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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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(2015) Question 48: What is your experience bringing hydrocracking catalyst online without ammonia attenuation? Are there alternative methods or technologies to temper catalyst activity without adding ammonia?

Hydrocracking catalyst needs to be passivated during sulfiding to avoid potential temperature runaway as temperatures are increased to complete the sulfiding process. In our experience, there are four different ways that we attenuate the catalyst activity. The first is to inject ammonia prior to the high temperature sulfiding to passivate the catalyst.
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(2015) Question 49: Each hydroprocessing unit has an optimum strategy for full load-catalyst replacement: oxidized versus presulfided. How does the strategy change for a partial reload (e.g., top-bed skim or replacement)? Are there other situations when pre-activation is justified?

Use of either oxidized or presulfided catalysts can work fine. It depends on safety approach, cost allowance, time goals, and handling the processing preference. The main point is safely carrying out this skimming operation, whether or not it is oxidized catalyst or presulfided catalyst.
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(2015) Question 50: How is your company planning to meet Tier 3 gasoline regulations?

Currently, our gasoline runs at 12 ppm sulfur. There are two sour components: our LSR (light straight-run) and butane. Some approaches we are contemplating for compliance are hydrotreating the LSR, reducing the sulfur via dilution, or restarting an out-of-service Merox unit.
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(2015) Question 51: What is your best method for monitoring salt level in a diesel salt dryer? What are your current guidelines for salt usage and capacity? What are your best practices for loading and monitoring salt dryer performance?

We prefer not to use salt dryers in new ULSD designs. In recent ULSD designs, we will put in a vacuum dryer, or we will re-boil the stripper to meet the low water specs. If there are less stringent water specs, using a coalescer can be sufficient. One of our most recent new units will have a coalescer followed by a vacuum dryer.
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(2015) Question 52: What approaches are effective for you to reduce aromatic levels in the ULSD product streams?

To reduce aromatic levels, we definitely need to assess the unit’s capabilities. Is it a high hydrogen partial pressure unit with psig greater than 800, and does it have a higher than 4.0 hydrogen availability ratio (HAR)? If both answers are greater than those reference points, then full loading of NiMo catalyst can be employed to give higher hydrogenation and very good aromatic saturation results.
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(2014) Question 28: What is your best practice for determining the maximum allowable temperature rise in hydrotreating beds? What solutions do you have for managing temperature rise?

Operating philosophy regarding the maximum allowable temperature rise in hydrotreating beds from a design perspective is determined by several factors.
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(2014) Question 29: What are your current best practices for protecting the charge heater from backflow?

Our design practice for a gas only heater uses a check valve at the outlet of the heater mainly to cut down on the chance of liquid flowing back into the heater during a compressor trip.
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(2014) Question 30: What is your minimum charge heater firing limit, especially when highly heat integrated or when processing cracked stocks? Do you have any hydroprocessing units run without firing the charge heater?

The low firing limit is caused by burner instability. Heaters can be turned down by completely shutting off some burners; but there is also a firebox temperature component. Burner instability would be noticed visually – examples being flickering, irregular flame pattern plus increased CO emission.
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(2014) Question 31: As more and more refiners consider installing zeolite catalyst in their hydrotreating units, what are your recommendations for a depressuring system?

Though many hydrotreating units operate at lower pressures than most hydrocracking units, loading zeolite catalysts poses a risk of temperature excursion which should be mitigated. Reactor thermometry, depressuring system capacity, and automating depressuring based on indication of excursion must be evaluated when cracking catalyst is loaded in a hydrotreating unit.
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(2014) Question 32: How does catalyst activity, run length, H2 uptake, volume swell, reactor temperatures, price of the catalyst and product quality impact optimizing the business case for a catalyst selection? Compare a regen catalyst, moderate activity and next generation catalysts in a cheap H2 available market.

Refinery Process Engineers are often confronted with a complex and time-consuming process when it comes to choosing a catalyst for their hydrotreating units.
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