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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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(2019) Question 4: What are your best practices for controlling caustic strength in an isomerization unit scrubber? How frequently is the caustic refreshed?

It is quite important to optimize PERC injection in feed as guided by technology supplier as otherwise the HCl concentration in off gas can go too high (normal range 1500 - 2500 ppm). This will lead to rapid depletion of caustic strength due to neutralization effect, thereby requiring frequent fresh caustic make-up.
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(2019) Question 5: How will Tier 3 rules impact gasoline-producing units at your facility?

ABIGAIL SLATER (HollyFrontier)
The Tier 3 gasoline regulation partially took effect in 2017 and will be fully implemented in 2020. The Tier 3 gasoline regulation has impacted the refining industry in a myriad of ways as refiners reduce sulfur further. These impacts will be similar to most refineries

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(2019) Question 6: What is your main blending limit for gasoline for both summer and winter specs?

ABIGAIL SLATER (HollyFrontier)
Gasoline blending specifications are vast and different in various geographical areas. The common blending limit that taxes both summer and winter specifications are volatility specifications. Depending on the gasoline blend, Reid Vapor Pressure (RVP), Total vapor over

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Question 7: What are your typical precious metal recoveries from reforming catalysts? What factors impact this?

BILL KOSTKA (AXENS NORTH AMERICA)
Reported platinum recoveries from reforming catalyst following commercial utilization have typically ranged between 90 and 100 wt% and have rarely been less than 80 wt%.  The magnitude of this range is both frustrating and at least somewhat explainable.

How one

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(2013) Question 1: What is a typical hydrofluoric (HF) acid inventory (pound of acid per bpdC5+ alkylate), and what steps are refiners considering reducing this volume? What other risk mitigation steps are refiners considering for their HF units?

As you can see on the slide, there is a big variation in the design HF-to-alkylate ratios. The order of older units, as denoted by old Heritage-Phillips and old Heritage-UOP types, has fairly high ratios. The more modern ones were designed with lower ratios.
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(2013) Question 2: Have seal-less pumps (magnetic drive or canned pumps) been used successfully in HF and sulfuric acid alkylation units? What services are considered for this equipment?

Yes, sealless pumps have been successfully used in both HF and sulfuric alkylation processes, typically in the acid rerun system for the HF process and fresh acid service for the sulfuric process. However, the API-610 sealed pump is, by far, the most commonly used pump based on the fact that API 610 pumps are familiar within the refinery for the Maintenance and Projects groups and also because of their robust design and relatively low initial cost.
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(2013) Question 3: What drives the decision to load presulfided, presulfurized, or oxidized catalyst in naphtha hydrotreaters? What are the different safety considerations for each case?

I would like to begin my responses by grounding us in some definitions. Pre-sulfided catalyst is the catalyst that is delivered with an active metal sulfide site. Pre-sulfurized catalyst is catalyst in the oxide form but which then has added to it an organic sulfur compound. The metal sulfide sites are then formed in-situ during the startup process. Finally, sulfiding is the process of injecting a sulfur compound into the reactor for in-situ sulfiding after the catalyst is loaded.
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(2013) Question 4: Is there any experience producing on-specification jet fuel without any sulfur/mercaptan treating, including any form of caustic, from feedstocks produced from ‘tight’ formations? What other jet specifications are adversely impacted by the changed feedstock?

The main idea here is that there is no real change to the way you make jet fuel based on tight oil. There may be slight changes to the freeze point due to the paraffinicity of the tight oil, but that is actually just dependent on the tight oil itself. If that is the case, really all that is required is a cutpoint adjustment in the crude unit to get on-spec on the freeze.
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(2012) Question 5: Reforming of feedstocks from ‘tight oil’ crudes offers unique challenges such as low naphthene and aromatic (N+A) content, lighter feed, and differences in coke yield.What are refiners doing to address these challenges and generate opportunities for these new crudes?

From a project standpoint, there have been inquiries related to tight oil and proposals generated, but not a significant number of actual projects realized for revamping units. It appears that most refiners are able to accommodate the tight oil in their existing units. Some of this accommodation has to do with the naphtha area capacity issues in the U.S. of which I am sure everyone is aware.
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(2013) Question 6: Has isomerization become more important as feedstocks have become more paraffinic with the increased processing of ‘tight oil’ feedstocks? Do ‘tight oil’ feedstocks contain more benzene?

For this question, I looked in our assay database at the light straight-runs since we spoke a little about isomerization then. Really, if you think about benchmark crudes like WTI (West Texas Intermediate) and WTS (West Texas Sour), and if you consider Bakken and some of the Eagle Ford crudes as tight oil crudes, then the only one that really pops out as being meaningfully different is the Eagle Ford Light or the Eagle Ford condensate that some people are running.
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