[0001] This invention relates to a process for improving the quality of heavy, viscous crude
oils. More specifically, it relates to a process comprising separating the viscous
crude into fractions by fractional distillation, and cracking and hydrogenating. the
highest boiling fraction so obtained in the presence of a recycled hydrogen donor
material obtained by separating particular portions of the resulting cracked material
and catalytically rehydrogenating a specific portion so produced to prepare said hydrogen
donor material for recycling. The fractionated streams produced in separating said
viscous crude and in separating said hydrogenated cracked material are suitable for
further hydrogenation and/or recombining into a reconstituted crude oil, or for use
in normal refinery processes without being'recombined.
[0002] The properties of heavy crudes, i.e. in-situ heavy oils and oil sands bitumen, have
long been known. These materials are abundant in Canada and several other countries
and are of increasing importance as conventional, i.e. lighter, crude oils are depleted.
Among the properties of these materials are a low hydrogen:carbon ratio, high viscosity,
and a high proportion of components which cannot be vacuum distilled without undergoing
thermal cracking. As a result, these heavy oils are impossible to transport through
normal crude pipelines or to process in existing refineries. The prior art has shown
that (1) carbon rejection, i.e. coking, and (2) hydrogen addition are the two basic
approaches to be used in upgrading such crude oils. The term "upgrading" can take
various meanings in various contexts. For clarity and consistency, it is here defined
as raising the hydrogen:carbon ratio, and lowering the viscosity, specific gravity
and average molecular weight of a heavy, viscous hydrocarbonaceous oil. Carbon rejection
has the disadvantage of producing a large quantity of refractory materials such as
coke which then must be disposed of and which detract from the total amount of liquid
product available. Hydrogenation on the other hand produces a larger quantity of valuable
liquid products and is more desirable than carbon rejection if the hydrogenation can
be carried out at reasonable cost.
[0003] Hydrogen donor materials are well known for their ability to release hydrogen to
a hydrogen-deficient oil in a thermal cracking zone, and thereby to convert heavy
hydrocarbon oils to more valuable.lower-boiling products. The hydrogen donor is aromatic-naphthenic
in nature and, having. released hydrogen in the thermal cracking zone, can be catalytically
rehydrogenated in a separate hydrogenation zone and recycled as a hydrogen donor.
Hydrogen donor cracking processes make possible the conversion of heavy oils in the
absence of a catalyst and with the formation of little, if any, coke, and at substantially
lower pressures than are necessary with the use of molecular hydrogen in hydrocracking.
[0004] . In USP 2,953,513 it was disclosed that certain distillate thermal tars, boiling
above 371°C, will, upon partial hydrogenation, produce a hydrogen donor material which
can be used to hydrocrack heavy feedstocks at temperatures above 427°C. The hydrogen
donor material can be rehydrogenatcd using external hydrogen and recycled to the thermal
cracking stage(s).
[0005] In US? 4,115,246 a process was disclosed in which the pitch fraction resulting from
fractional distillation of the products- of a hydrogen donor diluent cracking step
is subjected to a partial oxidation process, and the resulting hydrogen-containing
gas produced by the partial oxidation step is utilized to hydrogenate the recycled
hydrogen donor solvent. The pitch fraction was defined as the product of the fractional
distillation boiling above 500°C. It was disclosed that the fresh feedstock to the
cracking furnace could include shale oil, tar sand bitumen, or residual oil from a
petroleum refinery.
[0006] Many of the processes known in the art are designed for application in a conventional
petroleum refinery; these processes do not address the problem of transporting the
crude oil from the well site to the refinery. The coking processes in general form
excessive amounts of coke, which must be discarded or desulphurized and burned, and
which lower the yield of useful hydrocarbons. In those processes in which catalysts
are used, metals present in the crude have a tendency to poison the catalyst and create
the necessity for frequent regeneration or replacement of the catalyst.
[0007] In the ensuing description and claims, all references to proportions, percentages,
and parts are on a weight basis and all references to boiling points of materials
are to atmospheric pressure boiling points, unless otherwise specifically indicated.
[0008] The present invention is a process for the upgrading of heavy, viscous hydrocarbonaceous
oils comprising:
(a) fractionally distilling said hydrocarbonaceous oil to produce at least one fraction
boiling below a temperature from substantially 300°C to substantially 570°C and a
residuum boiling above said temperature, without significantly cracking said hydrocarbonaceous
oil,
(b) contacting said residuum with a liquid hydrogen donor material stream at hydrocracking
conditions to produce a hydrocracked stream,
(c) separating said hydrocracked stream into a gaseous stream and a liquid hydrocracked
stream,
(d) fractionally distilling said liquid hydrocracked stream to separate, from lower
and higher boiling fractions, a hydrogen donor precursor stream boiling above a temperature
from substantially 180°C to substantially 200°C and below a temperature from substantially
330°C to substantially 350°C,
(e) catalytically reacting said hydrogen donor precursor stream with a hydrogen-rich
gaseous stream to produce a hydrogenated hydrogen donor material, and
(f) recycling at least part of said hydrogenated hydrogen donor material as the material
which constitutes the entire liquid hydrogen donor material stream to contact said
residuum in step (b) noted above.
[0009] In a specific embodiment, the invention comprises steps (a) to (f) noted above, wherein
fractional distillation step (a) is carried out to produce a naphtha stream, a distillate
stream and a gas oil stream as well as the aforementioned residuum, and the lower
and higher boiling fractions from fractional distillation step (d) are utilized as
follows: the overhead stream is combined with said naphtha stream from step (a), a
heavy gas oil stream is combined with said gas oil stream from step (a) and these
streams as well as a bottoms stream from step (d) are withdrawn as product'streams.
[0010] Optionally, the gaseous stream obtained at step (c) can be desulphurized to produce
a desulphurized gaseous stream, and said desulphurized gaseous stream can be reformed
with steam to form a hydrogen-rich gaseous stream for use in step (e) and by-product
carbon dioxide. Alternatively, where an external supply of methane-rich gas (e.g.
natural gas) is advantageously available, the gaseous stream from step (c) can be
used as fuel gas and the external supply of methane-rich gas can be utilized as the
source of hydrogen for the reforming step.
[0011] Preferably, the aforementioned hydrogenated hydrogen donor material stream is fractionally
distilled to separate, from lower and higher boiling materials, an optimized hydrogenated
hydrogen donor material, which lower and higher boiling materials are combined with
the appropriate product stream or streams.
[0012] . Optionally, where it is desirable, said product streams can individually be catalytically
reacted with a hydrogen-rich gas, to produce more fully upgraded streams which can
be used in a conventional oil refinery, or alternatively they canbe combined with
the bottoms stream from step (d) to produce a fully upgraded, lower viscosity synthetic
crude.
[0013] The process of the invention is applicable to upgrading various types of heavy crudes,
including in-situ heavy oils (e.g. Lloydminster), oil sands bitumen (e.g. Athabasca),
and generally any type of crude oil whose composition and viscosity in the raw form
are such that they render it difficult or impossible to process the oil in a conventional
oil refinery or to transport in a pipeline without dilution or external heating or
tracing of the pipeline and consequent large-scale waste of energy.
[0014] In drawings which illustrate an embodiment of the invention and variations,
Figure 1 is a schematic flow sheet illustrating the basic process of the invention,
Figure 2 is a schematic flow sheet showing a specific group of fractionated streams,
Figure 3 is a schematic flow sheet showing a more complex process of obtaining an
optimum recycled hydrogen donor material, and
Figure 4 is a schematic flow sheet showing a further treatment of the streams shown
in Figure 2.
[0015] Referring to Figure 1, raw crude oil in stream 21 is distilled to remove material
distillable without thermal cracking. In order to avoid unwanted cracking and coking
in distilling the more refractory components of the mixture, the distillation is preferably
carried out in two stages, the first at atmospheric pressure in fractionating column
1 with overheads going via line 22 and residue via line 25, and the second under vacuum
in fractionating column 2, from which overheads go via line 26 and residue or bottoms
via 27. The amount of absolute pressure in column 2 can be varied to as low as 2 kPa
but is normally selected for minimum steam usage, and commercial operations are commonly
conducted at 2.5 - 4 kPa. The bottoms stream from vacuum distillation step 2 can have
an initial boiling point varying over a.wide range, depending upon the type of crude
and process conditions. Bottoms with an initial boiling point as low as 300°C or as
high as 570°C, preferrably in the range from 450°C to 570°C, can be used in the process,
although for reasons of economics it may be advantageous to remove as much distillate
material as possible to reduce the volume of reaction mixture and consequently the
size and cost of a hydrogen donor cracking zone 3. Under some circumstances, for example
in the use of a small upgrading plant (1500 - 3000 m
3/day), it may be desirable to omit a vacuum tower foe crude fractionation and thus
to feed to hydrogen donor cracking zone 3 a bottoms stream having an initial boiling
point in the range associated with atmospheric tower bottoms, 300°C to 330°C. The
bottoms stream 27 is contacted in reactor 3 with a hydrogenated recycled stream 30.
An initial supply of hydrogen donor material for start-up is fed through line 29 until
adequate flow in stream 30 is established. The recycled stream has the ability to
donate hydrogen and is used in a weight ratio of substantially 1:0.5 to 1:4 and a
temperature of substantially . 350°C to 500°C, preferably 400°C to 460°C and at an
absolute pressure of substantially 2 to 15 MPa, preferably 2.5 to 6 MPa, and a reaction
mass liquid space velocity of substantially 0.5 to 10.0 h
-1, preferably 0.8 to 7.0 h
-1. No catalyst is necessary in the hydrogen donor cracking reaction. Under the preferred
conditions no coke is produced in the reaction. Effluent from reactor 3 passes via
line 31 to gas separator 4, which separates gases including hydrocarbons boiling at
ambient room temperature or lower. Alternatively and particularly advantageously,,
gaseous material in stream 32 is treated to remove hydrogen sulphide in desulphurization
zone 6 and is passed via line 39 into a steam reforming zone 7 along with external
steam in stream 41, forming a hydrogen-rich gas passing via line 42 to be used in
catalytic hydrogenation zone 8. Sulphur is removed from zone 6 via line 40 and carbon
dioxide-rich gas from zone 7 is discharged via line 43. The liquid reactor effluent
33 from separator 4 is fractionated in fractionating still 5, and the distilled portion
boiling for example from substantially 180°C to substantially 350°C, preferably from
200°C to 330°C, in stream 35, is rehydrogenated in catalytic hydrogenation zone 8.
The upper and lower limits of the boiling range of stream 35 may be adjusted as necessary
to obtain an appropriate volume of hydrogen donor material for stream - 30.. Overhead
fractions 22, 26 and 34, gas oil fraction 36 and residuum fraction 37 can be combined
into a reconstituted "crude" in stream 53 which has sufficiently low viscosity that
it is suitable for pumping. A portion of residuum fraction 37 can optionally be recycled
through line 38 to be combined with bottoms stream 27 and reprocessed through the
hydrogen donor cracking zone. The reaction in hydrogenation zone 8 normally does not
consume all the hydrogen from stream 42 and the unused gases which are contaminated
with hydrogen sulphide can be recycled to the inlet of desulphurization zone 6, via
line 45. During operation, the hydrogen donor capability of the fraction in stream
35 is sufficient, when the latter has undergone catalytic hydrogenation in zone 8,
to continue the hydrogen donor cracking without adding make-up hydrogen donor material
via line 29. The hydrogen-rich gas in stream 42 is used to hydrogenate the fraction
in stream 35 under usual catalytic hydrogenation conditions in zone 8 and the effluent
stream of liquid hydrogenated material 44 is passed either directly to line 47 thence
to line 30 where it is recycled into hydrogen donor cracking zone 3, or via line 54
to a fractionation, hereafter described with reference to Figure 3, and return of
a fraction thereof via line 55 to line 47. The gaseous materials formed in the hydrocracking
step and separated at step 4 include methane and other hydrocarbons having up to substantially
five carbon atoms in their molecules. These latter materials have lower hydrogen-to-
carbon ratios, hence may be more useful for their heating - value than for their hydrogen
content. It may, therefore, be advantageous to take these materials to fuel-gas via
line 57, and at the same time to utilize an external gas stream in the steam reforming
step by importing it through line 56. r The imported gas stream can be for example
natural gas and can contain hydrogen; it is desulphurized if it is sour, in the desulphurization
zone 6 as shown in Fingure 1, or taken directly to steam reforming zone 7, as appropriate.
Similarly the gaseous stream 32 may be desulphurized if necessary in a desulphurization
zone, or taken directly to product via line 57, as shown in Figure 1.
[0016] An optional source of hydrogen for use in hydrogenating zone 8 is the steam reforming
of a residuum in steam reforming zone 7, instead of reforming the gaseous material
separated at step 4. An advantageous source of residuum for this purpose is stream
37, the bottoms from fractionation step S.
[0017] Suitable hydrogen donor or hydrogen donor precursor material for starting up the
process can be obtained for example, in certain refinery streams known in the art.
If necessary or desirable, it can be hydrogenated in the described hydrogenation zone
8 prior to contacting with fractionating tower bottoms stream 27 in hydrogen donor
cracking zone 3. .
[0018] Figure 2, employing identical numbers for parts identical to those shown in Figure
1, illustrates an optional processing scheme wherein the initial crude 21 is fractionally
distilled into a plurality of cuts 22, 23 and 24 each of whose initial and final boiling
points can be selected as is customary in petroleum refining to produce- appropriate
streams. Commonly used fractions are naphtha, distillate and gas oil, although fewer
or more than three fractions can be taken without departing from the scope of the
invention. The fractions resulting from the distillation step 5 in streams 34 and
36 can be combined with the appropriate fractions from the crude distillation, i.e.
fractions of similar boiling ranges, to obtain a plurality of product streams 49,
51 and 50. At the same time the bottoms stream 37 from fractional distillation step
5 can be kept as a separate product stream.
[0019] Referring to Figure 3, which is to be considered in conjunction with the embodiments
of either Figure 1 or Figure . 2, the hydrogenated hydrogen donor material in stream
44 from zone 8 optionally can be passed via line 54 and fractionally distilled in
distillation column 9 to separate, from lower and higher boiling materials 46 and
48, a hydrogen donor heart cut 55, boiling for example in the range from substantially
220°C to substantially 295°C, which can be fed through line 47 to hydrogen donor cracking
zone 3. The lower boiling material 46 can be combined for example with naphtha stream
49 and the higher boiling material 48 combined for example with gas oil stream 50
(Figure 2), or if desired, both can be combined with the product stream 53 (Figure
-1). The hydrogen donor activity of the lower boiling and higher boiling streams 46
and 48 is lower than that of the heart cut 55 and their removal has the effect of
raising the concentration of active hydrogen donor material recycled to the hydrogen-donor
cracking zone 3.
[0020] A modification of the embodiments of the invention outlined in Figures 1 and 2 is
shown in Figure 4. The reconstituted naphtha, distillate and gas oil streams 49, 50
and 51, obtained as shown in Figure 2, can optionally be further hydrogenated individually.at
catalytic hydrogenation steps 10, 11 and 12 by known methods. A hydrogen-rich gas
can be introduced from an external-source via line 58 and the resulting hydrogenated
naphtha stream 59, hydrogenated distillate stream 60 and hydrogenated gas oil stream
61 are therefore suitable for direct use in a conventional oil refinery. Alternatively
these hydrogenated streams can be combined with the residuum stream 37 (Figure 1)
to obtain in stream 53 an upgraded, lower viscosity pipelineable synthetic crude oil
suitable for use in conventional oil refineries remote from the upgrading plant. Because
of its higher hydrogen:carbon ratio, the synthetic crude oil can give higher quality
products with less processing than less
' highly hydrogenated synthetic crude oils.
[0021] An advantage of the present process is that it can be used in a small production
area to provide crude capable of being transported by pipeline to an appropriate refinery.
A further advantage is that the process at proper operating conditions produces no
coke. A still further advantage is that it uses as the hydrogen transfer material
a fraction of the heavy crude that is generated in the process itself, and therefore
no additional hydrogen transfer agent is needed . after the initial start-up. Another
advantage of this process is that it can convert as much as 90 per cent of the high
boiling components in the crude, i.e. components boiling at greater than about 504°C,
to components boiling at less than about 504°C. Further, the products streams can
be used in any of several optional ways, enabling the process to be tailored to actual
field conditions.
EXAMPLE 1
[0022] A sample of 2000 parts by weight of raw bitumen, obtained by steam stimulation of
a Pelican Lake (Alberta) heavy oil field, was submitted to distillation, first at
atmospheric pressure then under reduced pressure so as to avoid any thermal cracking,
to give a total overheads fraction (having a boiling range from its initial boiling
point up to 491°C) amounting-to 998 parts and a vacuum residuum of 1002 parts having
a boiling range above 491°C. In a two litre autoclave, 497 parts of the vacuum residuum
was thoroughly blended with 497 parts of a hydrocarbon stream serving as an initial
hydrogen donor stream. This donor stream was the heart cut obtained by hydrotreating
a fluid catalytically cracked fraction that boiled in the range 193°C to 343°C and
fractionally distilling the hydrotreated material to obtain a heart cut boiling in
the range 221°C to 293°C; the donor stream had a content of 48.7 per cent by weight
of benzocycloparaffins (predominantly substituted tetrahydronaphthalenes) and 19.4
per cent naphthalenes, as determined by low resolution mass spectrometry. After sealing
the autoclave, the air was displaced therefrom by nitrogen and a residual pressure
of 0.65 MPa absolute left in the vessel. The vessel was then stirred and heated to
an internal temperature of 415°C at-a rate of substantially 5.3°C per minute and maintained
at this temperature for a hydrogen donor cracking period of 81 minutes before cooling
was begun. During this constant temperature period the pressure in the vessel increased
from 3.0 MPa to 8.3 MPa. After cooling to ambient temperature (22°C, at which the
pressure was 2.34-MPa) the gas was discharged from the autoclave and its volume measured
(36.6 litres at NTP, including the nitrogen of the residual nitrogen pressure). The
total evolved gas.(nitrogen free basis) amounted to 4.6 per cent by weight of the
material charged to the autoclave; on analysis the gas was found to have a composition,
on a nitrogen free basis, approximately as shown in Table -1.

Upon desulphurization to remove the large proportion of hydrogen sulphide from this
gas, it was eminently suitable, because of its high content of gaseous hydrocarbons,
as the hydrocarbon feed to a steam reforming process for the production of the quantity
of·hydrogen utilized later in the process for catalytic rehydrogenation of a hydrocarbon
fraction to form a hydrogen donor stream. There was no coke formation during the hydrogen
donor cracking period and 952 parts of liquid product was recovered. Of this, 803
parts was fractionally distilled to yield three fractions, viz: (a) an initial fraction,
having a boiling range up to 204°C and amounting to 102 parts, (b) a mid-fraction
having a boiling range from 204°C to 316°C and amounting to 421 parts, and (c) a residue
boiling above 316"C and amounting to 280 parts. A sample of this residue was further
fractionated to separate material boiling above 491°C and amounting to 54.5 per cent
by weight of the residue sample. It was thus calculated that 63.6 per cent of the
original vacuum residuum (all of which boiled above 491°C) was converted to material
with a boiling point below 491°C. The remainder of the 280 parts of (c) fraction noted
above and an equivalent proportion of the overheads from the initial atmospheric and
vacuum distillations were blended with an equivalent proportion of the 102 parts of
(a) fraction noted above, to yield a reconstituted crude oil having improved properties
with respect to sulphur content and specific gravity, and remarkably improved viscosity.
A comparison of the properties of the raw bitumen and reconstituted crude is given
in Table 2.

[0023] The (b) fraction with a boiling range 204°C to 316°C from a duplicate operation as
described above was rehydrogenated under catalytic hydrogenation conditions as follows.
459 parts of the fraction, and 50 parts of commercial hydrogenation catalyst designated
as NT550 (supplied by Nalco Chemical Company) were sealed in a two litre autoclave,
purged with nitrogen to remove air, then pressured with hydrogen to 5.62 MPa at 23°C.
The stirred autoclave then was heated at a rate of 4.5°C per minute until a temperature
of 305°C was reached. Pressure in the vessel rose to 9.33 MPa during heating. The
temperature was maintained at 305°C for the next 4.7 hours during which the autoclave
was further repressured with hydrogen as recorded pressure readings indicated hydrogen
was consumed by reaction with the fraction, to maintain a minimum pressure of 10.5
MPa, final hydrogenation pressure being 11.47 MPa. Heating was then stopped and the
vessel allowed to cool to room temperature (23°C). Pressure at this time was 4.42
MPa. The gas was discharged and on analysis was found to be predominantly hydrogen
with some hydrogen sulphide and gaseous hydrocarbon. The hydrogenated liquid was recovered
and found to amount to 452 parts by weight. Low resolution mass spectrometry of samples
of the material, before and after rehydrogenation as described above, showed that
the naphthalenes content decreased during hydrogenation from a value of 49.67 per
cent-to 17.19 per cent and the benzocycloparaffins content increased at the same time
from 12.49 per cent to 44.56 per cent. Fractional distillation of the rehydrogenated
material that would remove much of the more volatile fraction rich in saturated hydrocarbons
(which constituted 19.04 per cent of the rehydrogenated material) could lower the
proportion of saturates and readily increase the benzocycloparaffins content to around
48 per cent, which corresponds to that of the initial hydrogen donor stream. The rehydrogenated
material, prepared as described above, was used as the hydrogen donor stream for blending
with another sample of vacuum residuum of bitumen in the autoclave, as described at
the beginning of this example, and was found effective, after a hydrogen donor cracking
period as described above, to convert the residuum and form additional reconstituted
crude of improved properties as described above.
EXAMPLE 2
[0024] A sample of hydrogen donor material, as was used in Example 1 and prepared by hydrogenating
a light cycle oil obtained from a fluid catalytic cracking unit, was mixed in .a 1:1
ratio with the residuum from a vacuum distillation of Athabasca oil sands bitumen.
The residuum constituted 54.5 per cent of the bitumen and had an initial boiling point
of 505°C. The mixture was fed by a positive displacement pump at a rate of 598.8 g/hour
into a tubular hydrogen donor cracking reactor of 989 ml volume and 22.9 m length,
coiled into a helical shape and immersed in a fluidized sand bed maintained at constant
temperature of 432°C. The reactor was equipped with a reciprocating mechanism to maintain
turbulent flow conditions in the reactor, as disclosed in co-pending patent application
&.N.. The reaction mixture, at 5.7 MPa, flowed through a'pressure control valve downstream
from the reactor tube and thence into a series of flash separation zones which separated
the gaseous portion from the liquids portion of the reactor effluent. The flow rate
of the gaseous stream was measured and the composition determined using an on-line
gas chromatograph. The hydrocarbon content of the evolved gas was found to be sufficient
to provide (by steam reforming) the hydrogen requirements for hydrogenation of the
hydrogen donor precursor material separated from the liquids portion of the reactor
effluent. The liquid portion of the reactor effluent was fractionally distilled to
separate a fraction boiling in the range 193°
C to 332°C and amounting to 56.3% of the liquid products. This fraction was hydrogenated
catalytically, over the same hydrogenation catalyst used in Example 1, at around 320°C
for 5.6 hours. Mass spectrometric analysis of samples of the fraction, before and
after rehydrogenation, showed that, as in Example 1, the naphthalenes content decreased
during hydrogenation and the benzocycloparaffins content increased as a result of
the hydrogenation; the corresponding increase in hydrogen donor activity of the hydrogenated
fraction and the quantity of the fraction together established that the fraction was
adequate, on recycling in its entirety or as a concentrated distilled portion thereof
to the reactor with fresh residuum, to maintain continuous operation of the hydrogen
donor cracking reactor under the conditions initially used. The distillate from the
distillation of the oil sands bitumen combined with the fractions from the remaining
(43.7 per cent) of the liquid reactor effluent not catalytically hydrogenated, constituted
an upgraded hydrocarbonaceous oil that could be pumped through a pipeline in the manner
used for normal crude oils.
[0025] Numerous modifications can be made in the various expedients described without departing
from the scope of the invention which is defined in the following claims.
1. A process for the upgrading of heavy, viscous hydrocarbonaceous oils comprising
fractionally distilling said hydrocarbonaceous oil to produce at least one distilled
fraction and a residuum without substantially cracking said hydrocarbonaceous oil,
contacting said residuum with a liquid hydrogen donor material stream to produce a
hydrocracked stream and separating said hydrocracked stream into a gaseous stream
and a liquid hydrocracked stream, characterized in that:'
(a) said liquid hydrocracked stream is fractionally distilled to separate from higher
and lower boiling fractions a hydrogen donor precursor stream boiling above a temperature
from substantially 180°C to substantially 200°C and below a temperature from substantially
330°C to substantially 350°C,
(b) said hydrogen donor precursor stream is catalytically reacted with a hydrogen-rich
gaseous stream to produce a hydrogenated hydrogen donor material, and
(c) at least part of said hydrogenated hydrogen donor material is recycled as the
material which constitutes the entire liquid hydrogen donor material stream to contact
said residuum.
2. A process as claimed in Claim 1, further characterized in that said hydrogenated
hydrogen donor material is fractionally distilled to separate from higher and lower
boiling fractions an optimized hydrogenated hydrogen donor material boiling above
a temperature of substantially 220°C and below a temperature of substantially 295°C
and said optimized hydrogenated hydrogen donor material is recycled as the material
which constitutes the entire liquid hydrogen donor material stream to contact said
residuum.
3. A process as claimed in Claim 1 further characterized in that the residuum is mixed
with said recycled liquid hydrogen donor material stream.in a weight ratio of from
0.5:1 to 4:1 under hydrocracking conditions.
4. A process as claimed in Claim 1 further characterized in that said hydrocracking
conditions include temperature in the range from substantially 350°C to substantially
500°C, pressure in the range from substantially 2 MPa to substantially 7 MPa and liquid
space velocity from substantially 0.5 h-1 to substantially 10.0 h-1.
5. A process as claimed in Claim 1 further characterized in that the hydrogen donor
precursor stream is a fraction distilled from the liquid hydrocracked stream and boils
from substanti-ally 200°C to substantially 330°C.
6. ' A process as claimed in Claim 1 further characterized in that fractions distilled
from the residuum are combined with the fractions of the liquid hydrocracked stream
other than the hydrogen donor precursor stream to form an upgraded oil of lower viscosity
and specific gravity than the original hydrocarbonaceous oil.
7. A process as claimed in Claim 1 further characterized in that at least one fraction-distilled
from the residuum is individually combined with the corresponding boiling range fraction
distilled from the liquid hydrocracked stream, and the resulting material is catalytically
hydrogenated.