Isomerization Unit
Isomerization Unit
Isomerization Unit
REFINING
As the iC5 is being sent out the overhead of the deisopentanizer tower, the balance of the feed stream is sent to the isomerization reactor. Hydrogen is also added to the stream to encourage the proper reactions and to help minimize coke formation on the catalyst. After passing through the reactor, the stream enters a H2 separation unit that removes and recycles the H2 back to the feed of the reactor. The stream then enters a stabilizer tower that removes any light hydrocarbons made during the reactions. These light compounds exit the top of the stabilizer tower and will typically be blended into the refinery fuel gas system. The product stream leaves the bottom of the stabilizer tower and enters a C5/C6 splitter tower.
RAIGC-AN-004 R0608 / 2008 Emerson Process Management Gas Chromatographs Division Page
REFINING
At the C5/C6 splitter, the C5s are sent out the top of the tower and are recycled back to the beginning of the process unit. The nC5 in the C5s will be reprocessed while the iC5 will leave the top of the deisopentanizer as finished iC5 product. The C6 and heavier components leave the bottom of the splitter and either go to gasoline blending or to the reformer unit to be made into aromatics. Improving isomerization unit performance with process gas chromatographs A number of opportunities exist to use process gas chromatographs to improve the isomerization unit performance. The first process gas chromatograph (AX #1 in Figure 1) would monitor the product effluent leaving the conversion reactor. By measuring the iC5 and nC5 content, the reaction conversion ratio can be calculated. This helps the plant's control system maintain proper conditions inside the reactor for maximum conversion. A gas chromatograph (AX #2 in Figure 1) is typically put on the overhead stream of the deisopentanizer tower to minimize the amount of nC5 in the iC5 product. Another gas chromatograph (AX #3 in Figure 1) monitors the stabilizer overhead by measuring the iC5 content and minimizing loss of the iC5 product to the fuel gas.
Finally, a gas chromatograph (AX #4 in Figure 1) would monitor the nC5 levels and minimize the level to make sure most is sent overhead for reprocessing. A summary of these applications can be seen inFigure 2. The Emerson Solution Emerson has a long history of providing process gas chromatographs for the refining industry. Emerson's process gas chromatographs have set the standard for on-line process measurement by supplying analyzers that are both robust and capable of handling the analytical requirements.
Analyzer # 1 2 3 4
Stream Reactor effluent Deisopentanizer overhead Stabilizer tower overhead C5/C6 splitter bottoms
Measurement Objective Maximize nC5 conversion to iC5 Minimize nC5 in product stream Minimize iC5 losses Minimize loss of nC5
Figure 2 - Summary of Process Gas Chromatograph Applications in a Typical Refinery Isomerization Unit
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