Process details
- Amine treatment in the oil & gas industry
- Catalytic reforming in the oil & gas industry
- Crude desalting in the oil & gas industry
- Delayed coking in the oil & gas industry
- Distillation in the oil & gas industry
- Fluid catalytic cracking in the oil & gas industry
- Gasoline blending in the oil & gas industry
- Hydrocracking in the oil & gas industry
- Hydrotreating in the oil & gas industry
- Merox treatment in the oil & gas industry
- Sulfuric acid alkylation process in the oil & gas industry
- Sulfur recovery in the oil & gas industry
Refining in the oil & gas industry
- Instrumentation for refinery and auxiliary processes
- High temperature liquid, gas and steam flow measurement
- Custody transfer measurement solutions for crude and refined products
Refining is a series of processes that convert crude oil into finished products: it is generally referred to as being the ‘downstream’ sector of the oil industry. The large industrial complex that creates a refinery treats the crude oil with heat, steam, hydrogen, water, chemicals and catalysts to split the oil, in several stages, into different types of liquid and gas: some of these are used as fuel to provide the heat and steam needed. After the initial stages, where major impurities are washed out of the crude oil, the main initial processing takes place in a fractionating column: this separates the crude oil into different fractions. Fractions with lower boiling points come out from the top of the fractionating column: those with a higher boiling point emerge lower down, as side-cuts, or from the bottom of the column. Cracking stages then convert the heavy bottom fractions into more useful, lighter products. Further processing then removes some undesirable components, such as hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide.
Refinery design engineers can choose from over 200 different processes to suit their crude oil properties, their geographical location, and the desired mix of saleable product, as required by the market. Refineries store the different refined products in tank farms, and these are blended into the final products, such as kerosene, diesel and gasoline. Accurate refinery instrumentation is important to ensure the blended products meet the required specification, without using too much of the more expensive fractions derived from the crude oil, and this can vary throughout the year.
KROHNE has a vast experience as a supplier of downstream measurement solutions to refineries. For key refinery processes KROHNE has developed dedicated flow and level instrumentation, such as both vortex and ultrasonic flowmeters for steam flow measurement, and ultrasonic flowmeters suitable for the harsh conditions and extremely high temperatures experienced with the oil feeds to the Delayed Coker. KROHNE straight tube Coriolis flowmeters offer the high accuracies needed for blending processes, and fiscal measurement solutions for truck loading applications.
KROHNE Global Industry Division Oil & Gas
Headquartered in Duisburg, Germany, our Global Industry Division Oil & Gas is dedicated to serving customers in the up-, mid- and downstream oil & gas industry. Our offering extends from elementary process instrumentation up to fully engineered metering systems, and from engineering consultancy during the design phase, through to on-site commissioning and training. With presence in around 100 countries, local support is usually available from just around the corner. This applies whether the application can be covered by standard instrumentation, or is more challenging, where a one-off solution with dedicated process diagnostics is required.
KROHNE Oil & Gas