At a minimum, you need two "coke drums". They are around 20 ft. wide, and 100 ft. tall. When Crude Oil is processed, you end up with the "Heavy Ends", that are hard to refine. So those "bottoms" are heated and pumped into a "coke drum" as a thick fluid. There (when the drum is full), the product is cooled with steam and water, and then cut with high pressure water. The "coke" then drops into a rail-car, or a conveyor belt. So...................while one drum is being filled, the other is being cut. Once the "cutting" is done on that drum, it is sealed up. The operator's then pressure test with high pressure steam. If no leaks are found, you "blow the drum down" (getting rid of the steam and condensate). You then begin to "heat" the empty drum up, using high-temp vapors from the other drum. [ And then you wait. LOL.] When the empty drum is up to temperature, and the other drum is full, you then "Swing" the flow of oil into the warmed up drum. About an hour later, you have to "Seperate" the two drums. The empty drum begins to fill, and the full drum is ready to cool. You have to vent a bit of pressure out of the full drum, into something called a "wax scrubber" and/or "overflow tower", but as you do that you inject steam into the full drum for about an hour, then begin to add water to cool the product and get it ready for cutting. (And this process takes hours. Call it 8.) Hope this helps. :)
More informative than the video. Thanks for the explanation! I work in a coker unit, our work is constantly interrupted because they're "dropping the bottom". Always wanted to know more about the process.
Hi. Sir some teachers ask me. Take Coal 10 Kilo Crush them And put it in air tight drum. Put on the heat 960 for 18 hours Then open drum Put water on it. The coal is convert to coke. Pleas advice me. Is that true ?
Thanks for writing this. I haul coke out of a refinery in Texas and the Coker is always breaking. Leaving us drivers waiting or without work. I learned is was built in 1962/1964 the plant has other problems too. It’s a patchwork place. 😮
Petroleum Coke abbreviated coke or pet coke, is a final carbon-rich solid material that derives from oil refining and is one type of the group of fuels referred to as cokes.
Thank you for sharing. I want to ask one thing regarding the production of this coke, how long does it take for heating process during production? We all know that heating aimed at eliminating (mainly) VM so fixed carbon can increase up to 99%+
At a minimum, you need two "coke drums". They are around 20 ft. wide, and 100 ft. tall. When Crude Oil is processed, you end up with the "Heavy Ends", that are hard to refine. So those "bottoms" are heated and pumped into a "coke drum" as a thick fluid. There (when the drum is full), the product is cooled with steam and water, and then cut with high pressure water. The "coke" then drops into a rail-car, or a conveyor belt. So...................while one drum is being filled, the other is being cut. Once the "cutting" is done on that drum, it is sealed up. The operator's then pressure test with high pressure steam. If no leaks are found, you "blow the drum down" (getting rid of the steam and condensate). You then begin to "heat" the empty drum up, using high-temp vapors from the other drum. [ And then you wait. LOL.] When the empty drum is up to temperature, and the other drum is full, you then "Swing" the flow of oil into the warmed up drum. About an hour later, you have to "Seperate" the two drums. The empty drum begins to fill, and the full drum is ready to cool. You have to vent a bit of pressure out of the full drum, into something called a "wax scrubber" and/or "overflow tower", but as you do that you inject steam into the full drum for about an hour, then begin to add water to cool the product and get it ready for cutting. (And this process takes hours. Call it 8.) Hope this helps. :)
Solutions for oil, fas and petrochemical companys: getg.ae/oil-gas/cleaning-maintenance/petcoke-liquifier/ Liquified petcoke is easily removed from the vessel and negates the need for caustics, mechanical separation equipment or man-entry processes.
Dislikes disabled by Repsol, suggested watch on the right "Toxic Waste in the Windy City: Petcoke" by VICE News. Mmmm yes, I love corporate propaganda.
At a minimum, you need two "coke drums". They are around 20 ft. wide, and 100 ft. tall. When Crude Oil is processed, you end up with the "Heavy Ends", that are hard to refine. So those "bottoms" are heated and pumped into a "coke drum" as a thick fluid. There (when the drum is full), the product is cooled with steam and water, and then cut with high pressure water. The "coke" then drops into a rail-car, or a conveyor belt. So...................while one drum is being filled, the other is being cut. Once the "cutting" is done on that drum, it is sealed up. The operator's then pressure test with high pressure steam. If no leaks are found, you "blow the drum down" (getting rid of the steam and condensate). You then begin to "heat" the empty drum up, using high-temp vapors from the other drum. [ And then you wait. LOL.] When the empty drum is up to temperature, and the other drum is full, you then "Swing" the flow of oil into the warmed up drum. About an hour later, you have to "Seperate" the two drums. The empty drum begins to fill, and the full drum is ready to cool. You have to vent a bit of pressure out of the full drum, into something called a "wax scrubber" and/or "overflow tower", but as you do that you inject steam into the full drum for about an hour, then begin to add water to cool the product and get it ready for cutting. (And this process takes hours. Call it 8.) Hope this helps. :)
More informative than the video. Thanks for the explanation! I work in a coker unit, our work is constantly interrupted because they're "dropping the bottom". Always wanted to know more about the process.
Hi. Sir some teachers ask me.
Take Coal 10 Kilo
Crush them
And put it in air tight drum.
Put on the heat 960 for 18 hours
Then open drum
Put water on it.
The coal is convert to coke.
Pleas advice me.
Is that true ?
When the comment is better than the video
Thanks for writing this. I haul coke out of a refinery in Texas and the Coker is always breaking. Leaving us drivers waiting or without work. I learned is was built in 1962/1964 the plant has other problems too. It’s a patchwork place. 😮
Petroleum Coke abbreviated coke or pet coke, is a final carbon-rich solid material that derives from oil refining and is one type of the group of fuels referred to as cokes.
thank u for this king
Thank you for sharing. I want to ask one thing regarding the production of this coke, how long does it take for heating process during production? We all know that heating aimed at eliminating (mainly) VM so fixed carbon can increase up to 99%+
Wrong Coke
WrOnG pEpSi
Wonderfully informative. Appreciate the effort you’ve put into this video. Thanks!
Very informative video 🎥
The Repsol Spanish motorcycle guys.
Always wondered how coal didn't burn when put into coke oven.
Gotta have that oxygen in order to burn.
Thank you for the information.
So thats how they make cocaine
Scarface laying hot bricks
No it's called petroleum coke it's a coal like product which is burned as a fuel or used in steel making
What is the purpose of the coke drums
That's where the coke is fraction process is done.
At a minimum, you need two "coke drums". They are around 20 ft. wide, and 100 ft. tall. When Crude Oil is processed, you end up with the "Heavy Ends", that are hard to refine. So those "bottoms" are heated and pumped into a "coke drum" as a thick fluid. There (when the drum is full), the product is cooled with steam and water, and then cut with high pressure water. The "coke" then drops into a rail-car, or a conveyor belt. So...................while one drum is being filled, the other is being cut. Once the "cutting" is done on that drum, it is sealed up. The operator's then pressure test with high pressure steam. If no leaks are found, you "blow the drum down" (getting rid of the steam and condensate). You then begin to "heat" the empty drum up, using high-temp vapors from the other drum. [ And then you wait. LOL.] When the empty drum is up to temperature, and the other drum is full, you then "Swing" the flow of oil into the warmed up drum. About an hour later, you have to "Seperate" the two drums. The empty drum begins to fill, and the full drum is ready to cool. You have to vent a bit of pressure out of the full drum, into something called a "wax scrubber" and/or "overflow tower", but as you do that you inject steam into the full drum for about an hour, then begin to add water to cool the product and get it ready for cutting. (And this process takes hours. Call it 8.) Hope this helps. :)
I know all about delayed cocking technology.
🤔🤔 📸📸
why do you gotta add musik ??..it spoils the video !!
Where's the soda???
Write this down
Write this down
I thought it was coca cola
Not shown the production of coal tar
Nice😊😊😊
Do americans really drink that?
Solutions for oil, fas and petrochemical companys: getg.ae/oil-gas/cleaning-maintenance/petcoke-liquifier/
Liquified petcoke is easily removed from the vessel and negates the need for caustics, mechanical separation equipment or man-entry processes.
Sheesh bout to be a drug lord.
Pet coke is a waste of time better to slap the heavy oil to surface roads.
Dislikes disabled by Repsol, suggested watch on the right "Toxic Waste in the Windy City: Petcoke" by VICE News. Mmmm yes, I love corporate propaganda.
peeeeenis
What da....
Commander Rockwell! I didn't expect to see you here.
@@Ghost-pd1mz Correct.
No explanation at all... not useful
Nice😊😊😊