RI 3159 Laboratory Batch Still And Fractionating Column For Production And Study Of Lubricating Distillates Under Vacuum

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Boyd Guthrie
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
22
File Size:
11278 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1932

Abstract

Methods of distilling topped crude oils and distillates under vacuum, accompanied by good fractionation, have taken a place of major importance in the refining industry. In the refining of petroleum products it is generally desirable to produce a distillate of good quality, and this objective is attained by fractionation of a high degree. The laboratory and commercial practice have proved that by varying the amount of fractionation the quality of the distillate can be changed, and refiners are cognizant of the advantages of good fractionation. Distillation under high vacuum, however, is a relatively new practice in petroleum refining, and only during the last few years has there been an indication that this method may become a general practice in the industry. Vacuum distillation offers many advantages over older methods of distilling petroleum products. Vacuum combined with steam distillation, for example, is replacing straight-steam distillation because the quality of the products of vacuum and steam distillation surpasses that of those produced by straight-steam distillation. Although the injection of varying amounts of steam in a vacuum unit is common practice, the amount of steam used is becoming loss as the vacuum within the unit is increased. This report describes the construction of a visible-action laboratory batch still and fractionating column and gives certain data pertaining to the operation of the apparatus under vacuum for the production of lubricating distillates. The apparatus was designed and built to produce lubricating distillates under as nearly ideal conditions as possible, in order that a subsequent study of the characteristics of the distillates could be made. For example, a study could be made of the distillates obtained up to the point of cracking of the charge if a topped crude were charged to the still; if the still was used as a rerun unit for lubricating distillates a study of nearly the entire charge could be made. Only topped crude has been charged to the still so far, and therefore this paper is limited to the results obtained from the distillation of such a charge. The results so far obtained indicate that such an apparatus is valuable in a study of different crude petroleums as sources of lubricating distillates.
Citation

APA: Boyd Guthrie  (1932)  RI 3159 Laboratory Batch Still And Fractionating Column For Production And Study Of Lubricating Distillates Under Vacuum

MLA: Boyd Guthrie RI 3159 Laboratory Batch Still And Fractionating Column For Production And Study Of Lubricating Distillates Under Vacuum. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1932.

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