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Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

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Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO May, 2015 Galveston, TX
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Page 1: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

May, 2015Galveston, TX

Page 2: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

LTO Effect On Crude Preheat Fouling

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

0 200 400 600 800 1,000 1,200

Fu

rna

ce

In

let

Te

mp

era

ture

Lo

ss

(°F

)

Run Day

∆T ∆T Regression Without LTO ∆T Regression With LTO

Exchanger Cleaning

Processing LTONot Processing LTO

Throughput reduced due to required exchanger cleaning

Page 3: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Impact On Crude Furnace Fouling When Processing > 90% LTO

0

50

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300

350

0 60 120 180

TM

T In

cre

as

e (

°F)

Run Day

∆TMT Case 1 ∆TMT Case 2 ∆TMT Case 3

Crude furnace run length from 2 – 4 years to < 180 days

Page 4: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Crude Unit Fouling

COLD PREHEAT

CRUDE STORAGE

DESALTER

HOT PREHEAT

PREFLASH TOWER

ATMOSPHERIC FURNACE

ATMOSPHERIC

TOWER

VACUUM FURNACE

VACUUM TOWER

P: Waxes & SolidsS: W/W, C&D, AF

P: Solids, Desalter Carry-overS: Desalter Optimization & Chemical, C&D, AF

P: Asphaltenes, Solids, PAH (Shell Side)S: C&D, AF, Velocity

P: Asphaltenes, Solids, PAHS: AF, Velocity, Exit Temp, Pass Balance

P: Asphaltenes, Solids, PAHS: AF, Velocity, C&D

P: Amine Salts, PhosphorousS: AF, Salt Dispersant, Acidification, Caustic

Page 5: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Mechanical & Operational Possible Causes

� Poor desalter operation

� Chemical additive treatment (caustic, etc.)

� Low excess O2 rates

� Flow imbalance between passes

� Poor heat distribution

� Inadequate mass velocity

� High heat flux

� Excessive vaporization in the crude preheat and heater

� High furnace ∆T

Page 6: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Operational Considerations > 90% LTO

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

0 100 200 300 400 500

Liq

uid

Fra

cti

on

Days

Crude Heater Liquid Fraction Changes

LTOs have high variability in vaporization potential

� Increased vaporization can result in deposition of solids

� Increase in furnace outlet temperature of 10 – 40°F corresponded with 50 –600% higher fouling rates

� Higher levels of excess O2 can improve the heat distribution, and low excess O2 can result in soot formation which can impact tube outside diameter fouling. � Excess O2 > 2% recommended

0

2

4

6

130 180 230 280

No

rmali

zed

TM

T S

lop

e

(°F

/Day)

Crude Furnace ∆T (°F)

Effect Of Crude Furnace ∆T On Fouling Rate

Page 7: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Vaporization

InjectionSystem

Monitoring Scope

MAXIMIZE

HEATER INLET

TEMP

MAXIMIZE

HEATER

CHARGE

Velocity

Cp∆T

API

Bypasses

Network Design

Heater ∆P

FeS

Dosage

Viscosity

Crude Type/Sources

Slops

Tankage sludge

Total Costs

Rate

MINIMIZE

EXCHANGER &

HEATER ∆P

Chemistry

HEAT TRANSFER

FACTORSOPERATIONAL MECHANICAL

FOULING

CONTROL

MechanismOther

Considerations

CausticDosing

Thermal Conductivity

PumparoundRates & Temps

Frac BottomTemps

Product Mode

DesalterOperation

Feedrate

Monitoring & Control

Asphaltene Content %

Crude Stability

Shell/Tube Side Fouling

Metallurgy

Solids

Crude Incompatibility

Upstream chemicals

Crude swaps

Fuel BTUs

Tank FarmPractices

PAH FormationCleaning

Preflash limitations

Instrumentation

Burner design

Page 8: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Root Cause Analysis: Fouling Mechanism

� Deposit analysis� Identify and quantify elemental components

� Interpret organic and inorganic nature

� Stream characterization� Identify and quantify fouling precursors

� Fouling simulation and Chemical selection� Simulate process fouling (mechanisms)

� Screen chemicals

� Together help describe probable fouling mechanisms

MOC

8

Page 9: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Typical Deposit Analysis LTO Fouling

AnalysisDownstream of desalter

(100% LTO)Upstream of crude furnace (LTO, WTI, Canadian Blend)

Atmospheric Tower Bottoms (100% LTO)

Organic Materials 11.00% 88.23% 73%

Soluble Organics 5.00% 52.00% 24%

Coke, polymers 6.00% 36.23% 49%

Inorganic Materials 89.70% 7.71% 18%

Iron Salts: 40.60% 5.67% 9.30%

Other Salts including Volatile Salts:

49.10% 2.05% 8.70%

Probable Mechanism

Solids carry-over from desalter

Asphaltenedestablization

PAH formation

Page 10: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Crude Characterization Eagle Ford Blend

Cation Concentration (ppm)

Barium 1.2

Calcium 3.0

Iron 13.0

Nickel 3.1

Sodium 1.5

Vanadium 6.8

Characteristic Measurement

Paraffin 32%

Polar 2.1%

Aromatic 8.4%

Asphaltene < 1%

Acid No. 0.11 mg KOH / g

Solids 63 ptb

Water 0.1%

BS&W 0.2%

NMR Aromatic

Carbons

13.3 mole%

Solids, Iron, & Ni + V a concern

Porphyrin MetalsV, Ni, Fe

Page 11: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

ATB Contaminants in LTO

Highly variable V level

0

5

10

15

20

0 100 200 300 400

pp

m

Run Day

V In ATB

Eagle Ford V ATB Bakken Blend V ATB

Correlated to increased heater fouling

0

1

2

3

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6

2.00 7.00 12.00

No

rma

lize

d T

MT

Slo

pe

(°F

/Da

y)

ATB V (ppm)

Effect Of ATB V On Fouling

Rate

Page 12: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Crude Oil Compositional Analysis

Page 13: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Plausible AsphalteneStructure

Crude Oil Components

Insoluble In N-Alkane “Non-solvent”

Plausible Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon (PAH) Structure

“Aromatic sheets”

Polar Contribution

Page 14: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Aromatic Sheet

Asphaltene

Aliphatic Side-Chain

Polar Functional Group

Resin-Stabilized Asphaltene Colloid

Resin

Polar Functional Group

“Sea” of saturates & aromatics

A simplified view…

Molecular Interactions In Crude Oil

Page 15: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Colloidal Instability IndexSARA Analysis Column Chromatography

Measurement EF Blends Bakken Blends Permian Blends

Paraffin 32 - 43% 29 - 37% 28 - 42%Polar (resins) < 1 - 2% 1.4 - 3% 1.9 - 2.6%

Aromatic 2.1 - 8% 8 - 8.8% 8.2 - 9.5%

Asphaltenes < 1% < 1% < 1%

Colloidal Instability Index > 3.0 2.6 - 3.6 2.6 - 3.7

� ��������� �������� ���� = ���������������������

����������������

� The SARA analysis results in the loss of volatile species, which can include both saturates and aromatics.

� Because of the material loss, the CII is never used in isolation, but instead used in conjunction with other test methods to better understand relative stability risks.

� Generally, a CII greater than 1.2 is considered a potential stability risk.

Page 16: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Crude Stability Analyzer• Intrinsic stability “S” concept as per ASTM D 7157

• Simple to operate, repeatable results

• Results obtained in about 20 minutesS = StabilitySo = Solvency Power of OilSa = Asphaltene Solubility

Page 17: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Unconventional Crude Blending

Blending heavier asphaltenic crudes with LTO can result in reduced stability.

Page 18: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Blending Order: Heavy and LightBlending order matters. Adding heavy asphaltenic oil to LTO will result in lower stability.

Tankage sludge buildup, desalter emulsion growth, and increased fouling can result.

Page 19: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Analysis of a LTO Blended Crude Sample

Analysis Wt %

C 84

H 7.8

N 0.9

S 6.3

Thermal Stressing results in reduced stabilityPrecipitant is polar aromatic

Page 20: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

100% LTO Furnace Simulation

Foulants are typically 0.2 – 40 pounds / 1000 barrels in the crude based on HLPS deposit weight

Analysis HLPS Deposit Field Deposit

Fe 2 - 18% 4 - 15%

S 6 - 17% 4 - 11%

Ca 0.5 - 0.6% 0.5 - 1.5%

C 51 - 78% 54 - 73%

H 5 - 7% 2.3 - 7.8%

N 0.8 - 2.7% 0.3 - 1.6%

C:H 10 - 13 8.7 – 13

HLPS Test Equipment

Page 21: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

PNA Formation (Coking) Mechanisms� Paraffin Cracking

� Aromatization

� Fusion and Dehydrogenation

R

+ 2 H2

R

RCH2CH2CH2CH2CH3 RCH2CH3 CH2=CHCH3+

Paraffin molecules crack, form olefins, reform into cyclic molecules and aromatize when forming PAH

Existing resins, cyclic molecules and aromatic molecules fuse and dehydrogenate when forming PAH.

Page 22: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Mechanism Summary

� Foulants are typically 0.2 – 40 pounds / 1000 barrels in the crude based on HLPS deposit weight

� The strength of the asphaltene-resin interaction can be reduced through blending operations and thermal stressing

� LTO reduces stability of crude blends which can lead to asphaltene deposition

� LTO can form PAH molecules which deposit due to poor oil solvency power

� Improving the crude’s oil solvency power or the use of stabilizing additives can reduce the fouling rate associated with processing light tight oils

Page 23: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Mitigation Strategies

Mechanical Options

� Preflash columns

� Add heat transfer surface area

� Change exchangers from parallel to series to increase velocities

� Helical baffles

� Twisted tube exchangers

Operational Options

� Clean exchangers

� Lower furnace exit temperature

� Balance passes on tube metal temperature

� Optimize desalter

� Change crude diet

� Increase pumparoundrates

Page 24: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Chemical Options

� Chemical Cleaning

� Desalter solids removal aids

� Caustic reduction

� Dispersants

� Coke suppressants

Page 25: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

100% Eagle Ford Crude Furnace Case Study

� 45% improvement in deposit weight

� 94% reduction in ∆T

-50

-30

-10

10

0 20 40 60 80

∆T

Time (min)

Crude Furnace HLPS Study > 90% LTO

Untreated Treated (94% fouling reduction)

Page 26: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

> 90% Eagle Ford Crude Furnace

0

100

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300

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0 30 60 90 120 150 180

TM

T In

cre

as

e (°° °°

F)

days on run

Crude Heater - Normalized TMT Change

Normalized TMT Change Untreated Normalized TMT Change Treated

Improving stability reduced the fouling rate 70%

Page 27: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Recommended Monitoring

� Heat transfer modelling

� Furnace monitoring

� Filterable solids testing (ASTM D-4807)

� Crude intrinsic stability testing (ASTM D-7157)

� Deposit analysis

� Economic evaluation

Page 28: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Fouling Control Program Evaluation Tips

� Evaluate changes on a $ / BBL or $ / year basis for comparison purposes

� Remember that garbage in = garbage out for simulation software

� Normalized Furnace Inlet Temperature (NFIT) is industry standard method for evaluating network fouling

� Fouling factors are more independent than U values

– Rf = 1/Uactual - 1/Uclean

� Shell Duty ≠ Tube Duty in practice so reconciliation is important

� LMTD applies only to single pass exchangers, Ft correction factor is required for all others

� Don’t forget about network effects when evaluating exchanger cleaning priorities

Page 29: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Network Fouling Monitoring

� Furnace Inlet Temperature (FIT) – good measure of network fouling

� Great deal of “noise” in FIT data

� Therefore, normalize the FIT to evaluate fouling

370

395

420

445

Te

mp

era

ture

(°F

)

FIT NFIT

Page 30: Strategies for Mitigating Fouling in Refineries Processing LTO

Cleaning Economics

� Total Cost of Operation (TCO) � optimum cleaning cycles for each exchanger

� minimum annualised cost of fouling– savings from cleaning – cost of cleaning

� compare with scheduled cleaning

� costs if cleaned now

� include antifoulant cost

Economic Calculations

E-201A/B Total Cost of Operation

0

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100000

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200000

0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350

Days

Co

st

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Fouling Cost Cleaning Cost TCO


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