[0001] This invention relates to a process for upgrading petroleum residual oils or whole
crudes of low quality to make products of higher economic value, especially high quality
feedstocks for subsequent catalytic processing or fuels.
[0002] The high cost of petroleum and the decreasing availability of high quality crudes,
with increased demand for gasoline and distillate range materials, led to a greater
reliance on processes for upgrading petroleum residua. Petroleum residua or resids
contain metals, mostly in the form of oil soluble porphyrins, nitrogen, sulfur and
other contaminants which interfere with many processing steps or reduce the value
of the products obtained from these processing steps. Metals and nitrogen are undesirable
if the resid is to be fed to a fluid catalytic cracking (FCC) or hydrocracking unit.
The metals and nitrogen deactivate the catalyst. If the residuum is to be coked, the
metals end up in the coke and reduce its value. It is desirable to remove the contaminants
in a predictable manner.
[0003] Various methods have been used to upgrade resids. These include hydrogenative processing,
solvent extraction and thermal processes.
[0004] Thermal processes used range from mild to severe. Visbreaking is a mild thermal cracking
process in which the higher molecular weight components in the residuum are cracked
to lighter products. During severe visbreaking, condensation reactions yield carbonaceous
materials including toluene insolubles which are incompatible with the remaining products
and which therefore tend to form a sludge which separates out of the visbroken effluent.
In coking, which is a severe thermal process, the heavy oil feed is heated to cracking
temperatures and converted into solid coke and lower molecular weight products which
are removed as a vapor. Various coking processes are known, including delayed coking,
fluid coking and contact coking and of these, delayed coking is the most common.
[0005] These techniques all have disadvantages. Hydroprocessing requires high pressure hydrogen
at high temperatures and this leads to high capital and operating costs.
[0006] Solvent extraction lacks selectivity for many contaminants, resulting in a requirement
for a high solvent/residuum ratio. The capital cost and energy consumption to handle
the solvent in each step of the process are high. The poor selectivity of solvent
extraction leads to the production of a large volume of low value product (asphalt).
[0007] Mild thermal processing, such as visbreaking, requires relatively little equipment
and relatively little in the way of process heat. Visbreaking reduces the viscosity
of the product, but not the contaminant content, so the "upgrading" is limited to
viscosity reduction. More severe thermal processing techniques such as delayed coking
are less advantageous. The capital and operating costs of delayed coking are intensive
and the value of the coke product may be less than 1/10 that of the feed (for shot
coke) or slightly more (for sponge coke) from low quality residua.
[0008] It would be desirable to carry out thermal processing with minimal production of
coke. It would be desirable to produce a liquid product with a higher hydrogen content
and reduced content of nitrogen, sulfur and metal contaminants. It would be beneficial
to have a stable upgraded liquid product which does not undergo any deleterious changes
in storage.
[0009] A way has now been discovered to efficiently upgrade heavy oils into lighter products
with reduced contaminant contents, without producing large amounts of solid coke.
[0010] Accordingly, the present invention provides a process for thermally upgrading a feed
comprising a resid contaminated with sulfur, nitrogen and metal compounds and containing
413°C (775°F) material characterized by heating the feed to 399 to 510°C (750 to 950°F)
at a pressure sufficient to maintain a liquid phase long enough to permit liquid/liquid
phase separation of thermally upgraded feed into an upper light oil phase of reduced
sulfur, nitrogen and metal content containing less than 0.5 wt. % toluene insolubies,
and a lower residual oil phase containing from 0.5 to 30 wt. % toluene insolubles,
and thereafter recovering the upper light oil phase.
[0011] In one embodiment, solvents or lighter boiling crude components are added to augment
phase separation after thermal processing.
[0012] In another embodiment, thermal processing is carried out in the presence of hydrogen,
and the light liquid phase immediately subjected to hydrotreating.
[0013] In yet another embodiment, the hydrotreated liquid is fed to a catalytic cracking
process.
Figure 1 is a simplified flow diagram of the present invention wherein a heavy feed
is thermally processed to produce an upgraded resid product and a carbonaceous phase.
Figure 2 is a simplified flow diagram showing the above process with H2 addition to the feed, and hydrotreating of the upgraded product.
[0014] The heavy oil feed comprises a petroleum residuum or a whole or reduced crude. Generally
the feed will be the bottoms from an atmospheric or vacuum tower, asphalt, various
tars, bitumen from heavy oil or tar sands, coal liquids or a heavy shale oil residue.
Feeds will usually have an initial boiling point, IBP, of at least 350°C and usually,
at least 415°C (775°F). Most of the resid will boil above 550°C. Whole crudes will
have a lower IBP. Such feeds usually have relative large amounts of con- radson carbon
residue, CCR, materials which are considered uncrackable in a catalytic process such
as FCC.
[0015] In the first stage of the process, the feed is thermally cracked optionally in the
presence of hydrogen and/or steam. This step is carried out under relatively mild
conditions so that it may be regarded as a severe visbreaking, or hydrovis- breaking
if H
2 is added. It may also be considered a mild coking process, but no solid coke is produced.
Substantially all the reactions take place in the liquid phase, even when H
2 is present. Reactions include the thermal cracking of paraffins and naphthenes, dealkylation
of aromatics, cracking of resinous constituents to light products and decomposition
or cracking of asphaltenes and metal compounds to lighter compounds. Some hydrogenation
of various unsaturated and reactive species formed during the cracking occurs if H2
is added.
[0016] The mild thermal cracking forms a denser, residual carbonaceous product which includes
a significant content of toluene insoluble, TI, materials and a relatively light liquid
product phase with a reduced level of contaminants. The contaminants, metal compounds,
nitrogen and sulfur-containing heterocompounds in the feed, concentrate in the carbonaceous
product. The light liquid product may be used as a feed for an FCC unit or as a low
sulfur fuel. When the feed contains very high contaminate levels, a hydrotreating
step may be used to upgrade the light product.
[0017] Preferably thermal processing removes 10 to 80, preferably 30 to 40 weight percent
of the CCR present in the feed. Under these conditions, the bulk conversion to light
components, e.g., to 350°C- materials, will be less than 50 percent, typically from
10 to 30 weight percent of the 550°C
+ material. At the same time, 20 to 70 weight percent of the 550°C
+ material is converted to 550°C- fractions. Thus a significant amount of the non-distillables,
the 550°C
+ material in the feed is converted by thermal cracking to distillate material. Conversion
of the feed to more volatile materials is not the same as CCR conversion. In general,
conversion to lighter materials and CCR conversion increase with increasing severity
but it is possible, and preferred, to convert most of the nondistillable portion of
the feed to distillable fractions without converting most of the CCR to coke.
[0018] The thermal processing step rejects a toluene insoluble, TI, residue which is removed
from a relatively light liquid oil product. In the thermal processing step the conversion
of the CCR to solid coke product is relatively low, only the relatively small portion
of the most refractory content of the feed is removed, typically 20 to 40 weight percent
of the CCR, leaving the rest of the carbon which is more reactive, to be upgraded
by downstream processing. The carbon removed during this thermal processing is the
most troublesome material for downstream processing units to handle, both from the
viewpoint of metals contamination and from being refractory to conventional refinery
upgrading processes.
[0019] The carbon removed is removed as toluene insolubles. TI content may be measured by
washing the total products with hot toluene (100°C), using four volumes of toluene
for each volume of product. The filter cake on a Whatman No. 2 paper, after washing
with hot toluene (100°C) and drying is the TI.
[0020] Another contrast to conventional coking is that thermal processing in the present
process produces little dry gas, typically from 0.5 to 5 weight percent of the resid
feed. This low gas make leads to improved liquid yield and reduced hydrogen loss so
that the process as a whole has a markedly higher efficiency in hydrogen use.
[0021] To initiate the thermal cracking, the heavy oil feed is preferably brought to a cracking
temperature of 425 to 550°C (800 to 1020°F) with enough pressure to keep most of the
liquid feed in the liquid phase typically 1500 to 15000 kPa. To avoid excessive fouling
in the furnace, the heavy oil may be heated to a somewhat lower temperature, at which
the degree of carbon deposition in the furnace is acceptable. Additional heat may
be supplied by the addition of heated hydrogen or heated diluent (if any). The hydrogen
may function as a heat transfer medium as well as a reactant both in the thermal cracking
step and any downstream hydrotreating step. The diluent, if present, is preferably
a light hydrocarbon such as a distillate, e.g., a light distillate or heavy distillate,
or even a fraction boiling in the gasoline boiling range or even heated hydrocarbon
gas, e.g. butane, propane. The diluent may be lighter portions of the crude oil feed.
Use of whole crude as feedstock will save on distillation expenses heretofore incurred
prior to visbreaking or coking. The diluent preferably acts as an antisol- vent for
the residual phase. The residual phase is aromatic, containing high molecular weight
asphaltenes, so paraffinic diluents are especially effective.
[0022] The hydrogen, and diluent, if used as a heating fluid, are heated to a temperature
which will bring the heavy oil feed to the desired cracking temperature after mixing.
Generally, the hydrogen and/or diluent will be heated to 450 to 550°C (840 to 1020°F),
preferably 450 to 510°C (840 to 950°F) at 1500 to 15000 kPa prior to mixing with the
heavy oil feed. H
2 and diluent temperature will vary according to the ratio of diluent to feed and their
thermal capacities. The ratio of diluent to heavy oil feed will generally be 0.05
to 2, preferably 0.1 to 1, by weight. If hydrogen is added, the hydrogen circulation
preferably is at least 200 n.I.I.-' (200 SCFB) and most preferably 200 to 2000 n.I.I.-'
- (1120 to 11235 SCFB). Adding H, to the thermal processing step also provides enough
hydrogen for downstream hydrotreating. Higher H
2:oil ratios may be desirable to heat the charge. Hydrogen consumption depends on the
resid feed and conditions in cracking and hydrotreating. Hydrogen consumption is made
up by addition of fresh hydrogen. The cracking temperature, furnace temperature, and
so on should be selected for the feed then the H
2 circulation rate set, after which the H
2 addition rate can be determined.
[0023] The diluent has a lower propensity for furnace fouling than the resid. The diluent
may be heated a lot to heat the resid, thereby reducing the resid heater duty and/or
eliminating the necessity for using hot hydrogen. It is expensive to heat hydrogen
so use of a heated diluent is preferred.
[0024] The heated diluent, if any, and hydrogen, if any, are mixed with the heated heavy
oil feed and charged to a thermal reactor where thermal cracking occurs. A phase separator
may follow the thermal reactor to separate the light liquid overflow product from
residual underflow under optimum conditions. The separate phase separator may be hot
so that some cracking takes place in it, increasing the total reaction severity. Adequate
severity can be obtained in a coil without a separate soaking drum, but with refractory
feeds, a drum may be necessary to secure the desired severity. A phase separator soaking
drum after the furnace provides time at elevated temperature and therefore increases
the severity and permits phase separation to take place.
[0025] The thermal cracking is controlled so that the desired phase separation takes place
and the desired level of demetalation is achieved. The optimum severity varies from
feed to feed and may be determined experimentally. The objective is to produce a denser,
residual carbonaceous phase in which the contaminants are concentrated and a supernatant
liquid phase which may be separated by physical means from the residual carbonaceous
phase. The severity of the thermal cracking step is preferably controlled so the TI
content of the dense or carbonaceous phase is 0.5 to 40 wt. % preferably from 5 to
30 wt. %. This ensures that the carbonaceous phase remains thermoplastic and meltable
at temperatures below about 200°C and may be handled as a liquid in subsequent processing.
Tl is not coke. The Tl material is a complex hydrocarbon mixture which is soluble
in solvents such as pyridine and tetrahydrofuran but insoluble in toluene. It has
a nominal hydrogen content of 6 to 7 wt. %. Pyrolysis of this Tl yields a coke residue
which weighs less than about 70 percent of the Tl feed. The weight ratio of TI in
the total liquid product (upper and lower phases) to the CCR in the residual phase
should be 0.5 to 2.0.
[0026] Generally, thermal cracking is not sensitive to pressure so pressure is not a critical
parameter of the process. A high enough pressure should be present to keep most of
the feed in liquid phase.
[0027] The reaction conditions required to achieve the optimum thermal severity vary according
to the thermal reactivity of the feed. The severity of any thermal processing step
may be expressed in terms of "Equivalent Reaction Time" (ERT) measured in seconds
at 427°C (800°F). Ten minutes at 427°C (800°F) equals a 600 ERT. This is a well known
concept in visbreaking, thermal cracking and coking.
[0028] In general, severity will be controlled to produce a residual phase which can be
maintained in a flowable condition for handling. The fluidity of the carbonaceous
phase may be maintained below certain upper limits to ensure that it remains fluid
and readily pumpable to other process units. In general, the severity will be from
1500 to 20.000 seconds ERT at 427°C (800°F). The optimum severity will vary from feed
to feed and may be determined experimentally by Shaker Bomb or other laboratory test.
[0029] The feed is thermally cracked to produce a residual phase containing the majority
of the contaminants, particularly the metals, nitrogen and sulfur heterocompounds,
and an upgraded liquid phase which separates from the residual phase. The light liquid
product is predominantly paraffinic whereas the residual phase, including the TI is
predominantly asphaltenic and high in aromatics. Phase separation takes place readily
in a phase separator, permitting the upgraded liquid product to be removed as an overflow
and the thermoplastic, residual phase to be removed as an underflow.
[0030] Hydrogen addition is optional, but preferred. Hydrogen can be used as a heating medium,
by superheating the hydrogen and using the superheated hydrogen to heat the feed.
The hydrogen may also be mixed with the feed, upstream of the thermal processing heater.
H2 addition may provide hydrogen for subsequent hydrotreating, so that the liquid
overflow product can be passed directly to a cascaded hydrotreating step. Direct coupling
of hydrotreating with cracking enables the light liquid product to be stabilized by
hydrogenation of metastable and labile species to prevent recombination to high molecular
weight materials. Phase separation between the liquid product and the residual carbonaceous
phase is promoted because hydrogen is one of the best antisolvents for the thermoplastic
phase. The hydrogen reduces the solubility of the thermoplastic phase in the liquid
product.
[0031] Phase separation may also be also improved by the use of solvents, e.g., light hydrocarbons,
whether added upstream or downstream of the thermal reactor. Light hydrocarbons, preferably
paraffinic, may be added to the phase separator to aid separation. If solvents are
added to the phase separator, they are preferably recycled solvents from a subsequent
stage of the operation, as described below. The boiling point of the solvent added
to the phase separator preferably is chosen so that at the temperature and pressure
of the separator, at least 50% of the solvent will be in solution in the liquid product.
Typical solvents used to enhance phase separation include naphthas and distillates
including kerosene, light distillate and heavy distillate. Temperatures in the phase
separator will generally be from 230 to 450°C, preferably 290 to 425°C. Generally
the ratio of any added solvent to the heavy oil feed will be from 0.05:1 to 2:1 by
volume.
[0032] The light, supernatant, liquid phase withdrawn as overflow from the phase separator
is low in metal, CCR and asphaltenes. The contaminants and asphaltenes concentrate
in the thermoplastic underflow phase. The liquid overflow product contains thermally
cracked fragments which are easily hydrogenated to increase their hydrogen content.
Hydrogenation improves the storage stability of the product. The liquid overflow product
is easy to hydrotreat because its molecular weight is lower than the original heavy
oil feed. Thermally cracked products are in a metastable or activated state for a
significant period of time. Hydrogenation produces stable products with a reduced
susceptibility to polymerization condensation and reduces residual heteroatom content
(nitrogen, sulfur, possibly oxygen). It is preferred to immediately hydrotreat the
liquid overflow product rather than store it, as during storage the activated species
may undergo polymerization and condensation to solid, sludge- like products which
are hard to hydrotreat.
[0033] In the optional, but preferred hydroprocessing step, the liquid overflow product
is hydrogenated with conventional hydrotreating catalyst. Suitable catalysts employ
a hydrogenation/dehydrogenation component on a substantially neutral or acidic support
such as alumina, silica-alumina, carbon, a zeolite or a solid aluminum phosphate.
The hydrogenation/dehydrogenation component will normally be a transition metal, either
a base metal or base metal combination such as cobalt, tung- ston, or a base metal
combination such as cobalt- molybdenum, nickel-tungsten, nickel-molybdenum, or a noble
metal such as platinum or palladium. Hydrotreating conditions are conventional, typically
200 to 450°C, preferably 250 to 400°C. Pressures in the hydrotreater are preferably
the same as in the thermal processing unit, or hydrovisbreaker if H2 is added during
thermal processing, to facilitate direct coupling of the two processes. Therefore,
pressure will generally be 1500 to 15000 kPa. Space velocities are normally from 0.1
to 20, preferably 0.5 to 5, hour-'. Liquid flow in the hydrotreater may be up or downflow
but downflow is preferred, i.e., a trickle bed reactor is preferred. The severity
of the hydrotreating operation will depend on product requirements.
[0034] Hydrotreating is especially preferred when the light liquid product will be FCC feed.
The sulfur and metals levels are substantially reduced by hydrotreating, and the hydrogen
content increased to about that of conventional FCC feed.
[0035] The thermoplastic, carbonaceous phase withdrawn as an underflow product from the
phase separator can be washed with solvent or stripped with steam to recover more
of light liquid oil product. The residue from solvent extraction or steam stripping
may be made into asphalt or pitch binder, charged to a coker or a gasification unit,
or used as refinery fuel. Coking treatments include delayed coking, fluid coking or
contact coking.
[0036] The process described above is illustrated in Figure 1. A resid feed having an initial
boiling point of 413°C
+ (775°F
+) is charged via line 8 to heater 10 and heated to 371 to 538°C. The thermal processing
can be achieved solely in heater 10, i.e., the time and temperature in the heater
can be enough to yield enough thermoplastic carbonaceous material to provide phase
separation from the paraffinic light oil phase. Generally once the resid is heated
it is passed via line 11 to thermal reactor 12, operated at 371 to 538°C, and time
brings about the thermal reactions which yield the light products due to cracking
and the carbonaceous material. Reactor 12 is simply a thermal reactor, the elevated
temperatures alone initiate the desired reactions. From reactor 12, effluent enters
phase separator 14 via line 13. Separator 14 is preferably maintained at 204 to 371
°C (400 to 700°F). The phenomenon of phase separation is based on the incompatibility
of the carbonaceous phase containing toluene insolubles and the liquid paraffinic
phase. The light or liquid paraffinic phase is withdrawn as overflow via line 16 while
the carbonaceous material or sludge is withdrawn as underflow via line 18. The underflow
may be passed to a heater 20, heated to at least 482°C - (900°F) and charged via line
21 to coking unit 22, e.g., a delayed or fluid coker. Optionally, the underflow via
line 18 can be mixed with ligh aromatics from line 5 or steam from line 52 prior to
heating. The products from coking unit 22 are solid coke removed via line 24 and a
vaporized product removed via line 26. The vaporized product may be fractionated in
fractionator 28 into various components, typically light gaseous components, naphthas,
light coker and heavy coker gas oils, removed via lines 31-34, respectively.
[0037] Separation of carbonaceous material from lighter paraffinic liquid in separator 14
may be aided by solvent treatment of the thermal reactor effluent.
[0038] Light products, e.g., contained in the effluent from the heater or thermal reactor
may first be flashed off in an optional flashing drum. These products will typically
be C
2 C. gases. To facilitate flashing, some pressure drop can be taken. The bottom product
from the flashing drum may contact solvent upstream of or in the phase separator.
[0039] The important parameters in the solvent treatment are the solvent, solvenflresid
ratio, temperature, pressure and number of treatment stages.
[0040] Solvents which may be used include carbon dioxide, light hydrocarbons, C
3-C
10 paraffins, cycle paraffins, naphthas, gasoline and kerosene, and their mixtures.
Propane, butanes, pentane, hexane, and heptane are particularly preferred. The lower
the carbon number of the solvent, the higher the quality of the light phase withdrawn
but the lower the yield of the treated product.
[0041] The temperature of solvent treatment must be at least 11°C (20°F), preferably 22°C
(40°F) higher than the melting point of the carbonaceous bottoms product so that the
two phases formed in solvent treatment are both liquids. At high temperatures, above
454°C (850°F), improved solubility between the solvent, light oil phase and carbonaceous
bottoms impairs phase separation. A high solvent/resid ratio aids phase separation,
but use of large amounts of solvent increases the processing cost. At high temperatures,
cooling feed to the solvent treater and heating product from the solvent treater can
be minimized leading to cost savings. There is an optimum phase separation temperature
depending on the nature of the resid feed and process costs. In general, an operable
range is 99 to 427°C (200 to 800°F) and 149 to 371 °C (300 to 700°F) is preferred.
[0042] Higher pressure increases the amount of solvent which is in liquid phase at high
temperatures. The optimum pressure depends on the solvent used. The pressure preferably
maintains most of the solvent in the liquid phase. Pressure may equal or exceed the
critical pressure of the solvent used. For light hydrocarbons this pressure is about
3,500 Kpa (500 psig).
[0043] As the solvent/resid ratio increases, the quality of the relatively light product
increases, but the yield decreases. Solvent/resid ratio should be reduced to minimize
the operation cost. The optimum solventtresid ratio is the lowest ratio which yields
the upgraded product of acceptable quality. The sotvent/resid ratio can be 1:10 to
10:1. A solvent/resid ratio of 1:2 to 3:1 is preferred. In addition to the nature
of the resid itself, the optimum solvent/resid ratio depends substantially upon the
severity of thermal treatment. The higher the thermal treating severity, the lower
the sotvent/resid ratio requirement.
[0044] To minimize the expense of purchased solvent, use of a solvent derived from the products
of the process is preferred. Recycle of a naphtha fraction via line 35 from fractionation
column 28 to phase separator 14, in Figure 1 illustrates this concept.
[0045] In Figure 2. a residual oil feed is charged via line 110 to furnace 111 where it
is heated. Hydrogen gas from recycle line 112, light solvent or diluent from recycle
line 114 and fresh hydrogen from inlet 115 are heated in heater 113 and passed via
line 151 to mix with the preheated feed in line 116. The mixture enters combined thermal
reactor and phase separator 120 where thermal cracking and phase separation occurs
to form an upper phase of upgraded liquid product and a lower phase of thermoplastic,
carbonaceous product.
[0046] The liquid/liquid interface in separator 120 preferably is kept high and the level
of inlet line 116 low to improve phase separation and consequently metal removal and
carbon residue rejection. As the liquid product passes towards the top of the separator
and the fluid carbonaceous product sinks towards the bottom, the toluene insoluble
materials formed in the thermal cracking coagulate and agglomerate.
[0047] The light liquid product is removed via line 161 and passed to hydrotreater 121,
a conventional hydrotreating process. A downflow, trickle bed hydrotreating reactor
is preferred. Hydrotreating severity depends on the product use. For fuel use, severity
is adjusted to meet fuel sulfur content specifications, generally below 0.3 wt % sulfur.
If the product will be FCC feed, more sulfur can be tolerated since sulfur rejection
may take place during the FCC operation, or in other downstream processing.
[0048] Effluent from hydrotreater 121 passes via line 162 to high pressure separator 122
where a hydrogen rich gas phase is removed from the hydrotreated product. The hydrogen
may be recycled via line 112 without purification, although an alkaline scrub may
be used to remove hydrogenation products, principally hydrogen sulfide, prior to recycle.
The hydrotreated liquid is removed via line 123.
[0049] In phase separator 120 the thermoplastic, carbonaceous phase is withdrawn via line
163 as a liquid or semi-liquid product. As shown, the residue is passed to a steam
stripper 125 where it contacts steam from line 164 which removes residual light products
and any added solvent. From the stripper, it passes via line 165 to separator 126
for removal of the light ends which are passed to hydrotreater 121 through line 127.
The stripped residue passes to a coking unit such as a delayed coker 128. The vaporous
products of coking are passed via line 129 to fractionator 130 where they are separated
into products, coker heavy gas oil (HCGO), coker light gas oil (LCGO), distillate,
naphtha and gas, removed via lines 135-131 respectively. Some naphtha is returned
as light solvent recycle through line 114 to assist in the heating of the heavy oil
feed to the requisite cracking temperature. Alternatively, the distillate could be
used as light recycle, as could the LCGO and HCGO fractions although these last two
are not preferred. The gas from fractionator 130 could also be recycled to assist
in the heating of the heavy feed, if desired.
EXAMPLE 1
[0050] This example illustrates what can be achieved by thermal processing. Mild coking
causes significant conversion of feed to lighter materials. No hydrogen is added.
No diluent or solvent is added, but the use of whole crude as a feedstock, rather
than a resid, simulates the addition of some solvent.
[0051] The feed properties were:

[0052] This feed was added to an autoclave, and heated to the desired reaction temperature.
The autoclave was maintained at the reaction temperature for 1/2 hour and cooled to
316°C (600°F) rapidly with an internal cooling coil. For 1/2 hour at 316°C (600°F),
the reaction mixture stood unstirred for phase separation, and then was quenched by
ice bath.
[0053] Gas products were collected and measured by a wet test meter. Light liquid products
were obtained from the wet gas by collection in a dry ice trap. The distinct liquid
phases in the reactor were separated by pipetting. The lower phase contained a considerable
amount of light liquid, the separated lower liquid phase was washed with pentane to
recover this light liquid.
[0054] Products collected were the upper phase liquid, extracted lower phase liquid from
pentane washing, lower phase tar, cold trap liquid and gas. The product distribution
is shown in Table 1.

[0055] Table 1 shows as the reaction severity increased from 1800 to 7200 ERT seconds, liquid
yield decreased and toluene-insoluble (TI) and gas yields increased. At 7200 ERT seconds
delayed coking conditions were approached and 17% TI formed. The TI/CCR ratio was
about 2.0 which falls in the range of the coke yield/CCR ratio of delayed coking.
The TI/CCR ratio indicates process severity, and increases with increasing severity.
At 1800 and 4300 ERT seconds the Ti/CCR ratio 0.44 and 0.71, respectively, and the
total liquid yield was greater than 90%.
[0056] The demetalation in the upper phase light oil product is shown in Table 2.

[0057] The metals, S and N content in the upper phase liquid product all decreased with
increasing reaction severity. A modest 60 to 70% demetalation was achieved at 1800
ERT sec, equivalent to 30 minutes at 427°C (800°F), with 94% total liquid yield (Table
1). The boiling point conversion of this product is shown in Table 3. The fractions
of 216°C-(420°F-) and 216 to 343°C (420 to 650°F) increased over the feed. The conversion
of 449°C+ (840°F+) to lighter products was 27 wt %. At a higher severity, e.g., 4,300
ERT, more conversion would be expected.

[0058] As shown in Table 4 below, at 1800 ERT the TI in the upper phase liquid was 1.03%,
reflecting poor phase separation. At higher severity, the TI was very low (0.1 % or
less), low enough to feed to .hydrotreaters, FCC units or use as heavy fuel. The TI
in the upper phase approached 0.09 at 4300 ERT. The ratio of TI in the two phases
increased from 33 to 570 with severity. This high ratio at high severity reflected
the production of more TI materials. For this feed the optimum treatment severity
is about 4300 ERT seconds which yielded large amounts of upgraded liquid product with
over 90% of Ni and V removed from the upper liquid phase product. A 4300 ERT severity
is between visbreaking and coking.

EXAMPLE 2
[0059] This example illustrates what can be achieved when mild coking, phase separation
and hydrotreating of light liquid product are practiced together.
[0060] A typical low gravity feed is subjected to mild coking in a fluidized bed, liquid
phase reactor to reject carbon as a thermoplastic, dense residue which is continuously
removed from the reactor. Reactor temperature is 470°C (880°F) at 2860 kPa (400 psig)
pressure, 3 V/V hr-' space velocity. The mildly coked liquid product (MCLP) is removed
as a relatively light liquid phase and passed directly to hydrotreating over a conventional
hydrotreating catalyst under 7000 kPa (1000 psig) hydrogen pressure at 400°C (750°F),
1 hr' LHSV.
[0061] The properties of the feed, the MCLP and the hydrotreated product (HDT) are given
below in Table 5 in which all percentages are by weight

[0062] The hydrotreated product is suitable for use as an FCC feed to produce gas plus distillate,
G/D, in a high efficiency process.
[0063] The present process efficiently upgrades residua to low boiling products including
gasoline and distillate, with the ability to use existing refinery equipment, thereby
minimizing capital cost. It efficiently uses hydrogen, by rejecting the more refractory
carbonaceous portions of the resid as a dense phase and using the hydrogen selectively
to increase the hydrogen level of the FCC fee. This, in turn, results in an increased
yield of low boiling product.
1. A process for thermally upgrading a feed comprising a resid contaminated with sulfur,
nitrogen and metal compounds and containing 413°C - (775°F) material characterized
by heating the feed to 399 to 510°C (750 to 950°F) at a pressure sufficient to maintain
a liquid phase long enough to permit liquid/liquid phase separation of thermally upgraded
feed into an upper light oil phase of reduced sulfur, nitrogen and metal content containing
less than about 0.5 wt. % toluene insolubles, and a lower residual oil phase containing
from 0.5 wt.% to 30 wt.% toluene insolubles, and thereafter recovering the upper light
oil phase as a product of the process.
2. The process of claim 1 wherein the severity ranges from 1,500 to 20,000 ERT seconds.
3. The process of claim 2 wherein the severity is 1,800 to 7,500 ERT seconds.
4. The process of any preceeding claim wherein the ratio of wt. % toluene insolubles
in the lower liquid phase to toluene insolubles in the upper light phase is at least
33:1.
5. The process of any preceeding claim wherein phase separation occurs in a phase
separator downstream of the thermal upgrading process, and operating at a temperature
lower than the thermal upgrading temperature.
6. The process of any preceeding claim further chracterized by stripping the lower
residual oil phase to remove occluded light oil therefrom.
7. The process of claim 6 wherein the residue remaining after stripping comprises
5 to 45 wt. % of the feed.
8. The process of any preceeding claim wherin the thermal upgrading is carried out
in the absence of hydrogen.
9. The process of any of claims 1 to 7 further characterized in that hydrogen is present
during thermal upgrading in an amount equal to 200 to 2000 n.l.l.-1.
10. The process of claim 9 further characterized in that the hydrogen added is hotter
than the feed whereby some heating of the feed with hydrogen is achieved.
11. The process of any of claims 1 to 10 wherein the feed is a resid having an initial
boiling point of at least 413°C (775°F).
12. The process of any of claims 1 to 10 wherein the feed is a whole crude.
13. The process of any preceeding claim wherein a solvent is added to the thermally
upgraded product to promote liquid/liquid phase separaton.
14. The process of any preceeding claim further characterized in that the upper light
oil phase is passed directly to a conventional hydrotreating zone without intermediate
storage to produce a hydrotreated product.
15. The process of Claim 14 further characterized in that at lease a portion of the
hydrotreated product is subjected to conventional catalytic cracking.