not found to be sensitive to the partial pressure of steam.

Claims (1)

14-- CLAIMS: 1. A continuous couL.terflow two-stage method for regenerating hot coked fluidized catalytic cracking catalyst discharged from a fluidized catalytic cracking reactor, each of which stages produces a distinct flue gas, the FCC catalyst comprising an acidic cracking component and a SOx-transfer agent which method comprises as concurrent steps: passing the hot coked catalyst and first-stage fluidizing gas consisting of the second-stage flue gas having more than 2 volume percent residual free oxygen and an ecologically excessive concentration of NO x to a first-stage riser unit under conditions effective to burn off 10 to 50 wt% of the coke whereby forming partially regenerated catalyst and a first-stage flue gas depleted of NO x and containing less than 2 volume percent of residual free oxygen; passing the partially regenerated catalyst and second-stage fluidizing gas comp'ising fresh regeneration gas to a second stage riser unit under conditions effective to produce regenerated catalyst containing entrained SO x and a second-stage flue gas containing more than 2 volume percent of residual free oxygen and an ecologically excessive concentration of NOx; discharging the first-stage flue gas depleted of NO x from the first-stage riser unit; and passing the regenerated catalyst containing entrained SO x back to the FCC reactor. 2. The method described in claim 1 wherein the FCC catalyst contains a platinum-group metal CO-oxidation promoter and the second-stage unit is operated in the complete CO-combustion mode. 3. The method described in claim 1 wherein the FCC catalyst also contains a NOx-reduction promoter. Scatalyst contains a t1.l LHd esi idaton pr r an ^TA^ catalyst contains a 1 -oxidation promoter and i i t -I Iq a tgrI -in Al At 15 4. The method described in claim 1 including the step of passing the catalyst from the second stage riser to a dense bed in the second-stage riser unit. The method described in claim 4 wherein the FCC catalyst contains a platinum-group metal CO-oxidation promoter and the second-stage unit is operated in the complete CO-combustion mode. 6. The method described in claim 1 wherein 10 to percent of the coke is burned in the'first combustion zone. 7. The method described in claim 1 wherein 10 to percent of the coke is burned in the first combustion zone. DATED: 26 April, 1993 MOBIL OIL CORPORATION By their Patent Attorneys: a S PHILLIPS ORMONDE FITZPATRICK 0646m S4 a a $oi, 60 S o* S :3p *t S l I S a I a a aI a
AU40600/89A 1989-07-24 1989-07-24 Apparatus and method for regenerating coked fluid cracking catalyst Expired - Fee Related AU638410B2 (en)

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* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4828680A (en) * 1988-01-20 1989-05-09 Mobil Oil Corporation Catalytic cracking of hydrocarbons

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US4828680A (en) * 1988-01-20 1989-05-09 Mobil Oil Corporation Catalytic cracking of hydrocarbons

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