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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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(2016) Question 56: What mechanical/design alterations to the "standard" crude furnace design do you require to prevent fouling when processing LTOs (light tight oils)?

From the various articles and presentations on this subject, plus our own experience, we have found that LTO, in itself, is not an issue. Rather, LTO mixed with crudes containing asphaltenes is the issue. Industry seems to agree that precipitation of asphaltenes is one of the main fouling mechanisms.
Read more

(2016) Question 57: Please discuss desalter level control equipment and its effectiveness at detecting and controlling rag layer, oil undercarry and water carryover.

There are many types of level controllers for desalters, so an exhaustive response is not possible here. Generally, each type has comparative merits based on how robust it is with regard to the various contaminants in desalters, resolution, or cost. Traditional capacitance probes, and also float-type level controllers, have a broad application in desalters and have been used for many years in the industry.
Read more

(2016) Question 58: What techniques do you use to rapidly detect fouling in the top section of the crude tower besides top section differential pressure?

Besides the use of flow-normalized pressure drop, another observable parameter that can be used is the distillation overlap of the overhead distillation curves.
Read more

(2016) Question 59: What is the contribution to salting in crude fractionators and overhead systems due to steam condensate amines, and what are your mitigation strategies?

Amines have been used in refinery steam systems for decades. When properly applied, the amount of amine that may make it to the crude fractionator towers should be very small; the partial pressure contribution should be so low that the steam condensate amines should not contribute to salt formation.
Read more

(2016) Question 60: When is your return on investment (ROI)adequate to justify installing a desalter to treat purchased FCC feeds? What other factors besides FCC catalyst impact and unit corrosion are used to determine ROI? How do these desalters differ, mechanically and operationally, from a conventional crude oil desalter?

This is a three-part question. The first question is: When is the return on investment (ROI)adequate to justify installing a desalter to treat purchased FCC feeds? The capital and operating costs of an FCC feed desalter are supported by improvements in performance, operating costs, and reliability.
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(2016) Question 61: How many inside/outside operators staff your FCC plant? What other processes are included in their scope of responsibility?

[United Refining Company (URC)] Our FCC unit has five operators per shift. Typically, two people are inside running the DCS (distributed control system) and board-mounted controls while the other three are doing rounds in the unit.
Read more

(2016) Question 62: We have run a full-burn FCCU for many years. We are considering processing more resid and operating in a partial CO combustion mode. What is a carbon runaway, and how can it be addressed?

A carbon runaway or “snowball” occurs in an FCC that is operating in partial CO combustion mode and very high CO levels. In the runaway situation, the carbon on regenerated catalyst (CRC) rises to levels such that additional coke that is laid down on the catalyst cannot be burned from the catalyst in the regenerator, causing the CRC to continue rising like a snowball that gets bigger and bigger as it rolls down a hill.
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(2016) Question 63: What are your current methods used for regenerator cyclone temperature control? Do you use water sprays or steam injection?

In the early days of FCC, the normal bed and dilute-phase operating temperatures –being less than 1100°F –did not support CO combustion. These units operated with high levels of carbon on catalyst and about 10 vol% CO in the flue gas with almost no excess oxygen in the flue gas.
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(2016) Question 64: What are your typical operating guidelines to prevent compressor surge episodes? How closely do your FCCU operators approach the actual surge line of a compressor before adjusting operation?

[United Refining Company (URC)] The unit engineer/compressor manufacturer should be able to provide guidelines to prevent surge episodes. These guidelines may include safe windows of operation for air rates, discharge pressures, and discharge temperatures.
Read more

(2016) Question 65: Please comment on which FCC feed types you are currently processing and what chemicals you are using for gas plant corrosion prevention. Is waterwashing sufficient to sustain adequate unit reliability?

Our refinery typically runs Western Canadian Crudes, SYN, and some conventional heavy crudes.
Read more

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