Thermal Stability Analysis of Hydroprocessing Unit

Abstract

Thermal stability is one of the most critical safety issues in the hydroprocessing units. Runaway reactions in the units can lead to catastrophic consequences as the reactors are being operated at high temperature and pressure, and the reactor effluent is a highly explosive mixture which contains hydrogen and hydrocarbons. For example, a fire and explosion due to a runaway reaction in a hydrocracking unit caused one death and forty-six injuries in 1997, in California. While the temperature runaway is the topic which has been studied extensively, most of the studies worked on simple reactions and little focused on the complex reactions such as hydroprocessing reactions. Also, in the studies on the hydroprocessing reactions, a lumping kinetic model was used which is less accurate and requires experiments for each application. In this research, the thermal stability of a naphtha hydrotreater will be analyzed by using a commercial process simulator ProMax where a novel mechanistic kinetic model, Single Event Kinetics has been integrated. Also, a simplified model will be established by using the data provided by ProMax for further analysis. The continuity and energy equations and parametric sensitivity equations will be solved by Matlab based on the methodology presented by Morbidelli and Varma

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