023 BP Refining
023 BP Refining
023 BP Refining
Keith Zink Cherry Point Refinery Coker Engineer 2001 CSM Graduate (CEPR)
About Me
Graduated from CSM in 2001 (CEPR) Contract Process Design Engineer (5yr) BP Chevron Conoco Phillips Shell (Equilon, Texaco) PetroStar Energy Engineer at BP Cherry Point Refinery (3yr) Delayed Coker Unit Process Engineer
About BP
1. Some Mobil employees became part of BP staff post dissolution of JV in Europe 2. BP acquired some Belgium assets
Whiting Refinery
Toledo Refinery
Carson Refinery
Refining receives the crude oil Produced by E&P and upgrades it to valuable products. Gasoline is the largest product from refining, but others include hydrogen, natural gas, jet fuel, diesel fuel, asphalt, coke, elemental sulfur, motor oil, and chemical feedstocks. Marketing is the most visible Link between our company and the general public (consumer) and focuses on providing the highest quality gasoline in conjunction with convenience retailing. BP is the second largest marketer of gasoline in the U.S.
100
Percent of B a rrel
Engineers Responsibilities
First and Foremost License to operate: Ensure your unit is safe and operating in an environmentally responsible manner. Nothing is as important as ensuring that everyone goes home safe at the end of the day.
An Engineers Duties
Serve as general technical resource to operations. Provide technical support and troubleshooting to the units. Ensure that unit operates within environmental permit limitations. Help develop and implement capital projects and best practice procedures to improve process operation. Understand and communicate impacts of decisions on Company, Refinery, & Operations goals. Monitor the performance of the fractionation towers, catalysts, material balances, product specifications, reactor yields, and energy consumption to optimize performance. Provide engineering support for turnarounds. Provide technical training and coaching for process operations staff.
About Cokers
Most crudes yield a heavy fraction called : resid Left over from Crude unit after easy stuff removed. Made up of heavy long chain hydrocarbons and large aromatic rings Limited practical commercial usage: asphalt, Asphalt demand limited to seasonal usage and roads. Coking developed to upgrade lower value resid to higher valued liquid products. Coking is a growing technology. Started in the 1930s and still a large part of the future in refining. Several technologies but delayed coking most popular. Available crudes are getting heavier yielding more resid. Heavy crudes generally cheaper due to limited global coking capacity.
Prefractionator (combination)
Stabilizer
Structure Heaters
Coker Furnaces
Supply heat for reaction. Resid heated from 700 F to 935 F (coking temperatures). Condensation/Thermally cracking reactions begins. 1 furnace per pair of drums. 2 furnaces total Tube velocity and heat input rate critical Operation outside specified conditions could result in coked furnace tubes High oxygen content in burner box promotes better heat distribution Coke must be removed from a furnace every 6 months to 1 year by mechanical pigging called decoke
Coker Drums
Where the majority of the reaction occurs. Separation of Coke and liquid hydrocarbons. Thermal cycling limits drum life. (amb temp to 900 deg F) CP coker approximate 27. 5 ft diameter by 100 ft T-T Piece of equipment that usually limits unit rate.
Drum schedule Drum steam-out (45 minutes) Cooling water (4 hours) Vent/Drain (1.5 hours) Unhead (0.5 hours) Drill (3 hours) Head (0.5 hours) Steam Purge & Pressure test (3 hours) Warm-up (2-hours) Switch into drum for Coking (16 hrs)
A Semi-Batch Process
Coker Fractionation
Heat required for fractionation delivered by coke drum effluent entering the bottom of the fractionator. Products from heavy to light in tower: Heater feed Heavy gasoil Light gasoil (diesel) Stove (Kero) Naphtha Fuel gas Fractionation in a harsh environment Coke formation Carry-over Pump around loops exist to remove heat from tower Heat integrated for energy efficiency
Drum foam overs Shot Coke Bottom/Top De-Heading Drilling (hot spots) Drum overfill Coked ovhd fouling Combination tower fouling
Internships- Provide valuable experience and insight to industry which aids in discussion during interviews; however, not essential.
Heat and Mass Transfer, Fluids, Kinetics, Process Control, Petroleum Refining, Gas Processing, Process Design, Economic Evaluation..all the good stuff!
Excellent colleagues World leader in trading Pioneer in clean fuels Strong push for innovation Global opportunity Challenging & rewarding
If interested, register at the CSM career center AND register with BP at:
http://www.bp.com/uscollegecareers
Questions?