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Define the Problem. Hydrocarbon spills
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1. Naphtha Product Spill and Leak Detection in Shared Process Cooling Water
2. Define the Problem Hydrocarbon spills & leaks are costly events resulting in
Loss of product to waste
Manpower and other resources to correct the problem
Damage to the environment
Possibly regulatory and public relations issues
All leading to lost productivity and profits
Prevention of “spill & leak events”
Is critical to process operation whether
Into the air, process or waste water or on the ground
Inevitably, spills and leaks will occur requiring
A system for detection and
Diversion of the material for correction and remediation
3. Focus of This Work, Naphtha Products in Water Naphtha range products including
C6 to C10 hydrocarbons
With varying volatility and solubility in water
Production shares cooling towers
Multiple naphtha product types use the same heat exchange system
Once through cooling water shares the same discharge point
Thus, simple leak detection using wastewater total organic carbon (TOC) is unsuitable
No speciation for product type spilled or leaking
Varying, temperature dependent solubility of the naphtha products lead to erroneous results
4. Measurement Possibilities Gas Chromatography with Flame Ionization Detection
Should provide the speciation required for leak identification
Direct liquid injection would simply duplicate TOC but with speciation
May not be sensitive or fast enough for the requirements
microGC and FID coupled with trapping technology
Provides more sensitivity with the speciation & speed required
Sensitivity enhancements enable headspace gas sampling
Headspace gas sampling removes “particulates” from the sampling problem and
Turbulent water effectively “sparges” hydrocarbons from the water enriching the headspace gas with naphtha sample minimizing temperature variability and erroneous measurements
5. Measurement Possibilities microGC FID with trapping coupled with chemometrics
Provides fast sensitive product leak detection and information for initiating diversion to the remediation tank
Provides faster, easier product leak identification
Can lead process operations to the source of the leak quickly for repairs
The possibilities needed validation
Can the microGC detect naphatha components?
Can the microGC chromatographic results identify the components?
Can the microGC and chemometrics discriminate “background within a hydrocarbon processing facility” from “leaks?”
6. On Site Measurement Validation Project Definition Establish “normal background”
Determine whether new microGC solution can work
Demonstrate that the background is sufficiently low
Demonstrate that the “detect & divert” measurement levels are sufficiently high enough to differentiate from background
Demonstrate “leaked product identification” potential
Demonstrate chemometric application efficacy
Onsite work definition
Measure background at “sump” and through a “sump sampling system”
Measure prepared naphtha product samples at the “detect and divert” levels
Follow up with data reduction and presentation
7. microFAST GCtm with EZChrom Used for On Site Validation
8. System Operation
9. Typical Results, Solvesso 200 ULN in Wastewater Headspace Gas
10. Typical Naphtha Product Range (in Wastewater) Results
11. Typical Naphtha Product Range (in Wastewater) Results
12. Discussion of Results Typical Naphtha Range products
Were prepared in water at the detect and divert levels
Solvesso 200 ULN was chosen for special attention
Has the highest water solubility translating into the lowest wastewater headspace gas concentration
Deemed to be the most difficult of the range to discern over normal background
Chromatographic traces are distinctive for each naphtha product
Boiling range distributions follow expected product compositions
Sensitivity over noise is more than adequate
But is it adequately higher than “background?”
13. Two Wastewater Sewer Background Chromatograms, original scale ~15,000 F.S.
14. Two Wastewater Sewer Background Chromatograms, at Solvesso 200 ULN scale
15. Solvesso 200 ULN at Detect & Divert Level Overlaid Wastewater Background
16. Solvesso 200 ULN at Detect & Divert Level Overlaid Wastewater Background
17. Discussion of Results Solvesso 200 ULN
Has the lowest headspace gas concentration
Is the most difficult to measure
Yet is clearly distinctive and well above “normal background” at the detect and divert level
Plenty of sensitivity is available over background for early warning
All naphtha range samples
Were prepared at the detect and divert levels for each product
Headspace gas concentrations range from 0.4 to about 10 ppm
All are clearly distinctive, one from the others and
Well above background levels
18. 1st Step Chemometrics: Merge Data into a Single File
19. 2nd Step: Principal Component Analysis
21. Blank Run: notice the highlighted components in the blank
22. Solvesso 200 ULN Overlaid Wastewater Headspace Gas
23. Conclusions Micro GC coupled with trapping technology
Is sufficiently sensitive for the job
Can detect “worst case” leak situation for the high solubility product and
Micro GC coupled with chemometrics
Is sufficiently selective for the job
Can discern which product has leaked into the cooling water
Can identify multiple product leaks simultaneously
On Site measurements provide significant value
Scoping a measurement project is fortified with real data
Potentially provides data enough to eliminate continuous measurement need
Micro GC coupled with NeSSI is a good fit
Future production implementation project is pending