go to top scroll for more

Fouling in heat exchangers of crude distillation units

Reference Number
EP/D503051/1
Title
Fouling in heat exchangers of crude distillation units
Status
Completed
Energy Categories
Fossil Fuels: Oil Gas and Coal(Oil and Gas, Refining, transport and storage of oil and gas)
Energy Efficiency(Industry)
Research Types
Basic and strategic applied research
Applied Research and Development
Science and Technology Fields
ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY (Chemical Engineering)
UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation
Not Cross-cutting
Principal Investigator
Professor GF Hewitt
Chemical Engineering
Imperial College London
Award Type
Standard
Funding Source
EPSRC
Start Date
01 June 2006
End Date
31 December 2009
Duration
43 months
Total Grant Value
£1,491,902
Industrial Sectors
Process engineering
Region
London
Programme
Engineering science: flow -- Process Environment and Sustainability
Investigators
Principal Investigator
Professor GF Hewitt, Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London
Other Investigator
Professor D Dugwell, Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London
Dr A Galindo, Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London
Professor G Jackson, Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London
Professor R Kandiyoti, Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London
Professor SG Kazarian, Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London
Professor C Lawrence, Institute for Energy Technology, Norway (IFE)
Professor PF Luckham, Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London
Dr OK Matar, Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London
Dr EA Muller, Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London
Professor SM Richardson, Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London
Industrial Collaborator
Project Contact, Esdu International Plc
Web Site
Objectives
Abstract
Crude oil distillation accounts for a large fraction of the energy used in oil refining. Every effort is made to reduce this huge energy consumption by exchanging heat between the input and output streams to the distillation tower in a train of heat exchangers commonly referred to as the "crude preheat train". Unfortunately, crude oil contains components which lead to drastic fouling of the heat exchangers in the crude preheat train. Such fouling leads to enormous costs, not only in the costs of loss of energy recovery but also in the costs of loss of product and mitigation measures. In the USA alone, preheat train fouling is estimated to cost around $1.2 billion per annum. The most important components causing fouling are the asphaltenes, which are complex polynuclear aromatic compounds which carry most of the trace element content of the crude oil. Though the importance of the problem has led to a large amount of work being done, this has not led to an understandingof the processes of ashphalene transport and deposition. What is proposed is a study (carried out by a multi-disciplinary team) which covers the scales from molecular to plant systems. The first step is to understand more precisely the asphaltene contents and compositions in crude oil and deposits (Sub-Project A). Using nano-rheoemetry, the interfacial behavior of the depositing species can be studied (Sub-Project B). Using the information on chemical and physical properties of asphaltenic materials, modelling structures can be developed both of the molecular properties (Sub-ProjectD) and of the heat and mass transfer effects (Sub-Project C ). It is an essential part of the project to carry out actual measurements on fouling and the plan is to make such measurements using a small scale (rotating cell) apparatus (Sub-Project E) and an annulus flow facility simulating heat exchanger conditions (sub-Project G). Finally, technology transfer will be achieved through participation of ESDUInternational Ltd. in the project (Sub-Project H); ESDU has close contacts with the refining industry and is already developing software which is used by this industry and into which the key results of the project can be subsumed to ensure rapid take-up by the companies involved
Data

No related datasets

Projects

No related projects

Publications

No related publications

Added to Database
07/06/07