10041103
Chemical
- Dec 16, 2013
- 4
Hi,
I recently started a new job at an oil refinery and quickly noticed that the 90%-10% overlap between kero to diesel and diesel to gas oil are 100 deg F and 150 deg F respectively. My background is mostly in FCC's not crude stills but I am used to overlap in main Frac's being more in the range of 20 deg F.
The tower only has an overall dP no sectional dP's and no bleeders to get readings. The overall dP is typically 1.5 psig. The tower has 34 trays between these pressure taps and the tray spacing is 3 feet. The trays are all original cast iron bubble caps. The tower is running at design rates and there is an identical tower running at the same rate with the same overlap.
Initially I would have thought that the problem was caused by weeping, but as long as the risers in the bubble caps were designed properly, my understanding is that weeping is not possible. I don't think it could be mechanical damage since this poor fractionation has always existed at this refinery and is duplicated in the identical crude unit 2. Do you think it could be caused solely by low liquid and vapor loading. Pumparounds are cut back to a minimum to try to increase internal reflux but I have only seen minimal improvement. The pumparounds return a couple trays below the draw trays. The only clean cut in the tower is between the kero and the overhead, which I suspect may be due to the high top pump around as there is no reflux used in the tower.
Any suggestions? The only other idea I can come up with is to adjust weir heights to increase liquid levels on the trays, currently suspect 3 in level on tray with 3 foot tray spacing so I believe there is plenty of room before hitting flood point.
Have I missed anything? Any suggestions would be appreciated.
I recently started a new job at an oil refinery and quickly noticed that the 90%-10% overlap between kero to diesel and diesel to gas oil are 100 deg F and 150 deg F respectively. My background is mostly in FCC's not crude stills but I am used to overlap in main Frac's being more in the range of 20 deg F.
The tower only has an overall dP no sectional dP's and no bleeders to get readings. The overall dP is typically 1.5 psig. The tower has 34 trays between these pressure taps and the tray spacing is 3 feet. The trays are all original cast iron bubble caps. The tower is running at design rates and there is an identical tower running at the same rate with the same overlap.
Initially I would have thought that the problem was caused by weeping, but as long as the risers in the bubble caps were designed properly, my understanding is that weeping is not possible. I don't think it could be mechanical damage since this poor fractionation has always existed at this refinery and is duplicated in the identical crude unit 2. Do you think it could be caused solely by low liquid and vapor loading. Pumparounds are cut back to a minimum to try to increase internal reflux but I have only seen minimal improvement. The pumparounds return a couple trays below the draw trays. The only clean cut in the tower is between the kero and the overhead, which I suspect may be due to the high top pump around as there is no reflux used in the tower.
Any suggestions? The only other idea I can come up with is to adjust weir heights to increase liquid levels on the trays, currently suspect 3 in level on tray with 3 foot tray spacing so I believe there is plenty of room before hitting flood point.
Have I missed anything? Any suggestions would be appreciated.