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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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Process

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(2018) Question 25: Coke drum integrity can be compromised due to the use of feed side entry devices. What is your experience with drum roundness upon inspection?

Coke drum integrity is typically dominated by low cycle fatigue. Imposed stresses due to thermal gradients during drum warming, water quenching and the contraction of the drum while full of coke can result in stresses higher than the yield stress of the coke drum metal.
Read more

(2018) Question 26: How do you monitor furnace convection section fouling? What mitigation steps do you implement?

Monitoring the flue gas temperature leaving the process convection section is a simple method of tracking the heat transfer in the convection section. The excess air needs to be taken into consideration as a higher O2 concentration will shift heat transfer into the convection section and causes the total quantity of flue gas to increase.
Read more

(2018) Question 27: What is your experience with chemical treatment to reduce furnace coking?

For conventional fouling, which is the result of asphaltene destabilization due to temperature, chemical treatment programs have not been effective for Coker heaters. For premature asphaltene precipitation due to resid compatibility concerns, chemical treatment programs have been effective in reducing or eliminating fouling.
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(2018) Question 49: As the demand for higher octane gasoline components increases and lobbying for a 95 RON gasoline standard continues, how are you adjusting your operations to meet the market demand? What FCC specific changes do you make to produce higher octane gasoline components?

Refiners are optimizing their gasoline blend components to maximize high octane components. Alkylate and reformate yields are becoming increasingly important, as well as minimizing low octane component yields. The emergence of tight oil feeds has created an increase in low octane natural gasoline and LPG saturate production.
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(2018) Question 50: Butylene demand and prices in relation to other refined products reached a record level in 2017. What caused it and what can we do in the FCC to produce more butylenes?

Higher demand for butylene is result of octane shortage in the gasoline market stemming from several main causes.
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(2018) Question 51: For advanced (closed) riser termination systems, where does coke form inside the reactor vessel? What is the typical amount accumulated during a run?

The quantity of coke is heavily dependent on reactor technology, feed quality, and operating conditions. In earlier termination devices the riser outlet was open to the reactor. The vapors would spend a lot of time in the reactor resulting in coking.
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(2018) Question 52: What are your best practices for wet flue gas scrubber water supply and system monitoring (sampling frequency, instrumentation verification, etc.)? How do you handle the effluent water and any new emerging trends?

Water supply should be managed depending on the system design. The water source used by Motiva is clarified water. Due to the stainless-steel material and the chloride concentration in both the water and the caustic for neutralization the inlet duct temperature is monitored and controlled to prevent Chloride Stress Corrosion Cracking.
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(2018) Question 53: In the Third Stage Separator (TSS), what is the expected life of swirl tubes or cyclones assuming good performing regenerator cyclones? Of these two types, which handle upsets/ variable particulate loadings better?

The performance of swirl tubes is comparable with cyclones in terms of separation efficiency. Swirl tubes have distinct advantages over cyclones in being more compact, much easier to construct and have high mechanical integrity.
Read more

(2018) Question 54: What are your best practices for soot blowing or scouring waste heat boiler tubes that ensure minimal impact to process variables, environmental limits are met, and spurious trips of safety instrumented functions on the ESP are avoided?

Automated systems are employed at Refineries that inject some type of abrasive (e.g., sand, walnut/pecan shells) on a scheduled interval basis. Injection duration must be controlled to ensure opacity limits are not exceeded. Manual injection of abrasives is also utilized.
Read more

(2018) Question 55: With new challenges presented by the Refinery Sector and Maintenance Venting Rules oil circuits are taking longer to prepare for maintenance; what successes and challenges have you had in staging shutdown operations to allow for safe entry to the FCC reactor/regenerator section prior to clearing other sections of the unit?

With new challenges presented by the Refinery Sector and Maintenance Venting Rules oil circuits are taking longer to prepare for maintenance; what successes and challenges have you had in staging shutdown operations to allow for safe entry to the FCC reactor/regenerator section prior to clearing other sections of the unit?
Read more

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