GB2107732A - Hydroprocessing of heavy hydrocarbonaceous oils - Google Patents

Hydroprocessing of heavy hydrocarbonaceous oils Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB2107732A
GB2107732A GB08229151A GB8229151A GB2107732A GB 2107732 A GB2107732 A GB 2107732A GB 08229151 A GB08229151 A GB 08229151A GB 8229151 A GB8229151 A GB 8229151A GB 2107732 A GB2107732 A GB 2107732A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
hydroprocessing
zone
hydrogenation
process according
oil
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB08229151A
Other versions
GB2107732B (en
Inventor
Arthur J Dahlberg
John H Shinn
Joel W Rosenthal
Tim T Chu
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Chevron USA Inc
Original Assignee
Chevron Research and Technology Co
Chevron Research Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from US06/312,437 external-priority patent/US4376037A/en
Priority claimed from US06/314,141 external-priority patent/US4389301A/en
Application filed by Chevron Research and Technology Co, Chevron Research Co filed Critical Chevron Research and Technology Co
Publication of GB2107732A publication Critical patent/GB2107732A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2107732B publication Critical patent/GB2107732B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • 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
    • C10G49/00Treatment of hydrocarbon oils, in the presence of hydrogen or hydrogen-generating compounds, not provided for in a single one of groups C10G45/02, C10G45/32, C10G45/44, C10G45/58 or C10G47/00
    • C10G49/10Treatment of hydrocarbon oils, in the presence of hydrogen or hydrogen-generating compounds, not provided for in a single one of groups C10G45/02, C10G45/32, C10G45/44, C10G45/58 or C10G47/00 with moving solid particles
    • C10G49/12Treatment of hydrocarbon oils, in the presence of hydrogen or hydrogen-generating compounds, not provided for in a single one of groups C10G45/02, C10G45/32, C10G45/44, C10G45/58 or C10G47/00 with moving solid particles suspended in the oil, e.g. slurries
    • 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
    • C10G2300/00Aspects relating to hydrocarbon processing covered by groups C10G1/00 - C10G99/00
    • C10G2300/10Feedstock materials
    • C10G2300/107Atmospheric residues having a boiling point of at least about 538 °C

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Oil, Petroleum & Natural Gas (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • General Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Production Of Liquid Hydrocarbon Mixture For Refining Petroleum (AREA)

Abstract

A heavy hydrocarbonaceous oil feed (e.g. a petroleum residue or coal, tar sand or shale derived oil) is hydrogenated by contacting the oil with hydrogen in the presence of added dispersed hydrogenation catalyst, suspended in the oil, and porous solid contact particles. At least part of the normally liquid product from the first hydroprocessing stage can be hydrogenated in a second stage catalytic hydrogenation reactor in the presence of a bed of particulate hydrogenation catalyst. The dispersed hydrogenation catalyst can be added as an aqueous solution of an alkali metal or ammonium molybdate, tungstate or vanadate. The solid contact particles can be waste catalyst fines, silica gel, alumina or clay. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Hydroprocessing of heavy hydrocarbonacepus oils This invention relates to the hydroprocessing of heavy oils and more particularly to the hydroprocessing of heavy oils in the presence of particulate solids. According to this invention, heavy hydrocarbonaceous oils are hydroprocessed to achieve a normally liquid product having one or more of (a) a reduced average molecular weight, (b) a reduced suifur content, (c) a reduced nitrogen content, and (d) a reduced content of soluble metals contaminants (Ni, V, and Fe).
A variety of heavy oil processing techniques which involve the addition of solids have been reported. U.S. Patent 2,462,891 discloses the treatment of an oil with inert fluidized heat transfer solids followed by solids separation end further treatment in the presence of a fluidized catalyst. U.S. Patent 3,331,769 discloses the addition of soluble decomposable organometallic compounds to a feedstock prior to contacting with a supported particulate catalyst. U.S. Patent 3,635,943 discloses hydrotreating oils in the presence of both a fine catalyst and a course catalyst. Canadian Patents 1,073,389 and 1,076,983 disclose the use of particles such as coal for treatment of heavy oils. U.S. patent 3,583,900 discloses a coal liquefaction process which can employ dispersed catalysts and downstream catalytic refining. U.S.Patent 4,G18,663 discloses two-stage coal liquefaction involving noncatalytic contact particles in a dissolution stage. U.S. Patent 3,707,461 describes the use of coal derived ash as a hydrocracking catalyst. U.S. Patent 4,169,041 discloses a coking process employing a finely divided catalyst and the recycle of coke. U.S. Patent 4,066,530 discloses the addition of a solid iron-containing species and a catalyst precursor to a heavy oil and U.S. Patent 4,172,814 discloses the use of an emulsion catalyst for conversion of ash-containing coals. Heretofore, however, it has not been recognized that finely divided catalysts interact synergistically with porous contact particles in the hydrogenation of heavy oils.
This invention is concerned with a process for hydroprocessing a heavy hydrocarbonaceous oil feed to convert at least a portion of components boiling above 3050C to components boiling below 3500C comprising (a) contacting said oil feed with added hydrogen in a reaction zone under hydroprocessing conditions in the presence of (1) solids suspended in said oil and containing at least one added catalytic hydrogenation component selected from transition elements or components thereof, and (2) added porous contact particles to produce a first effluent having a normally liquid portion; and, in a two-stage process, (b) contacting at least a portion of the normally liquid portion of said first effluent in a second reaction zone with hydrogen under hydrogenation conditions in the presence of a bed of particulate hydrogenation catalyst to produce a second effluent.The process is particularly advantageous for processing carbonaceous feedstocks containing soluble metal contaminants, e.g., Ni, V, Fe. When the heavy hydrocarbonaceous oil feed contains soluble metal contaminants, the hydroprocessing causes a deposition of metals from the soluble metal contaminants onto the second added particulate solids, thereby producing an effluent having a normally (room temperature at one atmosphere) liquid portion with a reduced soluble metals concentration. The dispersed catalyst can be added as a water/oil emulsion prepared by dispersing a water soluble salt of one or more transition elements in oil before or concurrently with introduction of the catalyst to the oil feed. The porous contact particles are preferably inexpensive materials such as alumina, porous silica gel, naturally occurring or treated clays, etc.
The accompanying drawing is a biock diagram showing by way of example a two-stage heavy oil treatment process according to this invention.
According to this invention, a heavy oil is hydroprocessed in the presence of two distinct types of added particulate solids: (1) a finely divided suspended catalyst and (2) porous contact particles which may or may not be suspended. For purposes of this invention, the term "added particulate solids" is intended to include only materials which are not normally present in the feed, e.g., as impurities or byproducts of previous processing. Likewise, the term "added particulate solids" does not include solids which are normally indigenous to the hydrocarbonaceous feed itself, such as unreacted coal in coalderived oils or oil shale fines in retorted shale oil, etc.The porous (i.e., non-glassy) contact particles are preferably totally or substantially free of catalytic transition metals or transition metal compounds added to impart catalytic activity to the solids, however, the contact particles can contain added catalytic metal components when economically justified. The porous contact particles are preferably inexpensive materials such as alumina, porous silica gel, clays and waste catalyst fines, which only incidentally contain catalytic metals as a result of their prior service. The porous contact particles may include ash from coal liquefaction, which may or may not contain carbonaceous coal residue. Coal ash high in average iron content could function as a dispersed catalyst in combination with a separate non-catalytic contact particle.Coal ash low in average iron content could function as non-catalytic contact particles in combination with a separate dispersed hydrogenation catalyst.
According to this invention, it has been found that dispersed hydrogenation catalysts interact synergistically with porous contact particles during hydroprocessing of heavy hydrocarbonaceous feedstocks. Suitable heavy oil feedstocks according to this invention include crude petroleum, petroleum residua, such as atmospheric and vacuum residua, vacuum gas oils, reduced crudes, deasphalted residua, and heavy hydrocarbonaceous oils derived from coal, including anthracite, bituminous, sub-bituminous coals and lignite, hydrocarbonaceous liquids derived from oil shale, tar sand, gilsonite, etc. Typically the hydrocarbonaceous liquids will contain more than 50 weight percent components boiling above 2000 C.
The process of this invention is particularly effective for hydroprocessing heavy oil feeds which contain soluble metal compounds, at least 5 ppm total Ni + V, or even 50+ ppm, which are typically present in crude petroleum, petroleum residua and shale oil or shale oil fractions, and which also typically contain at least about 2, or in some cases at least about 0.1 weight percent n-heptane insoluble asphaltenes.
First-stage hydroprocessing conditions suitable for use according to this invention include a hydrogen partial pressure above 35 atmospheres, a temperature in the range of 400 to 4800 C, preferably 425 to 4550C, a residence time of 0.1 to 3 hours, preferably 0.1 to 1 hour, a pressure in the range of 40-680 atmospheres, preferably 100 to 340 atmospheres, and a hydrogen gas rate of 355 to 3550 liters per liters of oil feed, and preferably 380 to 1780 liters per liter of oil feed. Preferably, the first-stage hydroprocessing zone is operated in the absence of externally provided carbon monoxide.
However, small amounts of carbon monoxide may be present in internaily recycled gas to the hydroprocessing zone. If desired, the first-stage hydroprocessing zone may be sufficiently elongated to attain plug flow conditions. Preferably the feed will flow upwardly through the hydroprocessing zone. A suitable feed distribution system is described in our British Patent Application No. 8118041 (Serial No.
2078537).
The finely divided catalytic material to be dispersed can be added either as a finely divided transition metal compound such as a transition metal sulfide, nitrate, acetate, etc. Examples of suitable transition metal compounds include Ni(NO3)2 6H20, NiCO3, (NH4)6Mo7O24. 4H2O, (NH4)2MoO4, Co(NO3)2 6H20, CoCO3, and various oxides and sulfides of iron, cobalt, and nickel. The dispersed catalytic material may alternately be added as an aqueous solution of one or more water soluble transition metal compounds such as molybdates, tungstates or vanadates or ammonium or alkali metals. Suitable emulsion catalysts and a method for their introduction are described in U.S.Patent 4,172,814, issued October 1979 Moll et al for "Emulsion Catalyst For Hydrogenation Catalyst".
Alternatively the dispersed hydrogenation catalyst can be added as an oil soluble compound, e.g., organometallic compounds such as molybdenum naphthenates, cobalt naphthenates, molybdenum oleates, and others as are well known in the art. If finely divided iron compounds are employed the feed can be contacted with H2S in sufficient quantity to convert the iron species to catalytic species The concentration of dispersed, suspended hydrogenation catalyst is preferably less than 20 weight percent of the feed calculated as catalytic metal and more preferably 0.001 to 5 weight percent of the feed to the first stage. When the finely divided catalyst is added as a emulsion, it is preferably mixed by rapid agitation with the feed prior to entry into the hydroprocessing zone wherein contact is made with the porous contact particles.In addition the finely divided hydrogenation catalyst can be added to the oil feed or to any recycle stream fed to the first-stage hydrogenation zone of the process.
The added hydrogenation catalyst is preferably added in an amount sufficient to suppress coke formation within the first-stage hydroprocessing zone.
The porous contact particles are preferably inexpensive porous material, such as alumina, silica gel, petroleum coke, and a variety of naturally occurring clays, ores, etc. A particularly convenient material for use as a contact material is spent fluid catalytic cracking fines, which are typically 10-50 microns in diameter, however, some submicron material may also be present. The spent FCC fines can contain zeolitic material and can also contain small mounts of contaminants from the prior feedstock, including iron, nickel, vanadium, sulfur, carbon and minor amounts of other components. For purposes of this invention spent fluid catalytic cracking fines have the composition and properties listed in Table 1.
TABLE 1 Composition and Characteristics of Spent FCC Fines Mean Particle Diameter, microns 5-50 Bulk Density, grams/cc 0.25-0.75 Surface Al-ea, meter2/gram 50-200 Pore Volume, cc/gram 0.1-0.6 Fe concentration, % by weight 0.10--1 C concentration, % by weight 0.1-2 Ni concentration, ppm 50-2000 V concentration, ppm 50-2000 The porous contact particles can be suspended or entrained in the oil, e.g., in a concentration of 0.1-20 weight percent, or can be present as a packed or expanded bed.Because metals from soluble metals compounds in the feed tend to deposit upon the contact particles, it is preferred that the particles be in a restrained bed, rather than being entrained with the product. Preferably the bed is a packed bed, such as a fixed or a gravity-packed moving bed. One convenient technique is to employ the contact particles in a bed which moves only periodically in order to replace particles which become heavily loaded with contaminant metals with fresh material. The bed can move co-currently or countercurrently, preferably countercurrently.
In addition to the catalyst and contact particles, a hydrogen donor oil may be added to the hydrogenation zone to help prevent coke formation. This hydrogen donor oil can be a recycle stream from the hydrogenated product or it can be supplied from an external source, such as hydrogenated petroleum or coal liquids.
In a two-stage process, at least a portion of the effluent from the first stage is passed to a secondstage catalytic hydrogenation zone wherein it is contacted with hydrogen in the presence of a bed of conventionally supported hydrogenation catalyst. Preferably, substantially all of the dispersed catalyst is passed through the second stage. Substantially all of the contact particles can also be passed through the second stage, if desired, but preferably they are retained in the first reaction zone. Preferably, the entire effluent from the first reaction zone is substantially free of the contact particles and is passed to the second zone.
The second reaction zone preferably contains a packed or fixed bed of catalyst, and the entire liquid feed to the second reaction zone preferably passes upwardly through the bed of catalyst. A flow distributor as described in our above-mentioned published British Patent Application may be used, if desired. The packed bed can move periodically, if desired, to permit catalyst replacement. The catalyst in the second reaction zone can be present as an ebullating bed, if desired. The catalyst in the second reaction zone should be of a different composition than the finely divided catalyst or contact particles added to the first stage.
The preferred catalyst for the second stage comprises at least one hydrogenation component selected from Groups Vl-B and VIII, present as metals, oxides, or sulfides. The hydrogenation component is supported on a refractory inorganic base, for example, alumina, silica, and composites of alumina-silica, alumina-boria, silica-alumina-magnesia, silica-alumina-titania. Phosphorus promoters can also be present in the catalyst. A suitable catalyst can contain, for example, 1 to 10% Co, 1 to 20% Mo, and 0.5 to 5% P on a y-alumina support. Such a catalyst can be prepared according to the teachings of U.S. Patent 4,113,661, to Tamm.
The second hydrogenation zone is operated at a temperature lower than the first hydrogenation zone, and generally 315 to 4550C, preferably 340 to 425CC, more preferably 360 to 4000C; a pressure of generally 40 to 340 atmospheres, preferably 70 to 210 atmospheres, more preferably 140 to 1 90 atmospheres; a space velocity of generally 0.1 to 2, preferably 0.2 to 1.5, more preferably 0.25 to 1 hours; and a hydrogen feed rate of generally 170 to 3400 liters/liter of feed, preferably 340 to 2700 liters/liter, more preferably 550 to 1 700 liters/liter.
Referring to the drawing, a heavy hydrocarbonaceous oil feed, such as petroleum vacuum residuum is contacted in zone 10 with an emulsion prepared by dispersing aqueous ammonium heptamolybdate solution in fuel oil. The amount of molybdenum in the emulsion is sufficient to provide 0.00005 to 0.0005 kilograms of molybdenum, as metal per kilogram of residuum. The feed containing dispersed catalyst is passed through line 1 5 to the first-stage hydrogenation zone 20 wherein it is contacted with hydrogen at 400 to 4500 C, a pressure of 1 70 to 200 atmospheres, a hydrogen pressure of 1 50 to 1 90 atmospheres, a hydrogen rate of 1500-1800 liters/liter of feed, and a residence time of 0.5 to 2 hours.Hydrogenation zone 20 is an upflow vessel containing a packed bed of attapulgite clay. The entire effluent from first hydrogenation zone 20 is passed to second hydrogenation zone 30 through a conduit 25. The second hydrogenation zone 30 is an upflow vessel containing a fixed bed of hydrogenation catalyst comprising Co, Mo, and P on a alumina support. The second hydrogenation zone is preferably operated at a temperature of 360 to 4000 C, a pressure of 1 70 to 200 atmospheres, a residence time oi 1 to 5 hours, and a hydrogen pressure of 1 50 to 1 90 atmospheres.The effluent from second hydrogenation zone 30 is passed through conduit 35 to a high pressure separator 40 wherein recycle gas rich in hydrogen is removed and recycled through line 50, C4-hydrocarbon product is received through line 45, and normally liquid product is passed to solids separator 60, e.g., a filter or hydroclone, normally liquid hydrocarbons are obtained through line 65 and solids, including catalyst particles, are withdrawn through line 75. If desired, a portion of the normally liquid product is recycled through line 70 to zone 10.
COMPARATIVE EXAMPLES The following examples demonstrate the synergistic effects obtainable when a dispersed catalyst and additional solids are present in a first stage of heavy oil hydroprocessing. Crude petroleum from Kern County, California was hydroprocessed in a single stage reactor operated at 4400 C, a 1 hours hourly space velocity, 1 60 atmospheres pressure and 1 780 liters of hydrogen per liter of feed. Three feeds were employed. Feed A was Kern crude containing 250 ppm ammonium molybdate added as an aqueous emulsion. Feed B contained 10 weight percent spent fluid catalytic cracking catalyst fines which contained small amounts of nickel and vanadium contaminants. Feed C contained 10 weight percent of the fluid catalytic cracking catalyst fines as in Feed B, plus 250 ppm ammonium molybdate as in Feed A.The results are depicted in Table 2.
TABLE 2 Feed Kern Crude A B C Gravity,OAPI 13.5 17.4 18.7 19.0 TGA, wt.% 3430C 12.4 41.2 62.2 47.8 343--537"C 44.6 43.4 29.3 42.0 5370C+ 43.0 15.5 8.5 10.2 Atomic H/C ratio 1.55 1.55 1.55 1.56 N,wt.% 0.74 0.76 0.74 0.71 O, wt.% 1.55 0.38 0.35 0.28 S, wt.% 1.22 0.62 0.65 0.57 n-heptaneinsolubles,wt.% 2.13 2.99 2.88 1.64 Ni/V/Fe, ppmw 64/33/18 59/26/4 41/16/5 17/7/ < 3 C1-C3 Gas Make, wt.% MAF - 2.7 3.9 2.9 It is seen that when both the ammonium molybdate catalyst and the FCC fines were employed, the asphaltenes in the product were reduced significantly from the cases where FCC fines or ammonium molybdate were individually present. Likewise, the nickel, vanadium and iron concentrations were significantly decreased when both the dispersed catalyst and the FCC fines were present. The reduction in metal contamination in the first stage protects the second-stage catalyst from metals contamination.

Claims (14)

1. A process for hydroprocessing a heavy hydrocarbonaceous oil feed to convert at least a portion of feed components boiling above 3500C to components boiling below 3500C, which process comprises: (a) contacting said oil with added hydrogen in a hydroprocessing zone under hydroprocessing conditions in the presence of (1) added dispersed hydrogenation catalyst suspended in said oil and containing at least one catalytic hydrogenation component selected from transition metal elements and compounds thereof, and (2) added porous contact particles to produce a first effluent having a normally liquid portion; and if desired (b) contacting at least a portion of said normally liquid portion of the first effluent in a hydrogenation zone with hydrogen under hydrogenation conditions in the presence of a bed of particulate hydrogenation catalyst to produce a second effluent.
2. A process according to Claim 1 , wherein the heavy hydrocarbonaceous oil contains soluble metal contaminants and at least 0.1 weight percent n-heptane insoluble asphaltenes, and the hydroprocessing conditions in the hydroprocessing zone cause deposition of metals from the soluble metal contaminants on to the porous contact particles to produce a first effluent having a normally liquid portion with reduced soluble metals concentration.
3. A process according to Claim 1 or 2, wherein the porous contact particles are substantially noncarbonaceous.
4. A process according to Claim 1,2 or 3; wherein said added hydrogenation catalyst is added initially as an oil/aqueous emulsion of an aqueous solution containing said catalytic hydrogenation component.
5. A process according to Claim 4, wherein said aqueous solution contains a metal compound selected from molybdates, tungstates, and vanadates of alkali metals or ammonium.
6. A process according to Claim 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5, wherein the added hydrogenation catalyst is present in the hydroprocessing zone in an amount sufficient to substantially suppress coke accumulation within said hydroprocessing zone.
7. A process according to any preceding claim, wherein said hydroprocessing conditions include a hydrogen partial pressure of above 35 atmospheres, a temperature in the range from 400 to 4800 C, a pressure in the range from 40 to 680 atmospheres, a residence time of 0.1 to 3 hours and a hydrogen gas rate of 355 to 3550 liters per liter of feed, and said hydrogenation conditions including a temperature lower than the temperature of the hydroprocessing zone and in the range from 31 5 to 4550C, a pressure in the range from 40 to 340 atmospheres, a space velocity in the range from 0.1 to 2 hour1, and a hydrogen feed rate of from 170 to 3400 liters per liter of feed.
8. A process according to any preceding claim, wherein said porous contact particles comprise material selected from spent FCC catalyst fines, alumina and naturally occurring clays.
9. A process according to any preceding claim, wherein said porous contact particles in the hydroprocessing zone are suspended in said oil.
10. A process according to any one of Claims 1 to 8, wherein said porous contact particles in the hydroprocessing zone are present in a packed bed.
11. A process according to any one of Claims 1 to 8, wherein said porous contact particles in the hydroprocessing zone are present in an ebullating bed.
1 2. A process according to any preceding claim, wherein substantially all of the dispersed catalyst from the hydroprocessing zone is passed to said hydrogenation zone.
13. A process according to Claim 12 as appendant to Claim 9, wherein the porous contact particles in the hydroprocessing zone are suspended in said oil and substantially all of said porous contact particles are passed from said hydroprocessing zone to said hydrogenation zone.
14. A process according to any preceding claim, the particular hydrogenation catalyst in said hydrogenation zone is present as a packed bed.
1 5. A process according to Claim 14, wherein the entire liquid feed to said hydrogenation zone passes upwardly through said packed bed of particulate hydrogenation catalyst.
1 6. A process according to Claim 12, wherein the effluent from the hydroprocessing zone is substantially free of said contact particles and the entire liquid effluent from the hydroprocessing zone is passed to the hydrogenation zone.
1 7. A process according to Claim 16, wherein the particulate hydrogenation catalyst in said hydrogenation zone is present as a packed bed and the entire liquid feed to said hydrogenation zone passes upwardly through the bed of particulate hydrogenation catalyst.
1 8. A process in accordance with Claim 1 for hydroprocessing a heavy hydrocarbonaceous oil feed, substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to the accompanying drawing.
1 9. A process in accordance with Claim 1 for hydroprocessing a heavy hydrocarbonaceous oil feed, substantially as described in the foregoing Examples.
GB08229151A 1981-10-16 1982-10-12 Hydroprocessing of heavy hydrocarbonaceous oils Expired GB2107732B (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US31243681A 1981-10-16 1981-10-16
US06/312,437 US4376037A (en) 1981-10-16 1981-10-16 Hydroprocessing of heavy hydrocarbonaceous oils
US06/314,141 US4389301A (en) 1981-10-22 1981-10-22 Two-step hydroprocessing of heavy hydrocarbonaceous oils

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2107732A true GB2107732A (en) 1983-05-05
GB2107732B GB2107732B (en) 1985-08-14

Family

ID=27405591

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB08229151A Expired GB2107732B (en) 1981-10-16 1982-10-12 Hydroprocessing of heavy hydrocarbonaceous oils

Country Status (6)

Country Link
JP (1) JPH0631332B2 (en)
DE (1) DE3237037A1 (en)
FR (1) FR2514778B1 (en)
GB (1) GB2107732B (en)
MX (1) MX7495E (en)
NL (1) NL8203780A (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20120167457A1 (en) * 2010-09-30 2012-07-05 Philip Harsh Methods and compositions for drying coal
US9004284B2 (en) 2009-10-01 2015-04-14 Vitrinite Services, Llc Mineral slurry drying method and system
EP3017023B1 (en) * 2013-07-02 2018-02-28 Saudi Basic Industries Corporation Method for converting a high-boiling hydrocarbon feedstock into lighter boiling hydrocarbon products

Families Citing this family (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4564439A (en) * 1984-06-29 1986-01-14 Chevron Research Company Two-stage, close-coupled thermal catalytic hydroconversion process
DE69206314T2 (en) * 1991-05-02 1996-04-18 Texaco Development Corp Hydroconversion process.
CA2073417C (en) * 1991-11-22 2004-04-20 Michael K. Porter Improved hydroconversion process
US5320741A (en) * 1992-04-09 1994-06-14 Stone & Webster Engineering Corporation Combination process for the pretreatment and hydroconversion of heavy residual oils
CA2095664A1 (en) * 1992-07-02 1994-01-03 Michael K. Porter Hydroconversion process and catalyst
US6406615B1 (en) * 1998-05-26 2002-06-18 Idemitsu Kosan Co., Ltd. Hydrotreating process for residual oil
JP3404522B2 (en) * 1999-10-29 2003-05-12 独立行政法人産業技術総合研究所 Hydroprocessing of heavy oil
ES2621425T3 (en) * 2005-08-16 2017-07-04 Research Institute Of Petroleum Process for hydroconversion of a heavy hydrocarbon feedstock.

Family Cites Families (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2987467A (en) * 1958-05-26 1961-06-06 Hydrocarbon Research Inc Removal of sulfur and metals from heavy oils by hydro-catalytic treatment
US3180820A (en) * 1962-08-15 1965-04-27 Universal Oil Prod Co Dual zone hydrorefining process
US3331769A (en) * 1965-03-22 1967-07-18 Universal Oil Prod Co Hydrorefining petroleum crude oil
US3583900A (en) * 1969-12-29 1971-06-08 Universal Oil Prod Co Coal liquefaction process by three-stage solvent extraction
US3817855A (en) * 1971-10-12 1974-06-18 Mobil Oil Corp Hydroprocessing of resids with metal adsorption on the second stage catalyst
CA1077917A (en) * 1976-07-02 1980-05-20 Clyde L. Aldridge Hydroconversion of heavy hydrocarbons
US4136013A (en) * 1977-02-28 1979-01-23 The Dow Chemical Company Emulsion catalyst for hydrogenation processes
US4172814A (en) * 1977-02-28 1979-10-30 The Dow Chemical Company Emulsion catalyst for hydrogenation processes
US4169041A (en) * 1978-04-05 1979-09-25 Exxon Research & Engineering Co. Fluid coking with the addition of dispersible metal compounds
US4211634A (en) * 1978-11-13 1980-07-08 Standard Oil Company (Indiana) Two-catalyst hydrocracking process
FR2456774A1 (en) * 1979-05-18 1980-12-12 Inst Francais Du Petrole PROCESS FOR HYDROTREATING LIQUID PHASE HEAVY HYDROCARBONS IN THE PRESENCE OF A DISPERSE CATALYST
FR2511389A1 (en) * 1981-08-11 1983-02-18 Inst Francais Du Petrole PROCESS FOR THE CATALYTIC HYDROCONVERSION OF LIQUID PHASE HEAVY HYDROCARBONS AND THE PRESENCE OF A DISPERSE CATALYST AND CHARCOAL PARTICLES

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US9004284B2 (en) 2009-10-01 2015-04-14 Vitrinite Services, Llc Mineral slurry drying method and system
US9759486B2 (en) 2009-10-01 2017-09-12 Vitrinite Services, Llc Mineral slurry drying method and system
US20120167457A1 (en) * 2010-09-30 2012-07-05 Philip Harsh Methods and compositions for drying coal
US8302325B2 (en) * 2010-09-30 2012-11-06 Ross Technology Corporation Methods and compositions for drying coal
EP3017023B1 (en) * 2013-07-02 2018-02-28 Saudi Basic Industries Corporation Method for converting a high-boiling hydrocarbon feedstock into lighter boiling hydrocarbon products
US10899978B2 (en) 2013-07-02 2021-01-26 Saudi Basic Industries Corporation Method for converting a high-boiling hydrocarbon feedstock into lighter boiling hydrocarbon products

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
JPS5879092A (en) 1983-05-12
MX7495E (en) 1989-04-26
JPH0631332B2 (en) 1994-04-27
GB2107732B (en) 1985-08-14
FR2514778B1 (en) 1988-02-19
NL8203780A (en) 1983-05-16
FR2514778A1 (en) 1983-04-22
DE3237037A1 (en) 1983-04-28

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4389301A (en) Two-step hydroprocessing of heavy hydrocarbonaceous oils
US4376037A (en) Hydroprocessing of heavy hydrocarbonaceous oils
US4067799A (en) Hydroconversion process
US3617481A (en) Combination deasphalting-coking-hydrotreating process
US4066530A (en) Hydroconversion of heavy hydrocarbons
US5374348A (en) Hydrocracking of heavy hydrocarbon oils with heavy hydrocarbon recycle
US4695369A (en) Catalytic hydroconversion of heavy oil using two metal catalyst
US4564439A (en) Two-stage, close-coupled thermal catalytic hydroconversion process
US4370221A (en) Catalytic hydrocracking of heavy oils
US5178749A (en) Catalytic process for treating heavy oils
US5591325A (en) Process for hydrotreating heavy oil and hydrotreating apparatus
US4376695A (en) Simultaneous demetalization and hydrocracking of heavy hydrocarbon oils
US5914030A (en) Process for reducing total acid number of crude oil
US3453206A (en) Multiple-stage hydrorefining of petroleum crude oil
US4379744A (en) Coal liquefaction process
US5928502A (en) Process for reducing total acid number of crude oil
GB2107732A (en) Hydroprocessing of heavy hydrocarbonaceous oils
US5061362A (en) Process for hydrogenation of heavy oil
JP3875001B2 (en) Hydrocracking method of heavy petroleum oil
US3825488A (en) Process for hydrorefining a hydrocarbon charge stock
US10745630B2 (en) Staged introduction of additives in slurry hydrocracking process
US4659452A (en) Multi-stage hydrofining process
US4510038A (en) Coal liquefaction using vacuum distillation and an external residuum feed
US4428820A (en) Coal liquefaction process with controlled recycle of ethyl acetate-insolubles
US3288704A (en) Auto-regeneration of hydrofining catalysts

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 19941012