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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 5: What is your experience with CCR catalyst on-the-fly replacement compared to changing at turnaround?

On-the-fly catalyst replacements are becoming more common, but still an economic decision for the refiner based on trade-offs between the continuous replacement approach and the historical changing at turnaround approach. On-the-fly catalyst replacement allows for full catalyst replacement while catalyst circulation is maintained, with both reaction and regeneration sections still in operation to allow for reduced unit downtime.
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(2018) Question 7: How do you monitor and protect the heater tubes from overheating in high temperature services such as catalytic reformer heaters? How is the tube wall temperature monitored?

As a first step and low investment solution, refiners will perform a visual check on the color of tubes to check for color differences or perform a thermal scan of the tubes. These solutions are not very accurate due to iron scale formation and ceramic coating on the tubes.
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(2018) Question 8: Fixed bed reforming and CCR reforming recycle gas compressor washing to remove salt deposits. What is the frequency? What is the typical deposit composition? What is used to wash the compressor?

The recycle compressor is water washed at every catalyst regeneration (typically once per year) after the chlorination step. In addition, if there is any extended outage for mechanical work, the compressor will be water washed anytime there is an opportunity to do so as precaution.
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(2018) Question 10: What are the problems with low coke operation in CCR reforming and how is it managed?

10% ethanol in gasoline regulation which lowered the gasoline octane required from the refinery.  At 10% blending ethanol raises the (R+M)/2 octane of regular gasoline about 2 numbers. 
Read more

(2019) Question 8: Where is salt (NH4Cl or (NH4)2S) fouling most likely to occur? What are common practices for monitoring and mitigating?

ABIGAIL SLATER (HollyFrontier)
Salting typically occurs in the reactor effluent exchangers (shell and tube and fin fans), recycle and net gas compressors, and product stabilizer overhead system (top trays, overhead condenser, etc.). Common monitoring practices on exchangers and fin fans can be

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(2019) Question 9: How do you track chloride in liquid/gas/LPG? What are your criteria for replacing adsorbent in chloride treaters?

DAVINDER MITTAL (HPCL Mittal Energy)
Chlorides have been a long standing issue in catalytic reformer operation. Until a few years ago, the focus on preventing operational problems from the chloride compounds in the catalytic reformer product stream was to remove HCl.  More recently, a growing

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(2019) Question 10: What causes metal-catalyzed coking (MCC) that obstructs catalyst circulation in CCR reformers? What actions do you take to mitigate MCC formation?

BILL KOSTKA (AXENS NORTH AMERICA)
Metal-catalyzed coke (MCC) formation typically occurs on 3d valence transition metals such as iron and nickel.  Under CCR-like conditions of low hydrogen partial pressure (less than about 620 kpa), high temperature (more than about 480 °C) and low or stagnant flow

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(2019) Question 11: Where are your liquid-phase chloride treaters installed for reforming units? What are the advantages of each location?

BILL KOSTKA (AXENS NORTH AMERICA)
Liquid-phase Cl treaters are typically used in three locations for reforming units.

Treating the unstabilzed reformate stream provides several advantages.  The stream is heated upstream of the stabilizer column which ensures that any ammonium chloride is

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(2019) Question 14: What are your strategies to reduce alky acid consumption?

ABIGAIL SLATER (HollyFrontier)
The most impactful parameter affecting alky acid consumption is feed quality. Reducing feed contamination will greatly reduce acid consumption. There are also operational changes that can be made to reduce acid consumption, but the biggest impact will be feed

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(2008) Question 81: Has the optimum feed for light naphtha isomerization units changed given that: 1) ethanol blending reduces the octane value of other blendstocks; 2) the demand for premium gasoline is down; and, 3) ethanol blending increases RVP compliance costs? Are you removing pentane from the isomerization unit feed stream or shutting down the unit? Or, are the units still valuable for isomerizing normal hexane and saturating benzene?

KAISER (Delek Refining Ltd.) The question is very well phrased in that the introduction of ethanol into the blend pool does tend to reduce the need to run the isomerization unit in that ethanol is a very high RVP blend component, and it has enough octane to be able to possibly offset the need for the octane boost that you’re getting out of your isomerization unit. So when a refiner wants to introduce the ethanol into their blend pool, there are three likely scenarios that they’ll go through in their unit operations. The first is obviously shut the isomerization unit down.
Read more

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