Petroleum naphtha

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Petroleum naphtha is an intermediate hydrocarbon liquid stream derived from the refining of crude oil.[1][2][3] It is most usually desulfurized and then catalytically reformed, which re-arranges or re-structures the hydrocarbon molecules in the naphtha as well as breaking some of the molecules into smaller molecules to produce a high-octane component of gasoline (or petrol).

There are quite literally hundreds of different petroleum crude oil sources worldwide and each crude oil has its own unique composition or assay. There are also hundreds petroleum refineries worldwide and each of them are designed to process either a specific crude oil or specific types of crude oils. That means that it is virtually impossible to provide a definitive, single definition of the word naphtha since each each refinery produces its own naphthas with their own unique initial and final boiling points and other physical and compositional characteristics. In other words, naphtha is a generic term rather than a specific term.

In addition, naphthas may be also be produced from coal tar, shale deposits, tar sands such as in Canada, the destructive distillation of wood and coal gasification or biomass gasification to produce a syngas[4][5] followed by the Fischer-Tropsch process to convert the syngas into liquid hydrocarbon products. For that reason, this article is entitled Petroleum naphtha and deals only with naphthas produced by the proccessing of crude oil in petroleum refineries.

The major source of petroleum naptha in a petroleum refinery

The first unit process in a petroleum refinery is the crude oil distillation unit. The overhead liquid distillate from that unit is called virgin or straight-run naphtha and that distillate is the largest source of naphtha in most petroleum refineries. The naphtha is a mixture of very many different hydrocarbon compounds. It has an initial boiling point (IFP) of about 35 °C and a final boiling point (FBP) of about 200 °C, and it contains paraffin, naphthene (cyclic paraffins) and aromatic hydrocarbons ranging from those containing 4 carbon atoms to those containing about 10 or 11 carbon atoms.

The virgin naphtha is often further distilled into two streams:[6]

  • a virgin light naphtha with an IFP of about 30 °C and a FBP of about 145 °C containing most (but not all) of the hydrocarbons with 6 or less carbon atoms
  • a virgin heavy naphtha containing most (but not all) of the hydrocarbons with more than 6 carbon atoms. The heavy naphtha has an IFP of about 140 °C and a FBP of about 205 °C.

It is the virgin heavy naphtha that is usually processed in a catalytic reformer because the light naphtha has molecules with 6 or less carbon atoms which, when reformed, tend to crack into butane and lower molecular weight hydrocarbons which are not useful as high-octane gasoline blending components. Also, the molecules with 6 carbon atoms tend to form aromatics which is undesirable because governmental environmental regulations in a number of countries limit the amount of aromatics (most particularly benzene) that gasoline may contain.[7][8][9]

Types of virgin naphthas

The table just below lists some fairly typical virgin heavy naphthas, available for catalytic reforming, derived from various crude oils. It can be seen that they differ significantly in their content of paraffins, naphthenes and aromatics:

Typical Heavy Naphthas
Crude oil name
Location
Barrow Island
Australia[10]
Mutineer-Exeter
Australia[11]
CPC Blend
Kazakhstan[12]
Draugen
North Sea[13]
Initial boiling point, °C 149 140 149 150
Final boiling point, °C 204 190 204 180
Paraffins, liquid volume % 46 62 57 38
Naphthenes, liquid volume % 42 32 27 45
Aromatics, liquid volume % 12 6 16 17

Cracked naphthas

Some refinery naphthas also contain some olefinic hydrocarbons, such as naphthas derived from the fluid catalytic cracking, visbreakers and coking processes used in many refineries. Those olefin-containing naphthas are often referred to as cracked naphthas.

In some (but not all) petroleum refineries, the cracked naphthas are desulfurized and catalytically reformed (as are the virgin naphthas) to produce additional high-octane gasoline components.

Removal of sulfur compounds from naphthas

For more information, see: Hydrodesulfurization, Amine gas treating, and Merox

Most uses of petroleum refinery naphtha require the removal of sulfur compounds down to very low levels (a few parts per million or less). That is usually accomplished in a catalytic chemical process called hydrodesulfurization which converts the sulfur compounds into hydrogen sulfide gas that is removed from the naphtha by distillation.

The hydrogen sulfide gas is then captured in amine gas treating units and subsequently converted into byproduct elemental sulfur. In fact, the vast majority of the 64,000,000 metric tons of sulfur produced worldwide in 2005 was byproduct sulfur from petroleum refining and natural gas processing plants (which also use amine gas treating units to remove hydrogen sulfide from the raw natural gas).[14][15]

In lieu of hydrodesulfurization, light naphthas may be treated in a Merox unit to remove any hydrogen sulfide and, more particularly, to remove mercaptans.

Other uses

Some petroleum refineries also produce small amounts of specialty naphthas for use as solvents, cleaning fluids, paint and varnish diluents, asphalt diluents, rubber industry solvents, dry-cleaning, cigarette lighters, and portable camping stove and lantern fuels. Those specialty naphthas are subjected to various purification processes.

Sometimes the specialty naphthas are called petroleum ether, petroleum spirits, mineral spirits, paraffin, benzine, hexanes, white oil or white gas. The best way to determine the boiling range and other compositional characteristics of any of the specialty naphthas is to read the Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) for the specific naphtha of interest.

On a much larger scale, petroleum naphtha is also used in the petrochemical industry as feedstock to steam reformers for the production of hydrogen (which may be and is converted into ammonia for fertilizers), ethylene and other olefins. Natural gas is also used as feedstock to steam reformers.

References

  1. Gary, J.H. and Handwerk, G.E. (1984). Petroleum Refining Technology and Economics, 2nd Edition. Marcel Dekker, Inc. ISBN 0-8247-7150-8. 
  2. Leffler, W.L. (1985). Petroleum refining for the nontechnical person, 2nd Edition. PennWell Books. ISBN 0-87814-280-0. 
  3. James G, Speight (2006). The Chemistry and Technology of Petroelum, Fourth Edition. CRC Press. 0-8493-9067-2. 
  4. Exploiting the Benefits of Fischer-Tropsch Technology (Sasol’s integrated business model)
  5. Beychok, M.R., Process and environmental technology for producing SNG and liquid fuels, U.S. EPA report EPA-660/2-75-011, May 1975
  6. Fuel Chemistry (scroll down to "What is naphtha")
  7. Canadian regulations on benzene in gasoline
  8. United Kingdom regulations on benzene in gasoline
  9. USA regulations on benzene in gasoline
  10. Barrow Island crude oil assay
  11. Mutineer-Exeter crude oil assay
  12. CPC Blend crude oil assay
  13. Draugen crude oil assay
  14. Sulfur production report by the United States Geological Survey
  15. Discussion of recovered byproduct sulfur