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These digital transcripts are meant to share information on process safety practices in order to help improve process safety performance and awareness throughout industry. The goal is to capture and share knowledge that could be used by other companies or sites when developing new process safety practices or improving existing ones. The documents being shared have been used by an industry member, but this does not mean it should be used or that it will produce similar results at any other site. Rather, it is an option to consider when implementing or adjusting programs and practices at a site. ​

BY THEMSELVES, THESE DIGITAL TRANSCRIPTS ARE NOT STANDARDS OR RECOMMENDED PRACTICES. THEY ARE NOT INTENDED TO REPLACE SOUND ENGINEERING JUDGMENT. THEY DO NOT PRECLUDE THE USE OF ALTERNATIVE METHODS THAT COMPLY WITH LEGAL REQUIREMENTS. A SUBJECT MATTER EXPERT SHOULD BE CONSULTED PRIOR TO DETERMINING WHETHER A PRACTICE CAN BE USED IN ANY SPECIFIC SITUATION. 

​

Process

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Process

  • (-) Crude/Coking
    • Process
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(2017) Question 44: How do you monitor exchanger fouling? How do you use that information to justify additional work scope during unplanned shutdowns?

Exchanger monitoring software or spreadsheets that pull in refinery process data can be used to monitor fouling trends. Exchanger trains should be evaluated for fouling on a routine basis to provide historical references and trends to compare pre- and post-cleanings.
Read more

(2017) Question 46: What is your design service life of atmospheric tower overhead heat exchangers? How does that compare to actual service life? What do you do to better manage corrosion and improve reliability of these heat exchangers?

Heat exchangers are designed for heat recovery and only rarely for corrosion control. The designer’s tool for reliability is to use upgraded materials of construction. Over the years, those on our team have seen even Hastelloy C276 and titanium being used.
Read more

(2017) Question 47: What correlations do you use to predict cracked gas make in a vacuum tower from atmospheric tower bottoms based on feedstock properties and heater outlet temperature?

In the past, vacuum towers’ flash zones have operating at or below atmospheric tower flash zone temperatures. These units relied on the vacuum to increase heavy gasoil yields from the atmospheric resid without running the risk of thermal cracking associated with higher temperatures.
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(2017) Question 48: What are your design and operating guidelines for vacuum tower bottoms versus crude heat exchangers such as minimum velocities, fouling rates, and pressure drop, and which process fluid should be on the tube side versus the shell side?

KPE believes the typical design for a vacuum bottom versus crude exchanger is for the crude to be on the tube side and the vacuum bottoms to be on the shell side. Most facilities I see have this setup as weli.
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(2017) Question 49: How do you use today’s Advanced Process Control (APC) technology to achieve crude unit operation that supports short-and long-term planning goals? How do you achieve alignment between the crude unit APC and those of downstream units?

Without proper resources and attention, Advanced Process Control (APC) technology may experience inconsistencies as applied to crude units. Refineries where crude slate varies frequently may struggle capturing the value that APC provides for steady controls and optimization. Mode-based APC may be applicable, but irregularities in crude compositions may still provide hurdles.
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(2016) Question 20: When is it appropriate to neutralize austenitic stainless-steel equipment to protect against stress corrosion cracking (SCC)? What neutralization procedures and methodologies do you recommend?

Austenitic stainless steels (200-and 300-series steel) are the most common type of stainless steels. Austenite refers specifically to the geometry of the steel (face-centered cubic crystal). These types of steel are most typically recognized as non-magnetic. Austenitic steels are widely used in the industry because they have very desirable mechanical properties. Their austenitic structure is very tough and ductile down to absolute zero. They also do not lose their strength at elevated temperatures as rapidly as ferritic iron base alloys.
Read more

(2016) Question 21: What programs or systems do you employ to monitor hydrotreater furnaces and prevent tube failures and loss of containment? Can you share your experiences using technologies to implement online temperature monitoring of tube skin temperatures?

In nearly all hydroprocessing heaters, MPC has installed tubeskin thermocouples in order to provide continuous monitoring of tube metal temperatures to the DCS (distributed control system) operator. These thermocouples are strategically located in the heater at the areas with the highest estimated maximum heat flux.
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(2016) Question 22: Describe your strategies for optimizing the pretreat and cracking catalyst cycles. How does this strategy vary when operating between maximum naphtha and maximum distillate modes? How does this impact catalyst selection for the next cycle?

Marathon Petroleum Company has adopted the philosophy of optimizing the hydrotreater and hydrocracking catalyst together as one unit. We do not measure nitrogen slip from the hydrotreater section, but rather allow the hydrocracker apparent conversion dictate adjustments to the pretreat section.
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(2016) Question 23: How do you operate mid-distillate selective recycle hydrocracking units to generate more naphtha while minimizing fuel gas/liquefied petroleum gas without catalyst replacement?

Maintaining flexibility to make gasoline versus ULSD (ultra-low sulfur diesel) is very important to most refiners today due to the volatile nature of the market. Understanding the economic goals of your process unit and building in the flexibility through your catalyst selection process is the best way to set up your process for flexibility in the coming run.
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(2016) Question 24: How do you manage reactor maldistribution once identified?

Reactor maldistribution is a phenomenon that is typically caused by inadequately designed or installed reactor internals, improperly/unevenly loaded catalyst bed, catalyst migration from an upstream bed, or process fouling. The main problems generated by flow maldistribution are the overuse of part of a catalyst inventory and the formation of hot spots, which can create a process safety risk, as well as limit the performance of the cycle.
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