RI 5574 Hydrogenating Shale Oil And Catalytic Cracking Of Hydrogenated Stocks ? Summary

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 21
- File Size:
- 1371 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1960
Abstract
Two Federal Bureau of Mines recycle hydrogenation experiments to prepare catalytic cracking feed stock were made at 3,000 pounds pressure with crude shale oil retorted from Green River (Colo.) shale in the gas-combustion retort. The hydrogenated product from the first experiment, made at 784° F., was used for investigating the effects of nitrogen content on catalytic cracking yields and for determining the quality of the catalytically cracked gasoline. Hydrogenated product containing 0.14 percent or more of nitrogen produced less gasoline when cracked in a CAT "A" unit than was obtained from East Texas light gas oil cracked at the same conditions; product containing 0.10 percent or less nitrogen produced a quantity of cracked gasoline equal to that obtained from the East Texas light gas oil. The catalytically cracked gasoline had research octane numbers calculated to be approximately 95 clear and 103 with 3 ml. of tetraethyl lead. The principal product from the second experiment, made at 828° F., was a low nitrogen content gas oil which was used for investigating the yields of cracked products obtained when it was catalytically cracked to different degrees of conversion. Yields of cracked products, when plotted as functions of conversion, were essentially the same, within the experimental range of the data, as published yields from catalytic cracking of East Texas heavy gas oil; however, yields from cracking the shale-oil product did not display the sensitivity to change of cracking temperature that has been found for East Texas gas oil.
Citation
APA:
(1960) RI 5574 Hydrogenating Shale Oil And Catalytic Cracking Of Hydrogenated Stocks ? SummaryMLA: RI 5574 Hydrogenating Shale Oil And Catalytic Cracking Of Hydrogenated Stocks ? Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1960.