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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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(2010) Question 12: Now that ULSD production has seen several cycles, what are the SOR and EOR operating conditions? What catalyst formulations are you using (NiMo, CoMo, regen, various blends)?

The operating conditions for ULSD vary and will depend on the feed to be processed as well as specific requirements to the product quality. This is apart from the typical US and European standards for ULSD, such as low aromatics, color, cold flow properties or other additional specifications.
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(2010) Question 13: Severe fouling of diesel and gas oil hydrotreating preheat exchangers has been a growing problem. In your experience, what are the causes and how can these be prevented? Have you tried antifoulant injection in this service?

Fouling of the heat exchanger train is sometimes a problem particularly when processing cracked feed stocks. The fouling is often caused by polymer like compounds (gums) that form when petroleum distillates come in contact with air.
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Question 14: How do you ensure that the reactor effluent stream is evenly divided when going to parallel exchangers?

Two phase reactor effluent flow to parallel exchanger trains need to be addressed during the design and initial piping layout phase. Once the system is installed very little can be done to evenly distribute the liquid and vapor.
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Question 15: ULSD reactor feed/effluent heat exchanger leaks can be a big problem meeting product specifications. What are best practices for detecting and preventing leaks? Are there new technologies or mechanical specifications to prevent cross contamination?

With regard to feed/effluent exchanger leaks there are a number of actions that can be taken during the initial design phase of the unit.
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Question 16: In your experience, are there documented cases of organic chlorides coming in with certain crudes? If so, what is their impact on hydrotreating units?

In researching this question with our corrosion experts, they identified this as a mature issue that has been well documented in NACE publications and international symposiums. These papers identify multiple cases of organic chlorides coming in with specific crude oils.
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(2010) Question 17: What are the best practices to manage ammonium chloride fouling ? What methods are used to set wash intervals? What are the potential pitfalls?

It is not unusual that NH3, H2S, and HCl are all present in the reactor effluent stream. Since ammonium chloride (NH4Cl), and ammonium bisulfide (NH4HS) form above the dew point of water, water is injected in reactor effluent train, upstream of the effluent air cooler.
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(2010) Question 18: What are your key strategies to maximize the heavy diesel barrels in the diesel pool without cracking? Do you consider blending and dewaxing etc. to meet product specifications?

Generally maximizing heavy diesel barrels in the total refinery diesel pool would be based on distillation cut points the diesel processing units, mainly crude atmospheric columns. The objective is to maximize barrels by increasing distillation cut points up to distillation cut point maximum or to product quality specifications.
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(2010) Question 20: How do refiners quantify the impact of sodium on hydroprocessing units, specifically those processing either residuum or VGO feeds?

Sodium generally enters a hydrotreater due to upstream addition of caustic soda or desalter operational problems. Feed sodium content of more than 3-5 ppm should be avoided. Sodium has a significant deactivation effect; 1-3 %wt results in a 50% loss of catalyst activity.
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(2010) Question 21: Silica uptake on gas oil and diesel hydrotreating units is an increasing problem. In your experience, what is the source of silica in these feeds? Do you have effective ways to manage this silica?

The main source of silicon in Hydrotreaters is polysiloxane compounds (such as polydimethylsiloxane) used to control foaming in delayed coker units. It has also been reported that indigenous silicon is present in some heavy oils.
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(2010) Question 22: In your experience, how are ULSD units maximizing catalyst life/ cycle length? Do you use feedstock or catalyst analysis to locate sources of contaminants, especially arsenic?

Many factors impact the cycle length in a ULSD unit, and in order to ensure the longest possible cycle length in such units it is important to: Have an optimal flow distribution and gas mixing using latest generation reactor internals designed for the actual operating conditions. This is very important in order to ensure maximum catalyst utilization with no channeling in the catalyst bed.
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