BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention is concerned with producing a high grade reduced crude having lowered
metals and Conradson carbon values from a poor grade of reduced crude having extremely
high metals and Conradson carbon values. In addition, this invention describes a sorbent
material that can be utilized for the reduction of these metal and Conradson carbon
values that exhibits a low catalytic cracking activity value. A further embodiment
of this invention is the inclusion of a metal additive as a select metal, organo metallic,
its oxide or salt into the sorbent material during manufacture or during the processing
cycle to immobilize the sodium vanadate, vanadium pentoxide deposited on the sorbent
during processing. This invention also describes a regeneration process to immobilize
the vanadium pentoxide by maintaining the metal in a reduced or lower oxidation state
to prevent vanadium mobility. This invention also provides a method for the processing
of reduced crudes high in metals and Conradson carbon to provide a feedstock for a
reduced crude conversion process or for typical fluid catalytic cracking processes.
[0002] The introduction of catalytic cracking to the petroleum industry in the 1930's constituted
a major advance over previous techniques with the object to increase the yield of
gasoline and its quality. These early FCC processes employed vacuum gas oils (VGO)
from crude sources that were considered sweet and light. The terminology of sweet
refers to low sulfur content and light refers to the amount of material boiling below
approximately 1,000-1025°F. The catalyst employed in these early homogeneous dense
beds were of amorphous siliceous materials, prepared synthetically or from naturally
occurring materials activated by acid leaching. Tremendous strides were made in the
1950's in FCC technology as to metallurgy, processing equipment, regeneration and
new more active amorphous catalysts. However, increasing demand with respect to quantity
and increased octane number requirements to satisfy the new high horsepower-high compression
engines being promoted by the auto industry, put extreme pressure on the petroleum
industry to increase FCC capacity and severity of operation.
[0003] A major breakthrough in FCC catalysis which came in the early 1960's, was the introduction
of molecular sieves or zeolites into the matrix of amorphous material constituting
the FCC catalyst. These new zeolitic catalysts, containing a crystalline aluminosilicate
in an amorphous matrix of silica, alumina, silica-alumina, clay, etc. were at least
1,000-10,000 times more active for cracking hydrocarbons than the earlier amorphous
silica-alumina catalysts. This introduction of zeolitic cracking catalysts revolutionized
the fluid catalytic cracking process. New innovations were developed to handle these
high activities, such as riser cracking, shortened contact times, new regeneration
processes, new and improved zeolitic catalyst developments, etc. The overall result
(economic) of these zeolitic catalyst developments gave the petroleum industry the
expensive, high pressure - special alloy multi-reactors system and a separate facility
for the production of hydrogen and high operating costs.
[0004] To better understand the reasons why the industry has progressed along the processing
schemes described, one must understand the effects of contaminant metals (Ni-V-Fe-Cu-Na)
and Conradson carbon on the zeolitic containing cracking catalysts and the operating
parameters of an FCC unit. High metal content, high Conradson carbon, high S, N, low
H-content, high asphaltenes, and high boiling range are very effective restraints
on the operation of a fluid cracking unit (FCC) or a reduced crude conversion unit
(RCC) when seeking maximum conversion, selectivity and life. As these values increase,
the capacity and efficiency of the FCC unit and RCC unit are adversely affected.
[0005] The effect of increasing Conradson carbon is to increase that portion of the feedstock
converted to carbon deposited on the catalyst. In typical VGO operations employing
a zeolite containing catalyst in a FCC unit the amount of coke deposited on the catalyst
averages at about 4-5 wt% of feed. This coke production has been attributed to four
different coking reactions, namely, contaminant coke (from metal deposits), catalytic
coke (acid site cracking), entrained hydrocarbons (pore structure adsorption - poor
stripping) and Conradson carbon. In the case of processing higher boiling fractions,
e.g., reduced crudes, residual fractions, topped crude, etc., the coke production
based on feed is the summation of three of the four kinds mentioned above plus exceedingly
higher Conradson carbon values. Thus coke production when processing reduced crude
is normally and most generally around 4-5 wt% plus the Conradson carbon value of the
feedstock. In addition, it has been proposed that two other types of coke former processes
or mechanisms may be manifested present in reduced crude processing in addition to
the four exhibited by VGO. They are adsorbed and absorbed high boiling hydrocarbons
not removed by normal efficient stripping due to their high boiling points, and carbon
associated with high molecular weight nitrogen compounds adsorbed on the catalyst's
acid sites.
[0006] The spent-coked catalyst is brought back to new equilibrium activity by burning off
the deactivating coke in a regeneration zone in the presence of air and recycled back
to the reaction zone. The heat generated during regeneration is removed by the catalyst
and carried to the reaction zone for vaporization of the feed and to supply the heat
for the cracking reaction. The temperature in the regenerator is limited because of
metallurgy limitations and the thermal-steam stability of the catalyst. The thermal-steam
stability of the zeolite containing catalyst is determined by the temperature and
steam partial pressure at which the zeolite irreversibly loses its crystalline structure
to form low activity amorphous material. Steam, generated by the burning of adsorbed
carboneceous material containing a high hydrogen content is highly detrimental. This
carboneceous material is principally hydrogen containing carboneceous product as previously
described plus high boiling adsorbed hydrocarbons with boiling points as high as 1500-1700°F
that have a high hydrogen content, high boiling nitrogen containing hydrocarbons and
porphyrins-asphaltenes.
[0007] It has also been shown that zeolite containing catalysts are also very sensitive
to vanadia. Small amounts of vanadia seem to catalyze the distruction of crystalline
zeolites.
[0008] As the Conradson carbon value of the feedstock increases, coke production increases
and this increased load will raise regeneration temperatures; thus the unit is limited
as to the amount of feed and Conradson carbon values it can process. Earlier VGO units
operated with the regenerator at 1150-1250°F. New developments in reduced crude processing
such as Ashland Oil's "Reduced Crude Conversion Process" (pending application USSN
094,216) can operate up to 1350-1450°F. But at adiabatic conditions, even these higher
temperatures place a limit on the Conradson carbon value of the feed which can be
tolerated at approximately about 8. Based on experience, this equates to about 12-13
wt% coke on catalyst based on feed.
[0009] The metal containing fractions of reduced crude contain Ni-V-Fe-Cu, present as porphyrins
and asphaltenes. These metal containing hydrocarbons are deposited on the catalyst
during processing, are cracked in the riser to deposit the metal or carried over by
the spent catalyst as the metallo-porphyrins or asphaltenes and converted to the oxide
during regeneration. The adverse effects of these metals are to decrease the acidity
of the zeolite therby reducing catalytic cracking activity, thus, enhancing non-selective
cracking and dehydrogenation to produce light gases such as hydrogen, methane and
ethane and more importantly, increase coke production all of which affects selectivity
and yield. The increased production of light gases affects the economic yield and
selectivity structure of the process and puts an increased demand on compressor capacity.
The increase in coke production also adversely affects catalyst activity-selectivity
and leads to increased regenerator air demand and compressor capacity, and elevated
regenerator temperatures.
[0010] These problems of the prior art were solved by the development of the Reduced Crude
Conversion Process, see pending applications 094,216 and 094,092. This new process
can handle reduced crudes containing high metals and Conradson carbon values. However,
certain crudes such as Mexican Mayan or Venezuelan which contain abnormally high metal
and Conradson carbon values if processed in a reduced crude process will lead to an
uneconomical operation because of the high load on the regenerator and the high catalyst
addition rate required to maintain catalyst activity and selectivity. The addition
rate can be as high as 4-8 lbs/bbl. which at today's catalyst prices can add as much
as $2-8/bbl additional catalyst cost to the processing economics. On the other hand,
it becomes economically desirable that an economical means be developed to process
crude oils such as the Mexican Mayan because of their availability and cheapness as
compared to Middle East crudes.
[0011] It was noted in the literature that a process was developed by Engelhard Minerals
and Chemicals which seeks to reduce the metal content and Conradson carbon of these
crudes. The process is described in U. S. Patent 4,243,514 and German Patent No. 29
04 230. Basically, this process involves contacting a reduced crude fraction with
sorbent at elevated temperature in a fluid bed of the RCC type, to produce a product
of reduced metal and Conradson carbon value. The claimed preferred sorbent is an inert
solid initially composed of kaolin, which has been spray dried to yield a microspherical
particle having a surface area below 100 m
2/g a catalytic cracking micro-activity value of less than 20 and calcined at high
temperature so as to achieve attrition resistance. This process was experimentally
tested and found to lower the metals and Conradson carbon values substantially. However,
as the vanadia content on the sorbent increased, in the range of 10,000-30,000 ppm,
the sorbent began to have fluidization problems apparently due to the clumping, fusion
or coalescence of particles. This could only be overcome by the removal of spent sorbent
and the addition of fresh virgin material.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0012] The problems of the prior art are now overcome in a process employing the sorbent
and metal additive of this invention which allows the processing of a reduced crude
or crude oil of extremely high metals and Conradson carbon values.
[0013] A reduced crude or crude oil having a high metal and Conradson carbon value is contacted
in an RCC type regenerator-reactor system with an inert solid sorbent of low surface
area at temperatures above about 900°F. Residence time in the riser is below 5 seconds,
preferably 0.5-2 seconds. The particle size of the inert solid sorbent is approximately
20-150 microns in size to ensure adequate fluidization properties.
[0014] The reduced crude-crude oil is introduced at a temperature below thermal cracking
at the bottom of the riser and contacts the inert solid sorbent at a temperture of
1150-1400°F and exits the riser at a temperature in the reactor vessel of approximately
900-1050°F. Along with reduced crude or crude pil; water, steam, naphtha, flue gas,
etc. may be introduced to aid in vaporization and act as a lift gas to control residence
time. The sorbent is rapidly separated from the hydrocarbon vapors at the top of the
riser by employing the vented riser :oncept developed by Ashland Oil, Inc., see U.
S. Patent No. 4,066,533. During the course of the reaction in the riser the netal
and Conradson carbon compounds are deposited on the sorbent. After separation in the
vented riser the spent sorbent is deposited as a dense bed at the bottom of the reactor
vessel, transferred to a stripper and then to the regeneration zone. The spent sorbent
is contacted with an oxygen containing gas to remove the carboneceous material through
combustion to carbon oxides to yield a regenerated sorbent containing 0.05-0.2 wt%
carbon. The regenerated sorbent is then recycled to the bottom of the riser to meet
additional high metal and Conradson carbon containing feed to repeat the cycle.
[0015] At the elevated temperatures encountered in the regeneration zone, the vanadium deposited
on the sorbent is converted to vanadium oxides, in particular, vanadium pentoxide.
The melting point of vanadium pentoxide is much lower than temperatures encountered
in the regeneration zone. Thus it can become mobile, flow across the sorbent surface,
cause pore'plugging, partial particle fusion, increase in particle density, and decrease
the fluidization properties of the sorbent. In addition, and more importantly, in
this application, any momentary stoppage of flow, such as occurs in a cyclone dipleg,
permits coalescence of two or more particles and ultimately inhibition of flow and
loss of cyclone operation. Further, when the unit is brought down to low temperatures
to clear the system, the vanadium pentoxide solidifies, thus causing solid plugs of
microspheres bound together by the vanadium pentoxide cement. This cause and effect
of vanadium pentoxide can be overcome by two methods.
[0016] We now have found that 1) The incorporation of select metals, metal oxides or their
salts into the sorbent during manufacture, impregnation after spray drying or added
during processing at select points in the units to affect compound or complex formation.
These compounds or complexes of vanadia with the metal additives have higher melting
points than the temperatures encountered in the regeneration zone. 2) Utilization
of select regeneration conditions to ensure that not all of the carbon is removed
from the sorbent surface thus ensuring a reducing atmosphere and the resulting in
the maintenance of vanadia in lower oxides or oxidation states of vanadium all of
which are extremely high melting solids, e.g., the lower oxides of vanadium melt above
the regenerator temperature encountered and contemplated.
[0017] The process of this invention and sorbent are not limited to a fluidized bed operation
with microspherical particles of 10-200 microns in size, but can include moving bed
operations employing microspherical particles of greater than 200 microns in size.
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0018] The select sorbents of this invention will include solids of low catalytic activity,
such as spent catalyst, clays, bentonite, kaolin, montmorillonte, smectites, and other
2-layered lamellar silicates, mullite, pumice, silica, laterite, etc. The surface
area of these sorbents would preferably be below 25 m
2/g, have a pore volume of approxmately 0.2 cc/g or greater and a micro-activity value
as measured by the ASTM Test Method No. D3907-80 of below 20.
[0019] To an aqueous slurry of the raw sorbent is mixed the metal additive to yield approximately
1-6 wt% concentration on the finished sorbent. The metal additive is a water soluble
compound which can be the oxide or one of its salts such as the nitrate, halide, sulfate,
carbonate, etc. This mixture is spray dried to yield the finished promoted sorbent
as a microspherical particle of 10-200 microns in size with the active promoter deposited
within the pores and/or the outer surface of the sorbent particle. Since the concentration
of vanadia on the spent sorbent is targeted to be approximately 2-5 wt% of final particle
weight, the concentration of metal additive will be in the range of 1-6 wt% to maintain
at least a one to one atomic ratio of vanadium to metal additive at all times. The
sorbent can also be impregnated with these metal additives after spray drying, employing
techniques well known in the art or combined with the clay as a gel so as to serve
also as a binder and pore volume extender in the spray dried product.
[0020] It is not proposed to define the exact mechanism for the immobilization of vanadia
but the metal additives of this invention will form compounds or complexes with vanadia
that have higher melting points or serve to immobilize the migration of vanadia at
the temperatures encountered in the regeneration zone. The targeted one to one molar
ratio is chosen as more or less a practical objective. Initially, in those cases where
the additive is included in the preparation the metal additive will be at a concentration
far exceeding targeted ratios. However, as vanadia content increases, this ratio gradually
decreases as vanadia is deposited on the sorbent. The melting point and migration
behavior of the vanadia-metal oxide compound or complex decreases, as vanadia increases,
usually approaching a eutectic having a melting point even lower than vanadium pentoxide.
For this reason, the additive is kept high in the virgin sorbent or is added in approximately
stoichiometric proportions with vanadium in the feedstock.
[0021] Although described in the literature, one to one by weight preparations (50 wt% vanadium
pentoxide - 50 wt% additive metal) were made and the melting points of the binary
mixtures determined by differential thermal analyses (DTA). This strategy was employed
to determine suitable metals-metal oxides combinations which can form binary mixtures
with vanadium pentoxide having melting points of at least 1800°F at this approximate
one to one ratio. Relatively high melting point tends to ensure that particle fusion
does not occur at the regeneration temperature. The metal-metal oxides additive would
include the following groups and their active elements from the Periodic chart of
the elements:

[0022] Because of cost, and other factors only a select few of the above are considered
practical. These would include Mg, Ca, Ba and titanium and iron oxide. The reaction
of the metal additive with vanadia frequently yields a binary compound. This invention
also recognizes that heating mixtures of these additive metals with vanadia can also
cause reactions to occur to form more complex compounds, and that combinations of
two or more of these metal additives with vanadia can also yield even more unusual
compounds and combinations thereof. In addition, ternary and quaternary combinations
can occur with metals not covered in the Groups illustrated above. In these discussions
we have covered vanadia and vanadium pentoxide. However, this approach also relates
to the lower valences of vanadium, and further, in processing a sulfur containing
feed and regeneration in the presence of an oxygen containing gas there will likely
exist vanadium sulfides, sulfites, sulfates, and which will create still other mixtures
containing mixed oxides and sulfides, sulfates, etc.
[0023] If the metal additive is not incorporated in the initial sorbent preparation or added
to the sorbent during manufacture then it can be added during the processing cycle
at any point of sorbent travel in the processing unit. This would include but not
be limited to addition of an aqueous solution of the inorganic metal salt or hydrocarbon
solution of metallo-organic compounds at the riser bottom 17, along the riser length
4, the dense bed 9 in reactor vessel 5, stripper 10 and stripper 15, regenerator inlet
14, regenerator dense bed 12, or regenerated sorbent standpipe 16.
[0024] In another embodiment, the vanadium deposited on the sorbent is immobilized through
select regeneration conditions. Initially, the vanadium is deposited on the sorbent
and in the regeneration zone under typical conditions is converted to vanadium pentoxide
during coke combustion. The sorbent containing vanadium pentoxide is transferred to
the riser and under the reducing conditions resulting from contacting vaporized feed
will undergo reduction to lower oxidation states. Since reduced vanadium oxide is
covered by the heavy coke deposition it will be protected against oxidation in the
regeneration zone. Under controlled conditions of combustion the coke level on the
sorbent will be reduced to 0.05-0.2 wt% on sorbent weight, preferably 0.1-0.2 wt%.
Operation of the regenerator in a semi-reducing condition, namely high CO/C0
2 ratio can also be utilized to maintain vandium in a lower valence state. This type
of operation establishes a condition wherein all the oxygen has been consumed and
that none is left to further reduce the coke level or oxidize the vanadium to a higher
oxidation level. Thus the reduction of vanadium pentoxide in the riser yields vanadium
oxide (V+4, V0
2) and vanadium trioxide (V
+3, V
20
3) which have much higher melting points, such as 1800°F or higher. Under these controlled
regeneration conditions the lower vanadium oxidation states are maintained so as to
avoid the flow and fusion problems which otherwise would occur.
[0025] The selective sorbent of this invention with or without the additive metal promoter
is charged to a fluidized Metal Removal System as outlined in Figure 1. Sorbent particle
circulation and operating parameters are maintained by methods well known to those
skilled in the art. The equilibrium sorbent at temperatures of 1100-1400°F contacts
the reduced crude containing high metals and Conradson carbon values at riser wye
17. The reduced crude can be accompanied by steam and/or naphtha, or dry gases or
flue gas injected at point 2, water and/or naphtha injected at point 3 to aid in vaporization,
sorbent fluidization and controlling contact time in riser 4. The sorbent and vaporous
hydrocarbons travel up riser 4 at a contact time of 0.1-5 seconds, preferably 0.5-2
seconds. The sorbent and vaporous hydrocarbons are separated in vented riser outlet
6 at a final reaction temperature of 900-1050°F. The vaporous hydrocarbons are transferred
to cyclone 7 where any entrained sorbent fines are separated and the hydrocarbon vapors
are sent to the fractionator via transfer line 8. The spent sorbent drops to the bottom
of vessel 5 to form a dense bed 9. The spent sorbent is then transferred to stripper
10 for removal of any entrained hydrocarbon vapors and then to regenerator vessel
11 to form dense bed 12. An oxygen containing gas such as air is admitted to the bottom
of dense bed 12 in vessel 11 to combust the coke to carbon oxides. The resulting flue
gas is processed through cyclones and exits from regenerator vessel 11 via line 13.
The regenerated sorbent is transferred to stripper 15 to remove any entrained combustion
gases and then transferred to riser wye 17 via line 16 to repeat the cycle.
[0026] At such time that the metals level on the sorbent becomes higher such that demetallization
and decarbonization of the reduced crude feedstock declines, additional sorbent can
be added and inactive sorbent withdrawn at addition-withdrawal point 18 into dense
bed 12 and at addition withdrawal point 19 into regenerated sorbent standpipe 16.
Addition points 18 and 19 can be utilized to add a metal additive promoted sorbent.
In the case of a non-promoted sorbent, the metal additive as an aqueous solution or
an organo-metallic compound in aqueous or hydrocarbon solvent can be added at addition
points 18 and 19 as well as at addition points 2 and 3 on feed line 1, addition point
20 in riser 4, addition point 21 to the bottom of vessel 5 into dense bed 9. The addition
of the metal additive is not limited to these locations but can be practiced at any
point along the reduced crude-sorbent processing cycle.
[0027] At such time that the metal promoted sorbent is not utilized than vanadia deposited
on the sorbent is immobilized through the use of the select regeneration conditions
described earlier in this invention. Sorbent and reduced crude feedstock are processed
in a manner similar to that described previously. The spent sorbent after stripping
in stripper 10 is transferred to regenerator vessel 11. The amount of oxygen containing
gases admitted though line 14 into dense bed 12 is sufficient to only regenerate a
large portion of the coke deposited on the sorbent. The regenerated sorbent exiting
regenerator vessel 11 to stripper 15 contains 0.05-0.2 wt% coke, preferably 0.1-0.2
wt%. This amount of coke on regenerated sorbent is sufficient to help ensure that
the vanadium pentoxide reduced in the riser to lower vandium oxides (monoxide, trioxide)
will remain in these reduced states. The small amount of coke remaining on the sorbent
ensures that vanadium in the lower oxidation state is not re-oxidized to the higher
+5 state.
[0028] The regenerator vessel as illustrated in Figure 1 is a simple one zone-dense bed
type. The regenerator section is not limited to this example but can exist of two
or more zones, stacked or side-by side arrangement, with interna1·and/or external
circulation transfer lines from zone to zone.
[0029] Having thus described the sorbent, metal additive promoters and process of this invention,
the following examples are provided to illustrate the effect of vandadia flowing and
causing particle coalescence which affect the fluidization properties and the steps
taken to better understand this process and prevent its occurrence.
EXAMPLES
[0030] The determination that vanadia deposited on a sorbent would flow and cause coalescence
between the sorbent particles at regenerator temperatures and what elements and their
salts would prevent this processs were studied by three methods; namely, the clumping
or lump formation technique, vanadia diffusion from or compound formation with a metal
additive in a alumina-ceramic crucible, and through spectroscopic studies and differential
thermal analyses of vanadia-metal additive mixtures.
CLUMPING TEST
[0031] A sorbent clay, spray dried to yield microspherical particles in 20-150 micron size,
had vanadia deposited upon it in varying concentrations. The sorbent, free of vanadia,
and those containing varying vanadia concentrations were placed in individual ceramic
crucibles and calcined at 1400°F in air for two hours. At the end of this time period
the crucibles were withdrawn from the muffle furnace and cooled to room temperature.
The surface texture and flow characteristics of these samples were noted and the results
are reported in Table I.

As shown in Table I, the sorbent free of vanadia does not form any crust or clumps
or fused particles at temperatures encountered in the regenerator section of the process
described in this invention. At vanadia concentrations above 5,000 ppm the absorbent
begins to clump and bind badly and does not flow at all.
[0032] While liquid at operating temperatures, manifestation of this phenomenum is demonstrated
by the finding which occurs when these samples are cooled down below the solidification
point in a crucible, or the operating unit is cooled down in order to facilitate entrance
to the unit for cleaning out plugged diplegs and other repairs. This phenomenum also
makes a turnaround extremely difficult, as this material must be chipped out.
CRUCIBLE DIFFUSION - COMPOUND FORMATION
[0033] An extension of the clumping test is the use of a ceramic- alumina crucible to determine
the end product of vanadia reacting with the metal additives. If vanadia does not
react with the metal additive or only a small amount of compound formation occurs,
then the vanadia will diffuse through and over the porous alumina walls and deposit
as a yellowish to orange deposit on the outside walls of the crucible. On the other
hand, when compound formation occurs, there is little or no vanadia deposits on the
outside crucible wall. Two series of tests were performed, in the first series shown
in Table 2, 1/1 mixture by weight of vanadia pentoxide and the metal additive was
placed in the crucible and heated to 1500°F in air for 12 hours. Compound formation
or vanadia diffusion was noted.

In the second series of tests a vanadia containing sorbent was tested in a similar
manner. A one to one ratio by weight of the vanadia containing sorbent and the metal
additive were heated to 1500°F in air for 12 hours. The results are shown in Table
III.

[0034] The study on the capability of certain elements to form higher melting compounds
with vanadium pentoxide was extended to DuPont differential thermal analyses (DTA),
X-ray diffraction (XRD) and scanning electron microscope (SEM) instruments. The metal
additives studied on the DTA showed that titania, barium oxide, calcium oxide, iron
oxide and indium oxide were excellent additives for the formation of high melting
metal vanadates, melting points of 1800°F or higher. Copper and manganese gave intermediate
results with compounds melting at approximately 1500
0F. Poor results were obtained with materials such as lead oxide, molybdena, tin oxide,
chromia, zinc oxide, cobalt oxide, cadimium oxide and some of the rare earths.
[0035] The material reported and produced in Table 3, namely 24,000 ppm vanadia on sorbent
with no metal additive, was fired at 1500°F and then studied in the SEM. The fused
particles initially gave a picture of fused particles, however, as the material was
continuously bombarded the fused particles separated due to the heat generated by
the bombarding electrons. One was able to notice the melting and flowing of vanadia
with the initial single fused particles separating into two distinct microspherical
particles.
[0036] An example of our XRD work is the identification of the compound formed when manganese
acetate reacted with vanadium pentoxide. This compound has been tentatively identified
as Mn
2V
2O
7.
[0037] The commercial application of the metal additive of this invention is illustrated
in Figure 2. As shown in November a reduced crude was processed over a virgin sorbent
and after 10,000 ppm vanadia the catalyst began to exhibit extreme clumping properties.
This was repeated in December. In January, the metal additive was added to the reduced
crude and reduced its clumping properties. The additive was DuPont's Tyzor TPT (tetraisopropyl
titanate).
1. A process for preparing a reduced crude or crude oil of reduced metal and Conradson
carbon content from a reduced crude or crude oil having a substantial metal and Conradson
carbon content, the improvement of which comprises contacting said feedstock with
a metal additive promoted sorbent to immobilize vanadium compounds, said sorbent having
a catalytic cracking micro-activity test value of less than 20, at elevated temperatures
in a riser fluidized transfer zone or moving bed reaction zone followed by rapid separation
of the gaseous products and spent sorbent, subjecting said spent sorbent to regeneration
in the presence of an oxygen containing gas, with recycle of the regenerated sorbent
to the riser transfer zone or moving bed reaction zone for treatment of fresh reduced
crude or crude oil.
2. The process of Claim 1 wherein the reduced crude or crude oil contains 100 ppm
or more of metals consisting of nickel, vanadium, iron and copper and the Conradson
carbon value is 8 wt% or higher and wherein the product after decarbonization and
demetallization contains less than 100 ppm metals, preferably less that 50 ppm metals
and less than 10 wt% Conradson carbon, preferably less than 8 wt% Conradson carbon
and wherein said sorbent is in microspherical form, prepared from a hydrated clay
and has a surface area below about 50 m2/g and a pore volume of 0.2 cc/g or greater.
3. The process of Claim 1 wherein the vanadium concentration on the sorbent is 10,000
ppm or greater and wherein the metal additive to immobilize vanadium compounds on
a sorbent will include the following elements: Mg, Ca, Sr, Ba, Sc, Y, La, Ti, Zr,
Hf, Nb, Ta, Mn, Fe, In, Tl, Bi, Te, lanthanide and actinide series of elements.
4. The process of Claim 1 wherein the product from the decarbonization-demetallization
process is utilized as feedstock for a reduced crude conversion process of fluid catalytic
cracking process.
5. A process for preparing a reduced crude or crude oil of reduced metal and Conradson
carbon content from a reduced crude or crude oil having a substantial metal and Conradson
carbon content., the improvement of which comprises contacting said feedstock with
a sorbent having a catalytic cracking micro-activity test value of less than 20, at
elevated temperatures in a riser fluidized transfer zone or moving bed reaction zone
followed by rapid separation of the gaseous products and spent sorbent, subjecting
said spent sorbent to controlled regeneration conditions to immobilize the vanadium
compounds deposited on the sorbent, in the presence of an oxygen containing gas to
yield a partially regenerated sorbent and the deposited vanadium in the lower oxidation
state, with recycle of the regenerated sorbent to the riser transfer zone or moving
the reaction zone for treatment of fresh reduced crude or crude oil.
6. The process of Claim 5 wherein the reduced crude or crude oil contains 100 ppm
or more of metals consisting of nickel, vanadium, iron and copper and the Conreadons
carbon value is 8 wt% or higher and wherein the product after decarbonization and
demetallization contains less than 100 ppm metals, preferably less than 50 ppm metals
and less than 10 wt% Conradson carbon, preferably less than 8 wt% Conradson carbon.
7. The process of Claim 5 wherein the vanadia oxidation state is reduced to a lower
level in the riser transfer reaction zone and maintained at this lower level by employing
incomplete combustion of the coke on the sorbent in the regeneration zone.
8. The process of Claim 5 wherein the sorbent is prepared from clays, bentonite, kaolin,
montmorillonites, smectites and other 2-layered lamellor silicates, mullite, pumice,
silica, laternite and wherein binder materials would be added to the sorbent which
include Mg, Ca, Ba, Ti, Zr, Ta, In, Bi, and Fe.
9. The composition of matter is use in process Claim 1 and Claim 5 containing microspherical
clay and 1-6 wt% titanium or zirconium as an oxide in final form.
10. The composition of matter is use in process Claim 1 and Claim 5 containing microspherical
clay and 1-6 wt% tantalum, bismuth, or indium as an oxide in final form.