| |
Ni passivator
Ni, as a dehydrogenation element, generates
Hydrogen and coke. There are several types of Ni passivators.
The first are ultra-fine particle metals added to the feed
injection system,
employing a fluid such as diesel or LCCO as the carrier
medium. These ultra-fine particle metals are Antimony (Sb)
and Bismuth (Bi). These metals work by permanently attaching
to the Ni. The Sb or Bi that have formed this attachment
reduces the surface area of the Ni exposed to the process,
reducing the H2/coke forming tendencies. In other words, the
Sb or Bi then retard the dehydrogenation effect of the Ni,
by reducing the exposed surface area of the Ni to the
process flow.
Generally, Sb has a lay-down efficiency of ~65% to 75% and
the same efficiency as to passivation. Generally, Bi has a
lay-down efficiency of ~30% to 40% and the same efficiency
as to passivation. So, you can see that from an
"effectiveness" point of view, Sb would be the material of
choice.
The balance of the undeposited Sb or Bi is transported with
the feed to the Main Fractionator Bottoms where it has been
observed to increases the coking & fouling tendencies of the
oil in the bottoms circuit. The use of Sb has also been
observed to increase NOx emissions from the regenerator. A
good target for Sb-to-Ni is a ratio of 0.35 (example 700 ppm
Sb for 2000 ppm Ni).
The second type of Ni passivator is Sulphur (S). This is a
temporary passivator. It also binds to the Ni reducing
H2&coke formation; also reducing the available surface area
of the Ni. However, the S is burned from the Ni within the
regenerator, thus "reactivating" the Ni. The most effective
way/manner to introduce the S is thru the use of a S
containing gas (sour refinery fuel gas or FCC off-gas) as
lift gas, instead of steam at the bottom of the Wye or J
bends (Wye or J bends depend on the FCC Licensor
technology).
Given some of the process issues associated with Sb use
(increased NOx emissions & increased Main Fractionator
Bottoms circuit coking tendencies), I recommend that you
consider/review the use of FCC catalyst Ni passivation
technologies first. Catalytic passivation technologies are
the Third method of passivation. They work by forming a Ni
Aluminate which traps and "submerges" the Ni; again,
reducing the surface area available for dehydrogenation.
These catalytic trapping technologies are fairly effective.
At very elevated Ni levels (greater than 3500 ppm Ni), a
combination of the catalytic trapping technology & another
passivation technology (either Sb or S) is used.
The duration and the magnitude of the expected Ni excursion
would help dictate the type of passivation to employ. A
short duration & high magnitude excursion would dictate the
use of either Sb or S passivation technology depending on
availability and timing. A long duration & moderate to high
magnitude would dictate catalytic passivation.
A long duration & high to severe magnitude would dictate a
combination of catalytic and either Sb or S passivation.
I normally target as a control methodology the Hydrogen to
Methane (H2/C1) ratio. The H2/C1 is easily/quickly derived
at the refinery (no-to-little turn-around time as compared
to E-cat catalyst analyses). A H2/C1 ratio of 0.85 to 0.9
(depending on the Wet-Gas Compressor, WGC, constraints) is a
good target.
I hope this information is helpful. Please let me know if
you require additional information or if you have additional
questions.
Ken
Kenneth A Peccatiello
Ken@CatCracking.com
Principal Consultant
|
Download a PDF version and send it to a colleague.
Many articles at CatCracking.com are submitted From
and For the FCC
Community.
How about submitting an article? Send your idea to
info@CatCracking.com.
|