RI 3485 Survey Of Fuel Consumption At Refineries In 1938 - Summary (d65f348b-3a94-42c5-90b9-ee9ed8c89d8c)

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
G. R. Hopkins
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
8
File Size:
2802 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1939

Abstract

[Apparent progress in fuel economy at petroleum refineries, as measured by the average amount of .seat units required to refine a barrel of crude oil, received a set-back in 1935, when the average rose to 562,00 B. t. u., compared with 562,000 B.t.u. in 1937 (see fig. l). The primary factor in the rise in average heat requirement's per barrel of crude oil refined in 1938 wan the decline in total runs to Invariably the average requirement increases when crude ins to stills decline, and vice versa. In other words, annual gains in fuel efficiency at refineries arc masked by the degree to which the capacity is utilized. Additional crude runs give lower average e heat requirements in two ways - first, because they are mane with the c expenditure of comparatively small amounts of auxiliary heat, and, second, because the additional runs generally represent simple topping operations. In 1938 crude runs, to stills declined 1.6 percent (from 1,183,440,000 barrels in 1937 to 1,165,015,000 barrels in 1938), but the total heat consumption declined only 0.4 percent, or from 663,866 billion B. t. u. in 1777 to 660, 56 billion in 1938 .]
Citation

APA: G. R. Hopkins  (1939)  RI 3485 Survey Of Fuel Consumption At Refineries In 1938 - Summary (d65f348b-3a94-42c5-90b9-ee9ed8c89d8c)

MLA: G. R. Hopkins RI 3485 Survey Of Fuel Consumption At Refineries In 1938 - Summary (d65f348b-3a94-42c5-90b9-ee9ed8c89d8c). The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1939.

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