Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Catalytic cracking mass balance

The catalytic cracking unit is often referred to as the gasoline workhorse of a refining unit. As shown in Fig. 18.9, feeds to the catalytic cracking unit are gas oils from the atmospheric and vacuum distillation columns and delayed coker. These heavier fractions also carry metals such as nickel, vanadium, and iron. More important, sulfur compounds concentrate in the heavier product fractions. Table 18.8 lists a typical mass balance for sulfur.25 FCC blend-stocks comprise 36 percent of the volume of the gasoline pool. However, this stream also contributes 98 percent of the sulfur concentration to blended procucts.25 As specifications on sulfur concentrations in diesel and gasoline tighten, more efforts are focused on how feeds and product streams from the FCC are pre- and posttreated for sulfur concentrations. [Pg.831]

In fixed-bed catalytic cracking tests the proper decreasing delta coke response as catalyst-to-oil is increased is possible if a constant catalyst load and a constant feed injection rate are maintained. As CCR increases above 4 wt%, however, fixed-bed cracking methods are suspect because the mass balance drops significantly and the cracking performance can be measured better using other techniques (e.g.s., circulating pilot plants or fluidized-bed reactors). [Pg.340]

Table 28.3 Mass balance on catalytic cracking of polyolefins... Table 28.3 Mass balance on catalytic cracking of polyolefins...

See other pages where Catalytic cracking mass balance is mentioned: [Pg.424]    [Pg.424]    [Pg.312]    [Pg.376]    [Pg.376]    [Pg.342]    [Pg.867]    [Pg.419]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.731 , Pg.732 ]




SEARCH



Mass balance

Mass balancing

© 2024 chempedia.info