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CHN-327 Petroleum Refining

Lecture 28

Dr. Hari Prakash Veluswamy


Assistant Professor
Depar tment of Chemi cal Engineering
IIT Roor kee

20 OCTOBER 2022
Dewaxing
• Dewaxing process in petroleum refining is removal of wax.
• The feedstocks to dewaxing include DAO from deasphalting, and HVGO from
vacuum distillation along with some compositional characteristics of the
feedstock and the dewaxing product.
• Wax (long-chain paraffins) obtained in dewaxing is a marketable by-product.
• Lubricating oil base stock is the principal product of interest
• The main purpose of dewaxing is to remove hydrocarbons that solidify readily
(i.e., wax) for making lubricating oil base stock with low pour points

https://www.e-education.psu.edu/fsc432/content/dewaxing 2
Feedstock for dewaxing and hydrocarbon composition
of the feed and the products

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Desired properties of lube oil stock
• In addition to low pour points, other important properties of lube oil base stocks
include:
• Volatility – should be low to keep oil in the liquid phase during engine operation. Vapors are not
good lubricants.
• Viscosity– important to control because of lubrication and heat transfer considerations.
Moderate viscosities are desired. Low viscosity may not provide the required lubrication and
lead to high friction between metal parts. High viscosity causes loss of energy.
• Viscosity Index (change in viscosity with temperature) – small change in viscosity is desired over
a wide temperature oil, i.e., high viscosity index (HVI). HVI ensures that the lube oil functions
well at both cold start and at high temperatures generated by the engines.
• Thermal Stability – High thermal stability (or small degree of thermal degradation at high
temperatures) is necessary to minimize viscosity loss and coke deposition on metal surfaces
• All of these properties depend on the molecular composition of the hydrocarbons
constituting the lubricating oil base stocks. Commercial engine oils and other
commercial lube oils are formulated with chemical additives that would enhance the
performance of the base stocks.
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Types of Dewaxing Process
• Two commercial methods of dewaxing are
• Solvent dewaxing - physical process; separation of wax by freezing and solvent
transport.
• Catalytic dewaxing - chemical process; removal of wax by selective reaction of long
chain n-alkanes (wax).

https://www.e-education.psu.edu/fsc432/content/deasphalting-process 5
Solvent dewaxing

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Solvent dewaxing
• Stage-wise refrigeration of the feedstock after it is mixed with the solvent.
• The lowest temperature used in the refrigeration cascade depends on the desired
pour point of the lube oils base stock product
• Upon refrigeration, wax compounds solidify to form crystals. Wax crystals are
carried in the solvent to a rotary filter where wax is separated on a filter cloth
covering the rotating drum.
• The layer of wax (filter cake) on the drum is scraped from the filter by a blade and
carried away in a solvent stream to a steam-stripping unit to recover and recycle
the solvent separated from the wax product.
• The wax product, called slack wax, can be used to make paraffin wax for candles,
microwax used in the cosmetics industry, and petrolatum for petroleum jelly.
• The dewaxed oil from the filtration unit is also steam stripped to recover the
solvent to produce the lube oil base stock.
https://www.e-education.psu.edu/fsc432/content/solvent-dewaxing 7
Solvent dewaxing
• The two principal solvents used in solvent dewaxing units are methyl ethyl
ketone (MEK) and propane
• Although the majority of dewaxing units in the U.S. refineries use MEK, some
advantages of using propane as a solvent compared to MEK include the
following:
• Propane is used both as a diluent and as a refrigerant
• Lower capital investment
• Refrigeration energy savings
• Higher filtration rates
• Rejection of asphaltenes and resins in the feed
• Higher VI than ketone dewaxing

https://www.e-education.psu.edu/fsc432/content/solvent-dewaxing 8
Catalytic dewaxing process
• Although included under the separation processes, catalytic dewaxing is actually a
low-severity conversion process involving a selective catalytic cracking of n-paraffins.
• Because of removing wax (long chain n-paraffins) by chemical reaction, the process is
called dewaxing.
• The selective cracking of n-alkanes takes place in the pores of molecular sieve
catalysts (zeolites) with pore openings in the order of 0.6nm, which keep i-paraffins
out because of their larger size due to branching in the hydrocarbon skeleton.
• This selective cracking increases the ratio of i-paraffins to n-paraffins in the product
and lowers its pour point. Hydrogen is introduced along with the feed to prevent
coking on the catalyst surfaces.
• The cracking of n-paraffins produces distillate fuels such as gasoline as a by-product
from catalytic dewaxing.

https://www.e-education.psu.edu/fsc432/content/simplified-flow-diagram-deasphalting-process 9
Catalytic dewaxing process

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Advantages of catalytic dewaxing process
• The advantages of catalytic dewaxing include:
• Production of lube base stock with lower pour point and in higher yield compared to the
product obtained from solvent dewaxing. Low yield from solvent dewaxing results from
the difficulty of separating the oil from the wax
• Lower capital investment
• Good product stability
• Flexibility to produce both lube oil base stock and light distillates

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Chemistry and process flow sheet of catalytic dewaxing

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