US20030221990A1 - Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle - Google Patents
Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US20030221990A1 US20030221990A1 US10/162,774 US16277402A US2003221990A1 US 20030221990 A1 US20030221990 A1 US 20030221990A1 US 16277402 A US16277402 A US 16277402A US 2003221990 A1 US2003221990 A1 US 2003221990A1
- Authority
- US
- United States
- Prior art keywords
- hydroprocessing
- kerosene
- naphtha
- zone
- range
- 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.)
- Abandoned
Links
Images
Classifications
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C10—PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
- C10G—CRACKING 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
- C10G65/00—Treatment of hydrocarbon oils by two or more hydrotreatment processes only
- C10G65/02—Treatment of hydrocarbon oils by two or more hydrotreatment processes only plural serial stages only
- C10G65/10—Treatment of hydrocarbon oils by two or more hydrotreatment processes only plural serial stages only including only cracking steps
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C10—PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
- C10G—CRACKING 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
- C10G65/00—Treatment of hydrocarbon oils by two or more hydrotreatment processes only
- C10G65/02—Treatment of hydrocarbon oils by two or more hydrotreatment processes only plural serial stages only
- C10G65/12—Treatment of hydrocarbon oils by two or more hydrotreatment processes only plural serial stages only including cracking steps and other hydrotreatment steps
Definitions
- This invention relates to a multi-stage hydrocracking process in which light products from the first stage, such as naphtha, kerosene and diesel, are joined with naphtha, kerosene and diesel from other sources and recycled from fractionation to a second stage (or subsequent stage) hydrocracker in order to produce lighter products, such as gas and naphtha.
- first stage such as naphtha, kerosene and diesel
- second stage or subsequent stage hydrocracker
- U.S. Pat. No. 5,447,621 discloses a middle distillate upgrading process.
- a middle distillate side stream of a conventional single-stage hydrocracking process is circulated to a hydrotreating stage, such as an aromatics saturation reactor and/or a catalytic dewaxing reactor in order to effect middle distillate upgrade.
- the upgraded product is then finished in a fractionation stage side-stripper column.
- This invention discloses passing middle distillate to a hydrotreating stage.
- the middle distillates are being upgraded, not cracked, as in the instant invention.
- U.S. Pat. No. 4,789,457 discloses a process in which a highly aromatic substantially dealkylated feedstock is processed directly to high octane gasoline by hydrocracking over a catalyst preferably comprising a large pore zeolite such as zeolite Y, in addition to a hydrogenation-dehydrogenation component.
- the feedstock is preferably a light cycle oil. Light cycle oil is heavier than the kerosene and naphtha cracked in the instant invention, and only one hydrocracking stage is employed in Fischer et al.
- the invention disclosed herein is a process for the production of light products, such as gas and naphtha, by processing kerosene in a second stage (or a subsequent stage) of a multi-stage hydrocracker. Kerosene, diesel and naphtha from other sources are included in the recycle, and subsequent hydroprocessing stages are maintained at lower pressures than the initial hydroprocessing stage. This results in cost savings.
- a method for hydroprocessing a hydrocarbon feedstock employing multiple hydroprocessing zones within a single reaction loop and comprising the following steps:
- step (b) removing the vapor stream of step (a), which comprises hydrogen, hydrogen sulfide and light hydrocarbonaceous gases overhead;
- step (c) combining the liquid stream of step (b) with the liquid effluent from other hydroprocessing zones;
- step (d) passing the liquid stream of step (c), which comprises hydrocarbonaceous compounds boiling in approximately the same range of the hydrocarbonaceous feedstock, to fractionation;
- step (e) separating the liquid stream of step (d), in fractionation, into gas, naphtha, kerosene and diesel fractions, in addition to the bottoms fraction;
- step (f) passing the bottoms fraction of step (e) to further processing or recycling to one or more of the other hydroprocessing zones of step (c);
- the Figure illustrates a two-stage hydrocracking process having the capability for recycle of bottoms fractions, diesel fractions, kerosene fraction or naphtha fractions to the second reactor stage.
- Preheated oil feed in stream 1 is mixed with hydrogen in stream 2 prior to its entrance into first stage or primary hydroprocessing zone 10 .
- This hydroprocessing zone is preferably a downflow, fixed bed reactor.
- This reactor contains multiple beds of hydroprocessing catalysts. At least one bed contains hydrocracking catalyst.
- the effluent 3 of the first stage reactor which has been hydrotreated and partially hydrocracked, comprises a liquid stream and a vapor stream.
- the vapor stream 3 ( a ) is removed overhead. It comprises hydrogen, hydrogen sulfide and light hydrocarbonaceous gases.
- the liquid stream 3 ( b ) is combined with the liquid effluent from other process zones, represented by stream 4 .
- Stream 3 ( b ) and stream 4 are combined to create stream 5 .
- Stream 5 is passed to the fractionation unit 30 , where it is separated into gas stream 6 , naphtha stream 7 , kerosene stream 8 , diesel stream 9 , and bottoms stream 14 .
- the naphtha product may alternately be recycled, in whole or in part, through stream 11 to stream 15 , and ultimately to second stage reactor 20 .
- Kerosene product may alternately be recycled, in whole or in part, through stream 12 to stream 15 , and ultimately to second stage reactor 20 .
- Diesel product may be alternately recycled, in whole or in part, through stream 13 to stream 15 , and ultimately to second stage reactor 20 .
- Bottoms material in stream 14 may be passed to further processing (in stream 14 a ) or, alternately, may be recycled in stream 14 ( b ) to second reactor 20 .
- Second reactor 20 represents hydroprocessing zones subsequent to the first hydroprocessing zone. Each of these zones possesses an environment substantially free of H 2 S, NH 3 or other heteroatom components.
- feedstocks include any heavy or synthetic oil fraction or process stream having a boiling point above 392° F. (200° C.).
- feedstocks include vacuum gas oils, heavy atmospheric gas oil, delayed coker gas oil, visbreaker gas oil demetallized oils, vacuum residua, atmospheric residua, deasphalted oil, Fischer-Tropsch streams, and FCC streams.
- a middle distillate fraction is defined as having an approximate boiling range from about 250° F. to 700° F. At least 75 vol %, preferably 85 vol %, of the components of the middle distillate have a normal boiling point of greater than 250° F. At least about 75 vol %, preferably 85 vol %, of the components of the middle distillate have a normal boiling point of less than 700° F.
- the term “middle distillate” includes the diesel, jet fuel and kerosene boiling range fractions.
- the kerosene or jet fuel boiling point range refers to the range between 280° F. and 525° F. (38-274° C.).
- the term “diesel boiling range” refers to hydrocarbons boiling in the range from 250° F. to 700° F. (121-371° C.).
- Gasoline and naphtha production is emphasized in the process of this invention.
- Gasoline or naphtha normally boils in the range below 400° F. (204° C.), or C 10 ⁇ .
- Boiling ranges of various product fractions recovered in any particular refinery will vary with such factors as the characteristics of the crude oil source, local refinery markets, and product prices.
- Heavy hydrotreated gas oil another product of this invention, usually boils in the range from 550° F. to 700° F.
- Hydroprocessing conditions is a general term which refers primarily in this application to hydrocracking or hydrotreating, preferably hydrocracking.
- the first stage reactor as depicted in FIG. 1, is a partial conversion hydrocracker.
- Typical hydrocracking conditions include a reaction temperature of from 400° F.-950° F. (204° C.-510° C.), preferably 650° F.-850° F. (343° C.-454° C.).
- Reaction pressure ranges from 500 to 5000 psig (3.5-4.5 MPa), preferably 1500-3500 psig (10.4-24.2 MPa).
- LHSV ranges from 0.1 to 15 hr ⁇ 1 (v/v), preferably 0.25-2.5 hr ⁇ 1 .
- Hydrogen consumption ranges from 500 to 2500 SCF per barrel of liquid hydrocarbon feed (89.1-445 m 3 H 2 /m 3 feed).
- Reactors subsequent to the first hydroprocessing reactor are operated at a pressure at least 100 psig lower than that of the first reactor, and preferably from 500 to 1000 psig lower than the first reactor.
- Each hydroprocessing zone may contain only one catalyst, or several catalysts in combination.
- the hydrocracking catalyst generally comprises a cracking component, a hydrogenation component, and a binder.
- the cracking component may include an amorphous silica/alumina phase and/or a zeolite, such as a Y-type or USY zeolite. Catalysts having high cracking activity often employ REX, REY and USY zeolites.
- the binder is generally silica or alumina.
- the hydrogenation component will be a Group VI, Group VII, or Group VIII metal or oxides or sulfides thereof, preferably one or more of iron, chromium, molybdenum, tungsten, cobalt, or nickel, or the sulfides or oxides thereof. If present in the catalyst, these hydrogenation components generally make up from about 5% to about 40% by weight of the catalyst. Alternatively, noble metals, especially platinum and/or palladium, may be present as the hydrogenation component, either alone or in combination with the base metal hydrogenation components iron, chromium molybdenum, tungsten, cobalt, or nickel. If present, the platinum group metals will generally make up from about 0.1% to about 2% by weight of the catalyst.
- Hydrotreating catalyst usually is designed to remove sulfur and nitrogen and provide a degree of aromatic saturation. It will typically be a composite of a Group VI metal or compound thereof, and a Group VIII metal or compound thereof supported on a porous refractory base such as alumina.
- Examples of hydrotreating catalysts are alumina supported cobalt-molybdenum, nickel sulfide, nickel-tungsten, cobalt-tungsten and nickel-molybdenum. Typically, such hydrotreating catalysts are presulfided.
- Catalyst selection is dictated by process needs and product specifications.
- a noble catalyst may be used in the second stage when there is a low amount of H 2 S present.
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
This invention relates to a multi-stage process for hydroprocessing gas oils. Preferably, each stage possesses at least one hydrocracking zone. The second stage and any subsequent stages possess an environment having a low heteroatom content. Light products, such as naphtha, kerosene and diesel, may be recycled from fractionation (along with light products from other sources) to the second stage (or a subsequent stage) in order to produce a larger yield of lighter products, such as gas and naphtha. Subsequent zones are maintained at a lower pressure than that of the first zone, thereby reducing operating expenses.
Description
- This invention relates to a multi-stage hydrocracking process in which light products from the first stage, such as naphtha, kerosene and diesel, are joined with naphtha, kerosene and diesel from other sources and recycled from fractionation to a second stage (or subsequent stage) hydrocracker in order to produce lighter products, such as gas and naphtha.
- Historically, there has been little interest in cracking kerosene or other light products to even lighter products. In the United States, there is little demand for gas or other very light volatile products. Bottoms materials are usually the material recycled in two-stage hydrocracking as practiced in the United States. There is, however, a demand for products such as LPG and LNG in Asia.
- Although there has been demand for very light products in some parts of the world, there was a belief by many experts that light products would not crack in most reactors (using conventional hydrocracking catalysts as opposed to FCC catalysts) because they are in the vapor phase as opposed to the liquid phase. This belief apparently originated due to the fact that the environment in a single-stage hydrocracker, in the presence of H2S and NH3, is not conducive to cracking of light products.
- The concept of recycling bottoms material back to an initial hydrocracking stage (rather than a second hydrocracking stage) is well known. U.S. Pat. No. 6,261,441 (Gentry et al.) discloses recycling of bottoms material which has been hydrocracked and dewaxed back to a hydrocracker.
- U.S. Pat. No. 5,447,621 (Hunter) discloses a middle distillate upgrading process. A middle distillate side stream of a conventional single-stage hydrocracking process is circulated to a hydrotreating stage, such as an aromatics saturation reactor and/or a catalytic dewaxing reactor in order to effect middle distillate upgrade. The upgraded product is then finished in a fractionation stage side-stripper column. This invention discloses passing middle distillate to a hydrotreating stage. The middle distillates are being upgraded, not cracked, as in the instant invention.
- U.S. Pat. No. 4,789,457 (Fischer et al.) discloses a process in which a highly aromatic substantially dealkylated feedstock is processed directly to high octane gasoline by hydrocracking over a catalyst preferably comprising a large pore zeolite such as zeolite Y, in addition to a hydrogenation-dehydrogenation component. The feedstock is preferably a light cycle oil. Light cycle oil is heavier than the kerosene and naphtha cracked in the instant invention, and only one hydrocracking stage is employed in Fischer et al.
- The Applicants have found that in the environment of a clean second-stage hydrocracker, with heteroatoms removed, light products will crack. The examples demonstrate that the net yield of kerosene decreased when recycled to the second stage on a raw feed blend basis, while the qualities of the middle distillates remained the same. Recycling the kerosene to the second stage increased the yield of 170-350° F. reformer naphtha, the product most highly valued by the customer.
- The invention disclosed herein is a process for the production of light products, such as gas and naphtha, by processing kerosene in a second stage (or a subsequent stage) of a multi-stage hydrocracker. Kerosene, diesel and naphtha from other sources are included in the recycle, and subsequent hydroprocessing stages are maintained at lower pressures than the initial hydroprocessing stage. This results in cost savings.
- The instant invention is summarized as follows:
- A method for hydroprocessing a hydrocarbon feedstock, the method employing multiple hydroprocessing zones within a single reaction loop and comprising the following steps:
- (a) passing a hydrocarbonaceous feedstock to a first hydroprocessing zone having one or more beds containing hydroprocessing catalyst, the hydroprocessing zone being maintained at hydroprocessing conditions, wherein the feedstock is contacted with catalyst and hydrogen to produce a vapor stream and a liquid stream as effluent;
- (b) removing the vapor stream of step (a), which comprises hydrogen, hydrogen sulfide and light hydrocarbonaceous gases overhead;
- (c) combining the liquid stream of step (b) with the liquid effluent from other hydroprocessing zones;
- (d) passing the liquid stream of step (c), which comprises hydrocarbonaceous compounds boiling in approximately the same range of the hydrocarbonaceous feedstock, to fractionation;
- (e) separating the liquid stream of step (d), in fractionation, into gas, naphtha, kerosene and diesel fractions, in addition to the bottoms fraction;
- (f) passing the bottoms fraction of step (e) to further processing or recycling to one or more of the other hydroprocessing zones of step (c);
- (g) passing one or more of the naphtha, kerosene and diesel fractions to further processing as products or recycling one or more of the fractions to one or more of the other hydroprocessing zones of step (c) the kerosene, naphtha, and diesel fractions being in combination with kerosene, naphtha and diesel fractions from other sources, said hydroprocessing zones or zones being maintained at hydroprocessing conditions and at lower pressure than the first hydroprocessing zone, and possessing an environment substantially free of H2S, NH3, or other heteroatom contaminants;
- (h) passing the effluent of step (g) to fractionation; and
- (i) recovering in fractionation an increased amount of gas and naphtha, in the fractionation stage of step (h) than in the fractionation step of step (e).
- The Figure illustrates a two-stage hydrocracking process having the capability for recycle of bottoms fractions, diesel fractions, kerosene fraction or naphtha fractions to the second reactor stage.
- Preheated oil feed in
stream 1 is mixed with hydrogen in stream 2 prior to its entrance into first stage orprimary hydroprocessing zone 10. This hydroprocessing zone is preferably a downflow, fixed bed reactor. This reactor contains multiple beds of hydroprocessing catalysts. At least one bed contains hydrocracking catalyst. - The effluent3 of the first stage reactor, which has been hydrotreated and partially hydrocracked, comprises a liquid stream and a vapor stream. The vapor stream 3(a) is removed overhead. It comprises hydrogen, hydrogen sulfide and light hydrocarbonaceous gases. The liquid stream 3(b) is combined with the liquid effluent from other process zones, represented by stream 4. Stream 3(b) and stream 4 are combined to create
stream 5.Stream 5 is passed to thefractionation unit 30, where it is separated into gas stream 6, naphthastream 7, kerosene stream 8,diesel stream 9, andbottoms stream 14. The naphtha product may alternately be recycled, in whole or in part, throughstream 11 to stream 15, and ultimately tosecond stage reactor 20. Kerosene product may alternately be recycled, in whole or in part, throughstream 12 to stream 15, and ultimately tosecond stage reactor 20. Diesel product may be alternately recycled, in whole or in part, throughstream 13 to stream 15, and ultimately tosecond stage reactor 20. Bottoms material instream 14 may be passed to further processing (instream 14 a) or, alternately, may be recycled in stream 14(b) tosecond reactor 20.Second reactor 20 represents hydroprocessing zones subsequent to the first hydroprocessing zone. Each of these zones possesses an environment substantially free of H2S, NH3 or other heteroatom components. - Feeds
- A wide variety of hydrocarbon feeds may be used in the instant invention. Typical feedstocks include any heavy or synthetic oil fraction or process stream having a boiling point above 392° F. (200° C.). Such feedstocks include vacuum gas oils, heavy atmospheric gas oil, delayed coker gas oil, visbreaker gas oil demetallized oils, vacuum residua, atmospheric residua, deasphalted oil, Fischer-Tropsch streams, and FCC streams.
- Products
- Although emphasis is placed on the increased production of gas and naphtha, the process of this invention is also useful in the production of middle distillate fractions boiling in the range of about 250-700° F. (121-371° C.). A middle distillate fraction is defined as having an approximate boiling range from about 250° F. to 700° F. At least 75 vol %, preferably 85 vol %, of the components of the middle distillate have a normal boiling point of greater than 250° F. At least about 75 vol %, preferably 85 vol %, of the components of the middle distillate have a normal boiling point of less than 700° F. The term “middle distillate” includes the diesel, jet fuel and kerosene boiling range fractions.
- The kerosene or jet fuel boiling point range refers to the range between 280° F. and 525° F. (38-274° C.). The term “diesel boiling range” refers to hydrocarbons boiling in the range from 250° F. to 700° F. (121-371° C.).
- Gasoline and naphtha production is emphasized in the process of this invention. Gasoline or naphtha normally boils in the range below 400° F. (204° C.), or C10−. Boiling ranges of various product fractions recovered in any particular refinery will vary with such factors as the characteristics of the crude oil source, local refinery markets, and product prices.
- Heavy hydrotreated gas oil, another product of this invention, usually boils in the range from 550° F. to 700° F.
- Conditions
- Hydroprocessing conditions is a general term which refers primarily in this application to hydrocracking or hydrotreating, preferably hydrocracking. The first stage reactor, as depicted in FIG. 1, is a partial conversion hydrocracker.
- Typical hydrocracking conditions include a reaction temperature of from 400° F.-950° F. (204° C.-510° C.), preferably 650° F.-850° F. (343° C.-454° C.). Reaction pressure ranges from 500 to 5000 psig (3.5-4.5 MPa), preferably 1500-3500 psig (10.4-24.2 MPa). LHSV ranges from 0.1 to 15 hr−1 (v/v), preferably 0.25-2.5 hr−1. Hydrogen consumption ranges from 500 to 2500 SCF per barrel of liquid hydrocarbon feed (89.1-445 m3 H2/m3 feed). Reactors subsequent to the first hydroprocessing reactor are operated at a pressure at least 100 psig lower than that of the first reactor, and preferably from 500 to 1000 psig lower than the first reactor.
- Catalyst
- Each hydroprocessing zone may contain only one catalyst, or several catalysts in combination.
- The hydrocracking catalyst generally comprises a cracking component, a hydrogenation component, and a binder. Such catalysts are well known in the art. The cracking component may include an amorphous silica/alumina phase and/or a zeolite, such as a Y-type or USY zeolite. Catalysts having high cracking activity often employ REX, REY and USY zeolites. The binder is generally silica or alumina. The hydrogenation component will be a Group VI, Group VII, or Group VIII metal or oxides or sulfides thereof, preferably one or more of iron, chromium, molybdenum, tungsten, cobalt, or nickel, or the sulfides or oxides thereof. If present in the catalyst, these hydrogenation components generally make up from about 5% to about 40% by weight of the catalyst. Alternatively, noble metals, especially platinum and/or palladium, may be present as the hydrogenation component, either alone or in combination with the base metal hydrogenation components iron, chromium molybdenum, tungsten, cobalt, or nickel. If present, the platinum group metals will generally make up from about 0.1% to about 2% by weight of the catalyst.
- Hydrotreating catalyst usually is designed to remove sulfur and nitrogen and provide a degree of aromatic saturation. It will typically be a composite of a Group VI metal or compound thereof, and a Group VIII metal or compound thereof supported on a porous refractory base such as alumina. Examples of hydrotreating catalysts are alumina supported cobalt-molybdenum, nickel sulfide, nickel-tungsten, cobalt-tungsten and nickel-molybdenum. Typically, such hydrotreating catalysts are presulfided.
- Catalyst selection is dictated by process needs and product specifications. In particular, a noble catalyst may be used in the second stage when there is a low amount of H2S present.
- The Examples below demonstrate the relative effectiveness of recycling kerosene to produce lighter products of high quality, as opposed to not recycling kerosene.
- The “recycle” of kerosene was simulated by passing kerosene from the first hydrocracking stage over the catalyst in the second hydrocracking stage. The first stage kerosene possessed a smoke point of 14 mm and 25 LV % aromatics. Net yields from the runs where kerosene was “recycled” have been calculated by deducting the supplemental kerosene feed from the gross, measured kerosene yield (gross weight of kerosene product-weight of kerosene “recycled”=net yield of kerosene product).
- In kerosene recycle mode, a base metal zeolite hydrocracking catalyst cracked a substantial fraction of the kerosene to naphtha and gas (see Tables 1 and 2). The net yield of kerosene decreased on a raw feed blend basis and the qualities of the middle distillates remained the same. Recycling the kerosene to the second stage did increase the yield of 170-350° F. reformer naphtha, a product in most demand by the customer.
TABLE 1 Two-Stage Hydrocracking of Vacuum Gas Oil/Hydrocracking Gas Oil/ Light Cycle Oil Feed Blend Using Hydrocracking Catalyst Run Hours 600-624 Reactor 1 Temp, ° F.725 Reactor 2 Temp, ° F. 669 Overall LHSV, hr−1 1.00 Per Pass Conversion 58 Total Pressure, PSIG 2297 No Loss Prod. Yields Wt. % Vol. % C1 0.13 C2 0.18 C3 0.56 iC4 0.94 1.62 nC4 0.63 1.06 C5-170° F. 3.43 5.04 170-350° F. 13.04 16.48 350-550° F. 29.99 33.44 550-RCP 15.57 16.92 Recycle Bleed 34.84 38.17 Recycle Cut Point, ° F. 656 Total C4− 2.44 Total C5+ 96.87 110.04 Closure 99.6 // Fractioner Bottoms Nitrogen, ppm 24.5 -
TABLE 2 Two-Stage Hydrocracking of Vacuum Gas Oil/Hydrocracked Gas Oil/Light Cycle Oil Feed Blend Using Hydrocracking Catalyst, with “Kerosene Recycle” Hours 816-840 Reactor 1 Tempera-725 ture, ° F. Reactor 2 Tempera- 691 ture, ° F. LHSV, 1/Hr 1.00 Per Pass Conversion, 60 % Total Pressure, psig 2294 No Loss Product Yields Wt. % Vol. % C1 0.13 C2 0.20 C3 0.80 iC4 1.80 nC4 0.99 C5-170° F. 6.4 9.5 170-350° F. 18.0 22.8 350-550° F. 24.0 26.8 550-650° F. 15.3 16.6 650° F.+ 32.4 35.3 Recycle cut point 650° F. Total C5+ 96.1 111.0 Total C4− 3.72 Chemical H2 Consumption, SCF/B 2080 Closure, % 99.7 Fractioner Bottoms Nitrogen, ppm 28
Claims (17)
1. A method for hydroprocessing a hydrocarbon feedstock, the method employing multiple hydroprocessing zones within a single reaction loop and comprising the following steps:
(a) passing a hydrocarbonaceous feedstock to a first hydroprocessing zone having one or more beds containing hydroprocessing catalyst, the hydroprocessing zone being maintained at hydroprocessing conditions, wherein the feedstock is contacted with catalyst and hydrogen to produce a vapor stream and a liquid stream as effluent;
(b) removing the vapor stream of step (a), which comprises hydrogen, hydrogen sulfide and light hydrocarbonaceous gases overhead;
(c) combining the liquid stream of step (b) with the liquid effluent from other hydroprocessing zones;
(d) passing the liquid stream of step (c), which comprises hydrocarbonaceous compounds boiling in approximately the same range of the hydrocarbonaceous feedstock, to fractionation;
(e) separating the liquid stream of step (d), in fractionation, into gas, naphtha, kerosene and diesel fractions, in addition to the bottoms fraction;
(f) passing the bottoms fraction of step (e) to further processing or recycling to one or more of the other hydroprocessing zones of step (c);
(g) passing one or more of the naphtha, kerosene and diesel fractions to further processing as products or recycling one or more of the fractions to one or more of the other hydroprocessing zones of step (c), the kerosene, naphtha or diesel fractions being in combination with kerosene, naphtha or diesel fractions from other sources, said hydroprocessing zone or zones being maintained at hydroprocessing conditions and at lower pressure than the first hydroprocessing zone, and possessing an environment substantially free of H2S, NH3, or other heteroatom contaminants;
(h) passing the effluent of step (g) to fractionation;
(i) recovering in fractionation an increased amount of gas and naphtha, and a decreased amount of kerosene, in the fractionation stage of step (h) than in the fractionation step of step (e).
2. The process of claim 1 , wherein the pressure in the subsequent zone or zones of claim 1 , step (g), are at least 100 psi lower than the pressure in the initial zone.
3. The process of claim 2 , wherein the pressure in the subsequent zone or zones of claim 1 is from 500 to 1000 psig lower than the pressure in the initial zone.
4. The process of claim 1 , wherein at least one bed in each hydroprocessing zone contains hydrocracking catalyst.
5. The process of claim 1 , wherein the hydroprocessing conditions of claim 1 , step (a), and claim 1 , step (g), comprise a reaction temperature of from 400° F.-950° F. (204° C.-510° C.), a reaction pressure in the range from 500 to 5000 psig (3.5-34.5 MPa), an LHSV in the range from 0.1 to 15 hr−1 (v/v), and hydrogen consumption in the range from 500 to 2500 scf per barrel of liquid hydrocarbon feed (89.1-445 m3 H2/m3 feed).
6. The process of claim 5 , wherein the hydroprocessing conditions of claim 1 , step (a), and claim 1 , step (g), preferably comprise a temperature in the range from 650° F.-850° F. (343° C.-454° C.), reaction pressure in the range from 1500-3500 psig (10.4-24.2 MPa), LHSV in the range from 0.25 to 2.5 hr−1, and hydrogen consumption in the range from 500 to 2500 scf per barrel of liquid hydrocarbon feed (89.1-445 m3 H2/m3 feed).
7. The process of claim 1 , wherein the feed to claim 1 , step (a), comprises hydrocarbons boiling above 392° F.(200° C.).
8. The process of claim 7 , wherein the feed is selected from the group consisting of vacuum gas oil, heavy atmospheric gas oil, delayed coker gas oil, visbreaker gas oil, demetallized oils, FCC light cycle oil, vacuum residua deasphalted oil, Fischer-Tropsch streams, and FCC streams.
9. The process of claim 1 , wherein the hydroprocessing catalysts of the first hydroprocessing zone of claim 1 , step (a), and the hydroprocessing zone of claim 1 , step (g), comprise a cracking component and a hydrogenation component.
10. The process of claim 9 , wherein the hydrogenation component is selected from Group VI, Group VII or Group VIII metals.
11. The process of claim 10 , wherein the hydrogenation component is selected from the group consisting of Ni, Mo, W, Pt and Pd or combinations thereof.
12. The process of claim 10 , wherein the Group VI, Group VII or Group VIII metals may exist as either sulfides or oxides.
13. The process of claim 10 , wherein the hydrogenation component comprises 5 to 40 wt % of the catalyst.
14. The process of claim 11 , wherein noble metals comprise from about 0.1 wt % to about 2 wt % of the catalyst.
15. The process of claim 9 , wherein the cracking component may be amorphous or zeolitic.
16. The process of claim 15 , wherein the zeolitic component is selected from the group consisting of Y, USY, REX, and REY zeolites.
17. The process of claim 1 , step (i), wherein an increased amount of naphtha boiling in the range of 170-350° F. is recovered.
Priority Applications (11)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US10/162,774 US20030221990A1 (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2002-06-04 | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle |
EP03726599A EP1511824A4 (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2003-05-02 | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle |
PL372757A PL203817B1 (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2003-05-02 | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle |
AU2003228827A AU2003228827B2 (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2003-05-02 | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle |
CA002487381A CA2487381A1 (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2003-05-02 | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle |
JP2004511419A JP2006510746A (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2003-05-02 | Multistage hydrocracking by kerosene recirculation |
PCT/US2003/013816 WO2003104358A1 (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2003-05-02 | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle |
US10/922,413 US20050103682A1 (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2004-08-19 | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle |
ZA200409344A ZA200409344B (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2004-11-19 | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle. |
US12/138,384 US20080283444A1 (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2008-06-12 | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle |
US12/256,561 US20090045100A1 (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2008-10-23 | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US10/162,774 US20030221990A1 (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2002-06-04 | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle |
Related Child Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US10/922,413 Continuation-In-Part US20050103682A1 (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2004-08-19 | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
US20030221990A1 true US20030221990A1 (en) | 2003-12-04 |
Family
ID=29583629
Family Applications (3)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US10/162,774 Abandoned US20030221990A1 (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2002-06-04 | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle |
US10/922,413 Abandoned US20050103682A1 (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2004-08-19 | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle |
US12/138,384 Abandoned US20080283444A1 (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2008-06-12 | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle |
Family Applications After (2)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US10/922,413 Abandoned US20050103682A1 (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2004-08-19 | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle |
US12/138,384 Abandoned US20080283444A1 (en) | 2002-06-04 | 2008-06-12 | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle |
Country Status (8)
Country | Link |
---|---|
US (3) | US20030221990A1 (en) |
EP (1) | EP1511824A4 (en) |
JP (1) | JP2006510746A (en) |
AU (1) | AU2003228827B2 (en) |
CA (1) | CA2487381A1 (en) |
PL (1) | PL203817B1 (en) |
WO (1) | WO2003104358A1 (en) |
ZA (1) | ZA200409344B (en) |
Cited By (17)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US20080144502A1 (en) * | 2006-12-19 | 2008-06-19 | Deterministic Networks, Inc. | In-Band Quality-of-Service Signaling to Endpoints that Enforce Traffic Policies at Traffic Sources Using Policy Messages Piggybacked onto DiffServ Bits |
US20090159493A1 (en) * | 2007-12-21 | 2009-06-25 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Targeted hydrogenation hydrocracking |
CN101173189B (en) * | 2006-11-01 | 2010-05-12 | 中国石油化工股份有限公司 | Two-stage hydrogenation cracking method for producing industrial chemicals |
US20140271398A1 (en) * | 2013-03-15 | 2014-09-18 | Uop Llc | Process and apparatus for recovering and blending hydroprocessed hydrocarbons and composition |
WO2015000849A1 (en) * | 2013-07-02 | 2015-01-08 | Saudi Basic Industries Corporation | Process and installation for the conversion of crude oil to petrochemicals having an improved ethylene yield |
WO2015000848A1 (en) * | 2013-07-02 | 2015-01-08 | Saudi Basic Industries Corporation | Process and installation for the conversion of crude oil to petrochemicals having an improved carbon-efficiency |
WO2015128038A1 (en) | 2014-02-25 | 2015-09-03 | Saudi Basic Industries Corporation | Method for converting a high-boiling hydrocarbon feedstock into lighter boiling hydrocarbon products |
CN104923291A (en) * | 2014-03-21 | 2015-09-23 | 中国石油化工股份有限公司 | Hydrocracking catalyst and preparation and application thereof |
WO2016102248A1 (en) * | 2014-12-22 | 2016-06-30 | Sabic Global Technologies B.V. | Process for producing c2 and c3 hydrocarbons |
US10287517B2 (en) | 2014-12-22 | 2019-05-14 | Sabic Global Technologies B.V. | Process for producing C2 and C3 hydrocarbons |
US10316259B2 (en) | 2014-02-25 | 2019-06-11 | Saudi Basic Industries Corporation | Process for converting hydrocarbons into olefins |
CN110088246A (en) * | 2016-12-20 | 2019-08-02 | 环球油品有限责任公司 | The method for being used to prepare fuel range hydrocarbon and lubricant base oil |
US10550339B2 (en) * | 2017-08-24 | 2020-02-04 | Uop Llc | Diesel and cycle oil upgrading process |
US20200102510A1 (en) * | 2018-09-29 | 2020-04-02 | Uop Llc | Process for maximizing production of heavy naphtha from a hydrocarbon stream |
CN111088072A (en) * | 2018-10-24 | 2020-05-01 | 中国石油化工股份有限公司 | Hydrocracking method for reducing heavy naphtha bromine index and increasing aviation kerosene smoke point |
US20220204877A1 (en) * | 2020-12-31 | 2022-06-30 | Uop Llc | Process for hydrocracking a hydrocarbon feed stream |
US20220348832A1 (en) * | 2021-04-30 | 2022-11-03 | Uop Llc | Hydrocracking process for maximization of naphtha |
Families Citing this family (10)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
EP1787289B1 (en) * | 2004-07-30 | 2018-01-10 | Dictaphone Corporation | A system and method for report level confidence |
US7427349B2 (en) * | 2004-12-16 | 2008-09-23 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Fuels hydrocracking and distillate feed hydrofining in a single process |
KR101399207B1 (en) * | 2007-08-22 | 2014-05-26 | 에스케이루브리컨츠 주식회사 | Method for producing feedstocks of high quality lube base oil from unconverted oil |
US8658020B2 (en) | 2007-12-19 | 2014-02-25 | Phillips 66 Company | Process for upgrading kerosene to gasoline by ring contraction—ring opening—dehydrogenation |
US20100200459A1 (en) * | 2009-02-10 | 2010-08-12 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Selective staging hydrocracking |
CN103572505A (en) * | 2012-08-08 | 2014-02-12 | 苏州维艾普新材料有限公司 | Swinging cylinder device for uniformly distributing fibers |
CN104043474B (en) * | 2013-03-13 | 2016-08-03 | 中国石油化工股份有限公司 | A kind of hydrocracking catalyst and its preparation method and application |
CN104043473B (en) * | 2013-03-13 | 2016-10-05 | 中国石油化工股份有限公司 | A kind of hydrocracking catalyst and application thereof |
RU2640419C2 (en) | 2013-03-15 | 2018-01-09 | Ламмус Текнолоджи Инк. | Hydraulic processing of thermal craking products |
CN104611056B (en) * | 2015-02-11 | 2017-03-08 | 武汉凯迪工程技术研究总院有限公司 | A kind of hydrotreating method of Low Temperature Fischer Tropsch synthetic product |
Citations (10)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3037930A (en) * | 1959-05-13 | 1962-06-05 | California Research Corp | Two-stage conversion process for the production of aromatic product fractions |
US3047490A (en) * | 1958-11-04 | 1962-07-31 | Phillips Petroleum Co | Hydrocracking process |
US3243367A (en) * | 1963-11-26 | 1966-03-29 | Chevron Res | Multi-stage hydrocracking process |
US3267021A (en) * | 1964-03-30 | 1966-08-16 | Chevron Res | Multi-stage hydrocracking process |
US3540999A (en) * | 1969-01-15 | 1970-11-17 | Universal Oil Prod Co | Jet fuel kerosene and gasoline production from gas oils |
US3891539A (en) * | 1971-12-27 | 1975-06-24 | Texaco Inc | Hydrocracking process for converting heavy hydrocarbon into low sulfur gasoline |
US4197184A (en) * | 1978-08-11 | 1980-04-08 | Uop Inc. | Hydrorefining and hydrocracking of heavy charge stock |
US4713167A (en) * | 1986-06-20 | 1987-12-15 | Uop Inc. | Multiple single-stage hydrocracking process |
US5904835A (en) * | 1996-12-23 | 1999-05-18 | Uop Llc | Dual feed reactor hydrocracking process |
US6113775A (en) * | 1997-12-05 | 2000-09-05 | Uop Llc | Split end hydrocracking process |
Family Cites Families (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3509040A (en) * | 1968-02-23 | 1970-04-28 | Gulf Research Development Co | Process for producing jet fuel |
US3551323A (en) * | 1968-12-23 | 1970-12-29 | Universal Oil Prod Co | Black oil conversion for maximum gasoline production |
US4340465A (en) * | 1980-09-29 | 1982-07-20 | Chevron Research Company | Dual component crystalline silicate cracking catalyst |
US4921595A (en) * | 1989-04-24 | 1990-05-01 | Uop | Process for refractory compound conversion in a hydrocracker recycle liquid |
US6217746B1 (en) * | 1999-08-16 | 2001-04-17 | Uop Llc | Two stage hydrocracking process |
-
2002
- 2002-06-04 US US10/162,774 patent/US20030221990A1/en not_active Abandoned
-
2003
- 2003-05-02 EP EP03726599A patent/EP1511824A4/en not_active Withdrawn
- 2003-05-02 CA CA002487381A patent/CA2487381A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 2003-05-02 WO PCT/US2003/013816 patent/WO2003104358A1/en active Application Filing
- 2003-05-02 AU AU2003228827A patent/AU2003228827B2/en not_active Ceased
- 2003-05-02 PL PL372757A patent/PL203817B1/en not_active IP Right Cessation
- 2003-05-02 JP JP2004511419A patent/JP2006510746A/en active Pending
-
2004
- 2004-08-19 US US10/922,413 patent/US20050103682A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 2004-11-19 ZA ZA200409344A patent/ZA200409344B/en unknown
-
2008
- 2008-06-12 US US12/138,384 patent/US20080283444A1/en not_active Abandoned
Patent Citations (10)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3047490A (en) * | 1958-11-04 | 1962-07-31 | Phillips Petroleum Co | Hydrocracking process |
US3037930A (en) * | 1959-05-13 | 1962-06-05 | California Research Corp | Two-stage conversion process for the production of aromatic product fractions |
US3243367A (en) * | 1963-11-26 | 1966-03-29 | Chevron Res | Multi-stage hydrocracking process |
US3267021A (en) * | 1964-03-30 | 1966-08-16 | Chevron Res | Multi-stage hydrocracking process |
US3540999A (en) * | 1969-01-15 | 1970-11-17 | Universal Oil Prod Co | Jet fuel kerosene and gasoline production from gas oils |
US3891539A (en) * | 1971-12-27 | 1975-06-24 | Texaco Inc | Hydrocracking process for converting heavy hydrocarbon into low sulfur gasoline |
US4197184A (en) * | 1978-08-11 | 1980-04-08 | Uop Inc. | Hydrorefining and hydrocracking of heavy charge stock |
US4713167A (en) * | 1986-06-20 | 1987-12-15 | Uop Inc. | Multiple single-stage hydrocracking process |
US5904835A (en) * | 1996-12-23 | 1999-05-18 | Uop Llc | Dual feed reactor hydrocracking process |
US6113775A (en) * | 1997-12-05 | 2000-09-05 | Uop Llc | Split end hydrocracking process |
Cited By (33)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
CN101173189B (en) * | 2006-11-01 | 2010-05-12 | 中国石油化工股份有限公司 | Two-stage hydrogenation cracking method for producing industrial chemicals |
US20080144502A1 (en) * | 2006-12-19 | 2008-06-19 | Deterministic Networks, Inc. | In-Band Quality-of-Service Signaling to Endpoints that Enforce Traffic Policies at Traffic Sources Using Policy Messages Piggybacked onto DiffServ Bits |
US20090159493A1 (en) * | 2007-12-21 | 2009-06-25 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Targeted hydrogenation hydrocracking |
WO2009085696A2 (en) * | 2007-12-21 | 2009-07-09 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Targeted hydrogenation hydrocracking |
WO2009085696A3 (en) * | 2007-12-21 | 2010-01-21 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Targeted hydrogenation hydrocracking |
US10010808B2 (en) * | 2013-03-15 | 2018-07-03 | Uop Llc | Process and apparatus for recovering and blending hydroprocessed hydrocarbons and composition |
US20140271398A1 (en) * | 2013-03-15 | 2014-09-18 | Uop Llc | Process and apparatus for recovering and blending hydroprocessed hydrocarbons and composition |
EA034700B1 (en) * | 2013-07-02 | 2020-03-10 | Сауди Бейсик Индастриз Корпорейшн | Process and installation for the conversion of crude oil to petrochemicals having an improved ethylene yield |
US10676681B2 (en) | 2013-07-02 | 2020-06-09 | Saudi Basic Industries Corporation | Process and installation for the conversion of crude oil to petrochemicals having an improved carbon-efficiency |
WO2015000849A1 (en) * | 2013-07-02 | 2015-01-08 | Saudi Basic Industries Corporation | Process and installation for the conversion of crude oil to petrochemicals having an improved ethylene yield |
CN105473690A (en) * | 2013-07-02 | 2016-04-06 | 沙特基础工业公司 | Process and installation for the conversion of crude oil to petrochemicals having an improved carbon-efficiency |
EA038963B1 (en) * | 2013-07-02 | 2021-11-16 | Сауди Бейсик Индастриз Корпорейшн | Process for the conversion of crude oil |
CN105473690B (en) * | 2013-07-02 | 2018-01-09 | 沙特基础工业公司 | For by converting crude oil into the method and facility of the petrochemical industry product with improved carbon efficiencies |
WO2015000848A1 (en) * | 2013-07-02 | 2015-01-08 | Saudi Basic Industries Corporation | Process and installation for the conversion of crude oil to petrochemicals having an improved carbon-efficiency |
EA033477B1 (en) * | 2013-07-02 | 2019-10-31 | Saudi Basic Ind Corp | Process and installation for the conversion of crude oil to petrochemicals having an improved carbon efficiency |
EP3460026A1 (en) | 2013-07-02 | 2019-03-27 | Saudi Basic Industries Corporation | Process and installation for the conversion of crude oil to petrochemicals having an improved carbon-efficiency |
US10260011B2 (en) | 2013-07-02 | 2019-04-16 | Saudi Basic Industries Corporation | Process and installation for the conversion of crude oil to petrochemicals having an improved ethylene yield |
WO2015128038A1 (en) | 2014-02-25 | 2015-09-03 | Saudi Basic Industries Corporation | Method for converting a high-boiling hydrocarbon feedstock into lighter boiling hydrocarbon products |
US10301559B2 (en) | 2014-02-25 | 2019-05-28 | Saudi Basic Industries Corporation | Method for converting a high-boiling hydrocarbon feedstock into lighter boiling hydrocarbon products |
US10316259B2 (en) | 2014-02-25 | 2019-06-11 | Saudi Basic Industries Corporation | Process for converting hydrocarbons into olefins |
EA032566B1 (en) * | 2014-02-25 | 2019-06-28 | Сауди Бейсик Индастриз Корпорейшн | Method for converting a high-boiling hydrocarbon feedstock into lighter boiling hydrocarbon products |
CN104923291A (en) * | 2014-03-21 | 2015-09-23 | 中国石油化工股份有限公司 | Hydrocracking catalyst and preparation and application thereof |
US10174263B2 (en) | 2014-12-22 | 2019-01-08 | Sabic Global Technologies B.V. | Process for producing C2 and C3 hydrocarbons |
US10287517B2 (en) | 2014-12-22 | 2019-05-14 | Sabic Global Technologies B.V. | Process for producing C2 and C3 hydrocarbons |
WO2016102248A1 (en) * | 2014-12-22 | 2016-06-30 | Sabic Global Technologies B.V. | Process for producing c2 and c3 hydrocarbons |
CN110088246A (en) * | 2016-12-20 | 2019-08-02 | 环球油品有限责任公司 | The method for being used to prepare fuel range hydrocarbon and lubricant base oil |
US10550339B2 (en) * | 2017-08-24 | 2020-02-04 | Uop Llc | Diesel and cycle oil upgrading process |
US20200102510A1 (en) * | 2018-09-29 | 2020-04-02 | Uop Llc | Process for maximizing production of heavy naphtha from a hydrocarbon stream |
CN111088072A (en) * | 2018-10-24 | 2020-05-01 | 中国石油化工股份有限公司 | Hydrocracking method for reducing heavy naphtha bromine index and increasing aviation kerosene smoke point |
US20220204877A1 (en) * | 2020-12-31 | 2022-06-30 | Uop Llc | Process for hydrocracking a hydrocarbon feed stream |
US11572515B2 (en) * | 2020-12-31 | 2023-02-07 | Uop Llc | Process for hydrocracking a hydrocarbon feed stream |
US20220348832A1 (en) * | 2021-04-30 | 2022-11-03 | Uop Llc | Hydrocracking process for maximization of naphtha |
US11859142B2 (en) * | 2021-04-30 | 2024-01-02 | Uop Llc | Hydrocracking process for maximization of naphtha |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
AU2003228827A1 (en) | 2003-12-22 |
EP1511824A1 (en) | 2005-03-09 |
JP2006510746A (en) | 2006-03-30 |
PL372757A1 (en) | 2005-08-08 |
AU2003228827B2 (en) | 2008-11-20 |
CA2487381A1 (en) | 2003-12-18 |
ZA200409344B (en) | 2006-02-22 |
US20050103682A1 (en) | 2005-05-19 |
PL203817B1 (en) | 2009-11-30 |
EP1511824A4 (en) | 2008-07-09 |
WO2003104358A1 (en) | 2003-12-18 |
US20080283444A1 (en) | 2008-11-20 |
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
US20080283444A1 (en) | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle | |
US20090045100A1 (en) | Multi-stage hydrocracker with kerosene recycle | |
US6630066B2 (en) | Hydrocracking and hydrotreating separate refinery streams | |
US6797154B2 (en) | Hydrocracking process for the production of high quality distillates from heavy gas oils | |
US7531082B2 (en) | High conversion hydroprocessing using multiple pressure and reaction zones | |
US10752848B2 (en) | Process integrating two-stage hydrocracking and a hydrotreatment process | |
AU2005316780B2 (en) | High conversion hydroprocessing | |
US20090159493A1 (en) | Targeted hydrogenation hydrocracking | |
EP1306421B1 (en) | Multiple hydroprocessing reactors with intermediate flash zones | |
US20100200459A1 (en) | Selective staging hydrocracking | |
US4404088A (en) | Three-stage hydrocracking process | |
CN113383057B (en) | Two-stage hydrocracking process for producing naphtha comprising a hydrogenation step carried out downstream of a second hydrocracking step | |
AU2005316715B2 (en) | Fuels hydrocracking and distillate feed hydrofining in a single process |
Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
AS | Assignment |
Owner name: CHEVRON U.S.A., INC., CALIFORNIA Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:YOON, H. ALEX;PAREKH, JAY;DAHLBERG, ARTHUR J.;REEL/FRAME:013316/0376;SIGNING DATES FROM 20020812 TO 20020816 |
|
STCB | Information on status: application discontinuation |
Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION |