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Steam cracker/cracking

Thermal Cracking. / -Butane is used in steam crackers as a part of the mainly ethane—propane feedstream. Roughly 0.333—0.4 kg ethylene is produced per kilogram / -butane. Primary bv-pioducts include propylene (50 57 kg/100 kg ethylene), butadiene (7-8.5 kg/100 kg), butylenes (5-20 kg/WO kg) and aromatics (6 kg/ToO kg). [Pg.402]

Since the bulk of butadiene is recovered from steam crackers, its economics is very sensitive to the selection of feedstocks, operating conditions, and demand patterns. Butadiene supply and, ultimately, its price are strongly influenced by the demand for ethylene, the primary product from steam cracking. Currently there is a worldwide surplus of butadiene. Announcements of a number of new ethylene plants will likely result in additional butadiene production, more than enough to meet worldwide demand for polymers and other chemicals. When butadiene is in excess supply, ethylene manufacturers can recycle the butadiene as a feedstock for ethylene manufacture. [Pg.350]

Table 6 compares the total production of butylenes in the United States, Western Europe, andjapan. Included in this table are relative amounts of productions from different processes. In the United States, about 92% of the butylene production comes from refinery sources, whereas only about 45% in Western Europe andjapan are from this source. This difference arises because the latter cracks mostiy petroleum distillates in the steam crackers that produce larger amounts of butylenes than the light feedstocks cracked in the United States. [Pg.366]

Significant products from a typical steam cracker are ethylene, propylene, butadiene, and pyrolysis gasoline. Typical wt % yields for butylenes from a steam cracker for different feedstocks are ethane, 0.3 propane, 1.2 50% ethane/50% propane mixture, 0.8 butane, 2.8 hill-range naphtha, 7.3 light gas oil, 4.3. A typical steam cracking plant cracks a mixture of feedstocks that results in butylenes yields of about 1% to 4%. These yields can be increased by almost 50% if cracking severity is lowered to maximize propylene production instead of ethylene. [Pg.366]

Separation of raw feedstock. The pyrolysis of petroleum feedstream is carried out at 650-900°C at normal pressure in the presence of steam. The so-called steam-cracking process involves carbon-carbon splitting of saturated, unsaturated and aromatic molecules. The following steam-cracker fractions are used as raw materials to produce hydrocarbon resins. [Pg.606]

Cracking n-hutane is also similar to ethane and propane, hut the yield of ethylene is even lower. It has been noted that cracking either propane or butanes at nearly similar severity produced approximately equal liquid yields. Mixtures of propane and butane LPG are becoming important steam cracker feedstocks for C2-C4 olefin production. It has been forecasted that world LPG markets will grow from 114.7 million metric tons/day in 1988 to 136.9 MMtpd in the year 2000, and the largest portion of growth will be in the chemicals field. [Pg.98]

The liquefied plastic fraction is heated to over 400 °C. This leads to cracking of the plastic into components of different chain lengths. Gases count for 20%-30% and oils for 60%-70% they are separated by distillation. Any naphtha produced is treated in a steam cracker, resulting in monomers like ethylene and propylene that are recovered. Such monomers can be used to produce plastics again. The heavy fractions can be processed into synthesis gas or conversion coke and then be transferred for further use. At most 5% of the input is converted into a mineral fraction. It is likely that this consists mainly of the inorganic additives in plastics. [Pg.8]

The thermal cracking of a light ffaction of mixed plastics waste was carried out in a fluidised bed reactor and the fractions obtained were analysed by elemental analysis, gas chromatography and ashing. The main components of the waste were PE and PP with a small amount of PS and the bed was fluidised by pyrolysis gas, nitrogen or preheated steam. Experiments conducted at different temperatures and residence times were compared by calculating the crack severity for each experiment. The results obtained revealed that the amounts of ethene and propene obtained by pyrolysis with steam were comparable with those obtained using a commercial steam cracker. [Pg.42]

Traditional olefin plants have more than one alias. One is even fraudulent. They are variously called ethylene plants after their primary product steam crackers because the feed is usiuilly mixed with steam before it is cracked or whatever aacker, where whatever is the name of the feed (ethane cracker, gas oil cracker, etc.). Olefin plants are sometimes referred to as ethylene crackers, biit only those who don t know any better, use that misnomer. Ethylene is not cracked but rather is the product of cracking. [Pg.66]

In order to identify the mercury species in the C3 and C4 cuts, experiments were carried out on propylene and on a raw steam-cracked C3 cut, containing methylacetylene (MA) and propadiene (PD). TTie steam-cracker C3 cut was found to be able to take up to 10 times more mercury than pure propylene. So MAPD has an effect on the mercury concentration in the C3 fraction. [Pg.88]

Q Catalytic Cracking for Integration of Refinery and Steam Crackers... [Pg.119]

For comparative purposes the typical weight percentage yields for a DCC unit, an FCC unit and a steam cracker are shown in Table 8.1. Propylene yields from the DCC unit are considerably higher than those from an FCC nnit. The DCC mixed C4s stream also contains increased amounts of bntylenes and iso-C4s as compared to an FCC. These high olefin yields are achieved by deeper cracking into the aliphatic components of the initially prodnced naphtha and life cycle oil (LCO). [Pg.121]

Since CPP cracking effluent is molecularly similar to that of heavy distillate cracking it will be logical to construct integrated CPP-steam cracker units, or even to add a CPP reactor-regenerator as a revamp side-cracker expansion feature. Various plans are under review for such prospective projects. [Pg.124]

C4 Hydrorefining. The main components of typical C4 raw cuts of steam crackers are butanes (4-6%), butenes (40-65%), and 1,3-butadiene (30-50%). Additionally, they contain vinylacetylene and 1-butyne (up to 5%) and also some methylacetylene and propadiene. Selective hydrogenations are applied to transform vinylacetylene to 1,3-butadiene in the C4 raw cut or the acetylenic cut (which is a fraction recovered by solvent extraction containing 20-40% vinylacetylene), and to hydrogenate residual 1,3-butadiene in butene cuts. Hydrogenating vinylacetylene in these cracked products increases 1,3-butadiene recovery ratio and improves purity necessary for polymerization.308... [Pg.664]

Steam cracker tar (SCT) is a by-product from the steam cracking of naphtha or gas oils to produce ethylene. The characteristics and yield of SCT is dependent on the feed characteristics, the plant design and severity of cracking,... [Pg.142]

Table I. Physical and Chemical Characteristics of Steam Cracker Tars from Naphtha and Gas Oil Cracking... Table I. Physical and Chemical Characteristics of Steam Cracker Tars from Naphtha and Gas Oil Cracking...
The hydrocarbon mixture at the furnace outlet is quenched rapidly in the transfer line exchangers (2) (TLE or SLE), generating high-pressure steam. In liquid crackers, cracked gas flows to a primary fractionator (3) after direct quench with oil, where fuel oil is separated from gasoline and lighter components, and then to a quench water tower (4) for water recovery (to be used as dilution steam) and heavy gasoline production (end-point control). [Pg.117]

Applications To primarily produce propylene from C4 to C8 olefins supplied by steam crackers, refineries and/or methanol-to-olefins (MTO) plants via olefin cracking. [Pg.182]

Application Increase the value of steam cracker C4 cuts via low-temperature selective hydrogenation and hydroisomerization catalysis. Several options exist removal of ethyl and vinyl acetylenes to facilitate butadiene extraction processing downstream conversion of 1, 3 butadiene to maximize 1-butene or 2-butene production production of high-purity isobutylene from crude C4 cuts total C4 cut hydrogenation and total hydrogenation of combined C3/C4 and C4C5 cuts for recycle to cracking furnaces or LPG production. [Pg.196]


See other pages where Steam cracker/cracking is mentioned: [Pg.232]    [Pg.127]    [Pg.368]    [Pg.370]    [Pg.432]    [Pg.169]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.91]    [Pg.512]    [Pg.519]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.123]    [Pg.368]    [Pg.370]    [Pg.232]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.207]    [Pg.161]    [Pg.165]    [Pg.413]    [Pg.145]    [Pg.112]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.10 , Pg.464 , Pg.604 , Pg.605 , Pg.607 ]




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