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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. 

​

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(2018) Question 20: What considerations do you give to co-processing or block mode operations with renewables in an existing hydroprocessing unit?

In all scenarios, a refiner must consider their RFS obligations, potential biodiesel tax incentives, biodiesel merchant market, refiner’s existing hydrotreating units’ utilization rates, capabilities, and designs, renewable feedstock types, availability, price, and pre-treatment requirements, and product specifications and storage constraints.
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(2018) Question 21: What are your important considerations for water washing with respect to: 1) Intermittent injection a. Process temperature of injection b. Duration of injection c. Frequency - triggers to begin d. How frequently before making it continuously? 2) Water Quality: a. pH range b. Oxygen c. Total Suspended solids d. Total dissolved solids e. Recirculation vs. make-up f. Other

Hotter temperatures typically will increase in the need for better designed injection systems. The injection mix point needs to be designed to contact and scrub the vapor well, with adequate dilution of water, with metallurgy at the injection point selected to handle the lower pH of the droplets.
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(2018) Question 22: Can you elaborate on the benefits, drawbacks, and trade-offs of liquid phase vs. gas phase catalyst activation in a hydrocracking unit? Is there an activity or yield difference of liquid phase or gas phase activation of 2nd stage catalyst in a 2-stage hydrocracking unit? Consider both catalyst formulation and operational factors (MPT, excursion risk, etc.)

Activation (or sulfiding) of hydrotreating and hydrocracking catalysts can be done either ex-situ or in-situ. In both methods, the objective is to convert all the catalyst’s metal oxide sites to active metal sulfides.
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(2018) Question 23: What are the sources of silicon that can impact a hydrotreater? How does silicon affect hydrotreater operations? What are your best practices for managing / mitigating silicon poisoning?

One source of silicon is antifoam chemistries. These may be introduced into HDS feeds via use in the Coker process within the refinery or via use in production upstream of the refinery.
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(2018) Question 24: How many refiners import and/or purchase gasoil feed for a hydroprocessing unit? What are common issues associated with imported or purchased gasoil feeds? Are there specific characteristics to target and / or avoid? Are there best practices for minimizing negative impacts to unit operations / reliability? How are supply limitations managed?

Key characteristics of imported feed like end point, sulfur, nitrogen, chlorides and carbon residue can be controlled by establishing allowed specifications. But other characteristics may be hard to control.
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(2018) Question 31: How does emulsion breaker performance compare when injected in the crude or wash water? What is your method to inject emulsion breaker for 2 stage desalters?

For the desalter system as a whole, the typical emulsion breaker is injected into the crude stream as far upstream as possible in order to provide intimate contact. In this case, the emulsion breaker is one that has a hydrocarbon solvent and so is hydrophilic which wants to stay in the oil phase. There are cases where injecting this emulsion breaker into the water phase can help reduce the impact of surfactants that surround the water droplets.
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(2018) Question 32: Have you developed processes to successfully extract the emulsion layer from the desalter, so the emulsion can be treated separately? Please describe your chemical treatment programs and equipment that have been implemented successfully to treat this extracted emulsion.

Emulsion extraction headers, sometimes called cuff headers, have been an option and have been installed in desalters for decades. The removal of the emulsion layer solves one problem and creates another as this emulsion layer can be very difficult to treat.
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(2018) Question 33: When processing cracked stocks in a crude unit, what potential issues do you expect? What changes in operations or treatment programs can you mitigate these issues?

If the site does not have a Delayed Coker, then reprocessing cracked stocks through the FCC fractionator is the next option. Again, this keeps the cracked materials separate from the straight run products.
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(2018) Question 41: What effective practices do you deploy to improve the removal of inorganic contaminants in crude such as iron and calcium? What has been the industry success rate with these practices?

Cracked feedstocks can be introduced into the crude unit from several sources; the most common of which in North America are diluted bitumen from Canadian sources, diluted crude oils from South American sources, and slop streams from cracking units onsite that are recycled into the reprocessed slop oil blended into the crude unit feedstream.
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(2018) Question 42: Some of the lighter waxy crudes have higher paraffin melting points making it difficult to treat and remove solids, salts in the desalter. What practices do you deploy to manage these higher melting point waxy crudes?

Some of the lighter waxy crudes have higher paraffin melting points making it difficult to treat and remove solids, salts in the desalter. What practices do you deploy to manage these higher melting point waxy crudes?
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