RI 7844 Methods for Refining Crude Shale Oil Produced by In Situ Retorting

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
C. M. Frost
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
25
File Size:
1374 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1974

Abstract

Crude shale oil produced during in situ retorting by the Bureau of Mines at Rock Springs, Wyo., was refined by three schemes. In the first, the crude oil was fractionated to raw naphtha and 400° F+ residuum. The residuum was hydrogenated over cobalt molybdate catalyst at 815° F and 1,100 psig. The blended raw and 160°-400° F hydrogenated naphthas were hydrodenitrified and then catalytically reformed. The 400° F+ hydrogenated oil was catalytically cracked. In the second scheme, the crude was hydrogenated over nickel-tungsten catalyst at 800° F and 1,500 psig. The hydrogenated fractions were processed by methods used in the first scheme. The third scheme resembled the second but, prior to hydrogenation, the crude was "hydrostabilized" over cobalt molybdate at 500° F and 500 psig. Yields of reformate and cat-cracked gasoline as volume-percents of the crude, and research-method octane numbers (with 3 ml TEL) for the three methods were as follows: First method, 32 pet reformate, 90 octane; 19.5 pct cracked gasoline, 99.2 octane. Second method, 29 pet reformate, 81.1 octane; 21.3 pct cracked gasoline, 99.6 octane. Third method, 28.2 pet reformate, 86 octane; 28.7 pct cracked gasoline, 95.9 octane.
Citation

APA: C. M. Frost  (1974)  RI 7844 Methods for Refining Crude Shale Oil Produced by In Situ Retorting

MLA: C. M. Frost RI 7844 Methods for Refining Crude Shale Oil Produced by In Situ Retorting. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1974.

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