User Contributed Dictionary
Etymology
Noun
- The product of a hydrocarbon reforming process; an intermediate in the production of fuels such as gasoline.
Related terms
Extensive Definition
Catalytic reforming is a chemical process used to
convert petroleum
refinery naphthas,
typically having low octane
ratings, into high-octane liquid products called reformates
which are components of high-octane gasoline (also
known as petrol). Basically, the process re-arranges or
re-structures the hydrocarbon molecules in the naphtha
feedstocks as well as breaking some of the molecules into smaller
molecules. The overall effect is that the product reformate
contains hydrocarbons with more complex molecular shapes having
higher octane values than the hydrocarbons in the naphtha
feedstock. In so doing, the process separates hydrogen atoms from the hydrocarbon
molecules and produces very significant amounts of byproduct
hydrogen gas for use in a number of the other processes involved in
a modern petroleum refinery. Other byproducts are small amounts of
methane, ethane, propane and butanes.
This process is quite different from and not to
be confused with the catalytic steam
reforming process used industrially to produce various products
such as hydrogen, ammonia and methanol from natural gas,
naphtha or other petroleum-derived feedstocks. Nor is this process
to be confused with various other catalytic reforming processes
that use methanol or biomass-derived feedstocks to
produce hydrogen for fuel cells or
other uses.
History
Universal
Oil Products (also known as UOP) is a multi-national company
developing and delivering technology to the petroleum
refining, natural gas
processing, petrochemical production
and other manufacturing industries. In the 1940s, an eminent
research chemist named Vladimir Haensel working for UOP developed a
catalytic reforming
process using a catalyst containing platinum. Haensel's process was
subsequently commercialized by UOP in 1949 for producing a high
octane gasoline from low octane naphthas and the UOP process become
known as the Platforming process. The first Platforming unit was
built in 1949 at the refinery of the Old Dutch Refining Company in
Muskegon,
Michigan.
In the years since then, many other versions of
the process have been developed by some of the major oil companies
and other organizations. Today, the large majority of gasoline
produced worldwide is derived from the catalytic reforming
process.
To name a few of the other catalytic reforming
versions that were developed, all of which utilized a platinum
and/or a rhenium
catalyst:
- Rheniforming: Developed by Chevron Oil Company.
- Powerforming: Developed by Esso Oil Company, now known as ExxonMobil.
- Magnaforming: Developed by Englehard Catalyst Company and Atlantic Richfield Oil Company.
- Ultraforming: Developed by Standard Oil of Indiana, now a part of the British Petroleum Company.
- Houdriforming: Developed by the Houdry Process Corporation.
- CCR Platforming: A Platforming version, designed for continuous catalyst regeneration, developed by UOP.
- Octanizing: A catalytic reforming version developed by Axens, a subsidiary of Institut francais du petrole (IFP), designed for continuous catalyst regeneration.
Chemistry
Before describing the reaction chemistry of the
catalytic reforming process as used in petroleum refineries, the
typical naphthas used as catalytic reforming feedstocks will be
discussed.
Typical naphtha feedstocks
A petroleum refinery includes many unit
operations and unit
processes. The first unit operation in a refinery is the
continuous distillation of the petroleum crude oil being
refined. The overhead liquid distillate is called naphtha and will
become a major component of the refinery's gasoline (petrol)
product after it is further processed through a catalytic
hydrodesulfurizer to remove sulfur-containing hydrocarbons
and a catalytic reformer to reform its hydrocarbon molecules into
more complex molecules with a higher octane rating value. The
naphtha is a mixture of very many different hydrocarbon compounds.
It has an initial boiling
point of about 35 °C and a final boiling point of about 200 °C,
and it contains paraffin, naphthene (cyclic paraffins)
and aromatic
hydrocarbons ranging from those containing 4 carbon atoms to those containing
about 10 or 11 carbon atoms.
The naphtha from the crude oil distillation is
often further distilled to produce a "light" naphtha containing
most (but not all) of the hydrocarbons with 6 or less carbon atoms
and a "heavy" naphtha containing most (but not all) of the
hydrocarbons with more than 6 carbon atoms. The heavy naphtha has
an initial boiling point of about 140 to 150 °C and a final boiling
point of about 190 to 205 °C. The naphthas derived from the
distillation of crude oils are referred to as "straight-run"
naphthas.
It is the straight-run heavy naphtha that is
usually processed in a catalytic reformer because the light naphtha
has molecules with 6 or less carbon atoms which, when reformed,
tend to crack into butane and lower molecular weight hydrocarbons
which are not useful as high-octane gasoline blending components.
Also, the molecules with 6 carbon atoms tend to form aromatics
which is undesirable because governmental environmental regulations
in a number of countries limit the amount of aromatics (most
particularly benzene)
that gasoline may contain.
It should be noted that there are a great many
petroleum crude
oil sources worldwide and each crude oil has its own unique
composition or "assay".
Also, not all refineries process the same crude oils and each
refinery produces its own straight-run naphthas with their own
unique initial and final boiling points. In other words, naphtha is
a generic term rather than a specific term.
The table just below lists some fairly typical
straight-run heavy naphtha feedstocks, available for catalytic
reforming, derived from various crude oils. It can be seen that
they differ significantly in their content of paraffins, naphthenes
and aromatics:
Some refinery naphthas include olefinic hydrocarbons, such as
naphthas derived from the fluid
catalytic cracking and coking
processes used in many refineries. Some refineries may also
desulfurize
and catalytically reform those naphthas. However, for the most
part, catalytic reforming is mainly used on the straight-run heavy
naphthas, such as those in the above table, derived from the
distillation of crude oils.
The reaction chemistry
There are a good many chemical reactions that
occur in the catalytic reforming process, all of which occur in the
presence of a catalyst and a high partial
pressure of hydrogen. Depending upon the type or version of
catalytic reforming used as well as the desired reaction severity,
the reaction conditions range from temperatures of about 495 to 525
°C and from pressures of about 5 to 45 atm.
The commonly used catalytic reforming catalysts
contain noble metals
such as platinum and/or rhenium, which are very susceptible to
poisoning
by sulfur and nitrogen
compounds. Therefore, the naphtha feedstock to a catalytic reformer
is always pre-processed in a hydrodesulfurization
unit which removes both the sulfur and the nitrogen
compounds.
The four major catalytic reforming reactions
are:
- 1: The dehydrogenation of naphthenes to convert them into aromatics as exemplified in the conversion methylcyclohexane (a naphthene) to toluene (an aromatic), as shown below:
- 2: The isomerization of normal paraffins to isoparaffins as exemplified in the conversion of normal octane to 2,5-Dimethylhexane (an isoparaffin), as shown below:
- 3: The dehydrogenation and aromatization of paraffins to aromatics (commonly called dehydrocyclization) as exemplified in the conversion of normal heptane to toluene, as shown below:
- 4: The hydrocracking of paraffins into smaller molecules as exemplified by the cracking of normal heptane into isopentane and ethane, as shown below:
The hydrocracking of paraffins is the only one of
the above four major reforming reactions that consumes hydrogen.
The isomerization of normal paraffins does not consume or produce
hydrogen. However, both the dehydrogenation of naphthenes and the
dehydrocyclization of paraffins produce hydrogen. The overall net
production of hydrogen in the catalytic reforming of petroleum
naphthas ranges from about 50 to 200 cubic meters
of hydrogen gas (at 0 °C and 1 atm) per cubic meter of liquid
naphtha feedstock. In the
United States customary units, that is equivalent to 300 to
1200 cubic
feet of hydrogen gas (at 60 °F and 1 atm) per barrel of
liquid naphtha feedstock. In many petroleum refineries, the net
hydrogen produced in catalytic reforming supplies a significant
part of the hydrogen used elsewhere in the refinery (for example,
in hydrodesulfurization processes).
Process description
The most commonly used type of catalytic
reforming unit has three reactors,
each with a fixed bed of catalyst, and all of the catalyst is
regenerated
in situ during routine catalyst regeneration shutdowns which occur
approximately once each 6 to 24 months. Such a unit is referred to
as a semi-regenerative catalytic
reformer (SRR).
Some catalytic reforming units have an extra
spare or swing reactor and each reactor can be individually
isolated so that any one reactor can be undergoing in situ
regeneration while the other reactors are in operation. When that
reactor is regenerated, it replaces another reactor which, in turn,
is isolated so that it can then be regenerated. Such units,
referred to as cyclic catalytic reformers, are not very common.
Cyclic catalytic reformers serve to extend the period between
required shutdowns.
The latest and most modern type of catalytic
reformers are called continuous catalyst regeneration reformers
(CCR). Such units are characterized by continuous in-situ
regeneration of part of the catalyst in a special regenerator, and
by continuous addition of the regenerated catalyst to the operating
reactors. As of 2006, two CCR versions available: UOP's CCR
Platformer process and Axen's Octanizing process. The installation
and use of CCR units is rapidly increasing.
Many of the earliest catalytic reforming units
(in the 1950's and 1960's) were non-regenerative in that they did
not perform in situ catalyst regeneration. Instead, when needed,
the aged catalyst was replaced by fresh catalyst and the aged
catalyst was shipped to catalyst manufacturer's to be either
regenerated or to recover the platinum content of the aged
catalyst. Very few, if any, catalytic reformers currently in
operation are non-regenerative. The process
flow diagram below depicts a typical semi-regenerative
catalytic reforming unit.
The liquid feed (at the bottom left in the
diagram) is pumped up to
the reaction pressure (5 to 45 atm) and is joined by a stream of
hydrogen-rich recycle gas. The resulting liquid-gas mixture is
preheated by flowing through a heat
exchanger. The preheated feed mixture is then totally vaporized and heated to the
reaction temperature (495 to 520 °C) before the vaporized reactants
enter the first reactor. As the vaporized reactants flow through
the fixed bed of catalyst in the reactor, the major reaction is the
dehydrogenation of naphthenes to aromatics (as described earlier
herein) which is highly endothermic and results in a
large temperature decrease between the inlet and outlet of the
reactor. To maintain the required reaction temperature and the rate
of reaction, the vaporized stream is reheated in the second fired
heater before it flows through the second reactor. The temperature
again decreases across the second reactor and the vaporized stream
must again be reheated in the third fired heater before it flows
through the third reactor. As the vaporized stream proceeds through
the three reactors, the reaction rates decrease and the reactors
therefore become larger. At the same time, the amount of reheat
required between the reactors becomes smaller. Usually, three
reactors are all that is required to provide the desired
performance of the catalytic reforming unit.
Some installations use three separate fired
heaters as shown in the schematic diagram and some installations
use a single fired heater with three separate heating coils.
The hot reaction products from the third reactor
are partially cooled by flowing through the heat exchanger where
the feed to the first reactor is preheated and then flow through a
water-cooled heat exchanger before flowing through the pressure
controller (PC) into the gas separator.
Most of the hydrogen-rich gas from the gas
separator vessel returns to the suction of the recycle hydrogen
gas
compressor and the net production of hydrogen-rich gas from the
reforming reactions is exported for use in other the other refinery
processes that consume hydrogen (such as hydrodesulfurization units
and/or a
hydrocracker unit).
The liquid from the gas separator vessel is
routed into a fractionating
column commonly called a stabilizer. The overhead offgas
product from the stabilizer contains the byproduct methane, ethane,
propane and butane gases produced by the hydrocracking reactions as
explained in the above discussion of the reaction chemistry of a
catalytic reformer, and it may also contain some small amount of
hydrogen. That offgas is routed to the refinery's central gas
processing plant for removal and recovery of propane and butane.
The residual gas after such processing becomes part of the
refinery's fuel gas system.
The bottoms product from the stabilizer is the
high-octane liquid reformate that will become a component of the
refinery's product gasoline.
Catalysts and mechanisms
Most catalytic reforming catalysts contain
platinum or rhenium on a silica or
silica-alumina
support base, and some contain both platinum and rhenium. Fresh
catalyst is chlorided
(chlorinated) prior to use.
The noble metals (platinum and rhenium) are
considered to be catalytic sites for the dehydrogenation reactions
and the chlorinated alumina provides the acid sites needed for
isomerization, cyclization and hydrocracking reactions.
The activity (i.e., effectiveness) of the
catalyst in a semi-regenerative catalytic reformer is reduced over
time during operation by carbonaceous coke
deposition and chloride loss. The activity of the catalyst can be
periodically regenerated or restored by in situ high temperature
oxidation of the coke followed by chlorination. As stated earlier
herein, semi-regenerative catalytic reformers are regenerated about
once per 6 to 24 months.
Normally, the catalyst can be regenerated perhaps
3 or 4 times before it must be returned to the manufacturer for
reclamation of the valuable platinum and/or rhenium content.
References
External links
- Oil Refinery Processes, A Brief Overview
- Colorado School of Mines, Lecture Notes (Chapter 10, Refining Processes, Catalytic Refinery by John Jechura, Adjunct Professor)
- Students' Guide to Refining] (scroll down to Platforming)
- Modern Refinery Website of Delft University of Technology, Netherlands (use search function for Reforming)
- Major scientific and technical challenges about development of new refining processes (IFP website)
reformate in Arabic: مصلح حفزي
reformate in Spanish: Reformado catalítico
reformate in Japanese: 接触改質
reformate in Russian: Каталитический
риформинг