화학공학소재연구정보센터
Fuel Science & Technology International, Vol.14, No.6, 839-866, 1996
Changes in the composition and properties of the vacuum residues as a result of visbreaking
Two vacuum residues of heavy petroleum blends and residues of the products of their visbreaking, on a commercial unit, were investigated by means of column chromatography, cryoscopic analysis, elemental analysis, NMR spectroscopy, etc. An increase in the contents of asphaltenes and saturated, increase in asphaltenes/polar components ratio, and decrease in the aromatics contents during visbreaking were observed for both kinds of feed. The N/C ratio increased, the S/C ratio did not change significantly. Most of the nickel and vanadium were concentrated in the asphaltenes and aromatics. The length of the paraffinic chains of the saturated decreases during visbreaking from about 50 to 30 carbon atoms. The number of carbon atoms per alkyl chain and the number of naphthenic rings in the average molecule of the aromatics decreased, whereas the number of aromatic rings increased. About 2/3 of the total aromatic carbon in the aromatics are non-bridged. The average asphaltenes molecule contains about 36-38 aromatic rings (mostly condensed), 5-7 naphthenic rings and 12-16 alkyl substituents having relatively short. (n = 5-6) chains. Two contrary processes, relating asphaltenes, take place during visbreaking: 1) cracking of asphaltenes, which results in a decrease in their content and molecular weight, decrease in the number of the side chains and their length, and increase in asphaltenes aromaticity; 2) asphaltenes formation from the polar components of the feed. The resulting process may be expressed both in a decrease and in an increase in the asphaltenes content. Reactions of condensation of the asphaltenes precursors (resins, etc.) prevail for the light stocks. For heavier stocks, cracking of the asphaltenes plays a more significant role, and the increase in asphaltenes content takes place mainly due to concentrating them in the visbreaking residue as a result of the distillation of the visbroken product.