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Title:
CONVERSION OF TRIACYLGLYCERIDE-CONTAINING OILS TO HYDROCARBONS
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/2014/093098
Kind Code:
A1
Abstract:
A process for converting triacylglycerides-containing oils into crude oil precursors and/or distillate hydrocarbon fuels is disclosed. The process may include: reacting a triacylglycerides-containing oil-water-diatomic hydrogen mixture at a temperature in the range from about 250°C to about 560°C and a pressure greater than about 75 bar to convert at least a portion of the triacylglycerides and recovering a reaction effluent comprising water and one or more of isoolefms, isoparaffins, cycloolefins, cycloparaffins, and aromatics; and hydrotreating the reaction effluent to form a hydrotreated effluent.

Inventors:
MUKHERJEE UJJAL K (US)
ARORA ARUN (US)
GREENE MARVIN I (US)
COPPOLA EDWARD (US)
RED CHARLES JR (US)
BAXLEY J STEVEN (US)
NANA SANJAY (US)
RINE JEFFREY (US)
Application Number:
PCT/US2013/073132
Publication Date:
June 19, 2014
Filing Date:
December 04, 2013
Export Citation:
Click for automatic bibliography generation   Help
Assignee:
CHEVRON LUMMUS GLOBAL LLC (US)
APPLIED RES ASSOCIATES INC (US)
International Classes:
C10G45/58; C10L1/04
Domestic Patent References:
WO2010011737A22010-01-28
WO2010053896A22010-05-14
WO2009015054A12009-01-29
WO2008020048A22008-02-21
Foreign References:
US20120157734A12012-06-21
Other References:
See also references of EP 2931847A4
Attorney, Agent or Firm:
GRIFFITH, Aron, T. et al. (909 Fannin StreetSuite 350, Houston TX, US)
Download PDF:
Claims:
CLAIMS

What is claimed:

1. A process for converting triacylglycerides-containing oils into crude oil precursors and/or distillate hydrocarbon fuels, the process comprising:

reacting a triacylglycerides-containing oil-water-diatomic hydrogen mixture at a temperature in the range from about 250°C to about 560°C and a pressure greater than about 75 bar to convert at least a portion of the triacylglycerides and recovering a reaction effluent comprising water and one or more of isoolefins, isoparaffins, cycloolefms, cycloparaffins, and aromatics;

hydrotreating the reaction effluent to form a hydrotreated effluent.

2. The process of claim 1 , further comprising mixing a triacylglycerides-containing oil with water and diatomic hydrogen to form the triacylglycerides-water-diatomic hydrogen mixture.

3. The process of claim 1 , further comprising mixing a triacylglycerides-containing oil with water to form a triacylglyceride- water mixture.

4. The process of claim 3, further comprising mixing the triacylglyceride- water mixture with hydrogen to form the triacylglycerides-water-diatomic hydrogen mixture.

5. The process of claim 1 , wherein the triacylglycerides- water-diatomic hydrogen mixture has a water to triacylglycerides mass ratio in the range from about 0.001 : 1 to about 1 : 1.

6. The process of claim 1 , wherein the triacylglycerides-water-diatomic hydrogen mixture has a diatomic hydrogen to triacylglycerides mass ratio in the range from about 0.005: 1 to about 0.5: 1.

7. The process of claim 1 , further comprising separating at least one of diatomic hydrogen and water from the hydrotreated effluent.

8. The process of claim 7, further comprising recycling at least one of the separated diatomic hydrogen and the separated water to the reacting step.

9. The process of claim 1 , further comprising co-processing a non-renewable hydrocarbon feedstock with the reaction effluent in the hydrotreating step.

10. The process of claim 1 , wherein the triacylglycerides-containing oil comprises a renewable oil from at least one of camelina, carinata, cotton, jatropha, karanja, moringa, palm, castor, corn, linseed, peanut, soybean, sunflower, tung, babassu, or at least one triacylglycerides-containing coil from at least one of canoia, shea butter, tall oil, tallow, waste vegetable oil, algal oil, and pongamia.

1 1. The process of claim 1 , further comprising fractionating the hydrotreated effluent to recover one or more hydrocarbon fractions boiling in the range of naphtha, diesel, or jet.

12. The process of claim 1, wherein the reacting is performed in the absence of an added heterogeneous or soluble metallic catalyst.

13. The process of claim 1, wherein the reacting is performed in a hydrothermolysis reactor and the process further comprises injecting water into the hydrothermolysis reactor to maintain a temperature or a temperature profile within the hydrothermolysis reactor.

14. The process of claim 11 , wherein the jet fraction has a total acid number of less than 0.1 , expressed as mg KOH per gram.

15. The process of claim 11 , wherein the jet fraction has an olefins content of less than about

5 vol% and an aromatics content of less than about 25 vol%.

16. The process of claim 11 , wherein

the jet fraction may be used directly as a jet fuel without blending; or

the diesel fraction may be used directly as a diesel fuel without blending.

17. A process for converting triacylglycerides-containing oils into crude oil precursors and/or distillate hydrocarbon fuels, the process comprising:

mixing a triacylglyceride-containing oil with water to form a triacylglycerides-water mixture;

mixing diatomic hydrogen with the triacylglycerides-water mixture to form a mixed feed;

reacting the mixed feed in a hydrothermolysis reaction zone under reaction conditions sufficient to convert at least a portion of the triacylglycerides via hydrothermolysis to produce hydrocarbon compounds comprising one or more of isoolefins, isoparaffms, cycloolefins, cycloparaffins, and aromatics; and recovering an effluent from the hydrothermolysis reaction zone;

feeding effluent from the hydrothermolysis reaction zone, without any intermediate separations, to a catalytic hydrotreatment zone to hydrotreat the hydrothermolysis effluent; and

recovering a hydrotreated effluent.

18. The process of claim 17, wherein the hydrothermolysis reaction conditions comprise a temperature in the range from about 250°C to about 560°C.

19. The process of claim 17, wherein the reaction conditions comprise a pressure and a temperature greater than the critical pressure and temperature of water.

20. The process of claim 17, wherein the triacylglycerides- water mixture has a water to triacylglycerides mass ratio in the range from about 0.001 : 1 to about 1 : 1.

21. The process of claim 17, wherein the mixed feed has a diatomic hydrogen to triacylglycerides mass ratio in the range from about 0.005:1 to about 0.5: 1.

22. The process of claim 17, further comprising separating water and diatomic hydrogen from the hydrotreated effluent.

23. The process of claim 22, further comprising recycling at least one of the separated diatomic hydrogen and the separated water to the reacting step.

24. The process of claim 17, wherein the triacylglycerides-containing oil comprises a renewable oil from at least one of camelina, carinata, jatropha, karanja, moringa, palm, castor, corn, linseed, peanut, soybean, sunflower, tung, babassu, tallow, waste vegetable oil, algal oil, and canola.

25. The process of claim 17, further comprising fractionating the hydrotreated effluent to recover one or more hydrocarbon fractions boiling in the range of naphtha, diesel, or jet.

26. The process of claim 17, wherein the hydrothermolysis is performed in the absence of an added inorganic heterogeneous catalyst.

27. The process of claim 17, wherein the hydrothermolysis effluent further comprises organic acids, and wherein the catalytic hydrotreatment zone further hydrodeoxygenates and/or decarboxylates the hydrothermolysis effluent.

28. A system for converting triacylglycerides-containing oils into crude oil precursors and/or distillate hydrocarbon fuels, the system comprising:

at least one mixing device for mixing a triacylglycerides-containing oil feed with water and diatomic hydrogen to form an oil-water-diatomic hydrogen feed mixture;

a hydrothermolysis reactor for reacting the feed mixture at a temperature in the range of 250°C to about 560°C and a pressure greater than about 75 bar to produce a reaction effluent; a hydrotreater for hydrotreating the reaction effluent;

a separator for separating water and diatomic hydrogen from hydrocarbons in the hydro treated effluent.

29. The system of claim 28, further comprising one or more fluid conduits for recycling the compressed diatomic hydrogen to the mixing device for mixing diatomic hydrogen.

30. The system of claim 28, further comprising a fractionator for fractionating hydrocarbons in the hydrotreated effluent to form one or more hydrocarbon fractions boiling in the naphtha, jet or diesel range.

31. The system of claim 28, wherein the hydrotreater comprises at least two catalyst beds, and wherein:

a first catalyst bed comprises a catalyst having hydrogenation activity;

a second catalyst bed comprises a catalyst having hydrocracking activity.

32. The system of claim 31 , wherein the catalyst bed proximate an inlet of the hydrotreater comprises a catalyst useful for at least one of:

decarboxylation;

hydrodeoxygenation of unsaturated free fatty acids to produce C5-C24 paraffins; saturation of mono-, di- and tri-olefins contained in the alkyl backbone of the free fatty acids;

hydrodenitrogenation of trace organic nitrogen compounds; and

catalyst tolerance for water coming in with the hydrocarbonaceous feed.

33. The system of claim 32 wherein the catalysts having hydrocracking activity are comprised of one or more noble metals supported on low acidity zeolites wherein the zeolite acidity is widely distributed throughout each catalyst particle.

34. The system of claim 28, further comprising one or more fluid conduits for co-processing a non-renewable hydrocarbon feedstock with the reaction effluent in the hydrotreater.

35. The system of claim 28, wherein the hydrothermolysis reactor comprises one or more tubular conduits within a furnace configured to maintain a temperature of the hydrothermolysis reactor effluent proximate an outlet of the hydrothermolysis reactor at a temperature in the range from about 400°C to about 560°C.

Description:
CONVERSION OF TRIACYLGLYCERIDES-CONTAINING

OILS TO HYDROCARBONS

FIELD OF THE DISCLOSURE

[0001] Embodiments disclosed herein relate generally to production of useful hydrocarbons, such as distillate fuels, from triacylglycerides-containing plant or animal fats-containing oils.

BACKGROUND

[0002] Hydrothermolysis of triacylglycerides-containing oils such as those derived from crops, animal fats or waste vegetable and animal-derived oils involves many types of chemical reactions. As one example, some prior art processes catalytically hydrotreat the triacylglyceride containing oils, converting the unsaturated aliphatic chains in the triacylglyceride containing oils to straight chain paraffins while simultaneously deoxygenating / decarboxylating the acid and glyceryl groups to form water, carbon dioxide and propane. Two downstream processes are then required to (a) skeletally isomerize the n-paraffms to isoparaffins to produce specification grade diesel fuels, and (b) hydrocracking the diesel range n-paraffins and isoparaffms to hydrocarbons to produce specification grade jet fuels.

[0003] U.S. Patent No. 7,691 ,159, for example, discloses a hydrothermolysis process to convert triacylglycerides to smaller organic acids in the presence of hot compressed water at supercritical water conditions. During the process, the backbone of the triacylglycerides undergoes rearrangement reactions.

SUMMARY OF THE DISCLOSURE

[0004] In one aspect, embodiments disclosed herein relate to a process for converting triacylglycerides-containing oils into crude oil precursors and/or distillate hydrocarbon fuels. The process may include: reacting a triacylglycerides-containing oil-water-hydrogen mixture at a temperature in the range from about 250°C to about 560°C and a pressure greater than about 75 bar to convert at least a portion of the triacylglycerides and recovering a reaction effluent comprising water and one or more of isoolefins, isoparaffins, cycloolefins, cycloparaffins, and aromatics; and hydrotreating the reaction effluent to form a hydrotreated effluent. [0005] In another aspect, embodiments disclosed herein relate to a process for converting triacylglycerides-containing oils into crude oil precursors and/or distillate hydrocarbon fuels. The process may include: mixing a triacylglyceride-containing oil with water to form a triacylglycerides-water mixture; mixing hydrogen with the triacylglycerides-water mixture to form a mixed feed; reacting the mixed feed in a hydrothermolysis reaction zone under reaction conditions sufficient to convert at least a portion of the triacylglycerides via hydrothermolysis to produce hydrocarbon compounds comprising one or more of isoolefins, isoparaffms, cycloolefins, cycloparaffins, and aromatics; and recovering an effluent from the hydrothermolysis reaction zone; feeding effluent from the hydrothermolysis reaction zone, without any intermediate separations, to a catalytic hydrotreatment zone to hydrotreat the hydrothermolysis effluent; and recovering a hydrotreated effluent.

[0006] In another aspect, embodiments disclosed herein relate to a system for converting triacylglycerides-containing oils into crude oil precursors and/or distillate hydrocarbon fuels. The system may include: a mixing device for mixing a triacylglycerides-containing oil feed with water to form an oil-water mixture; a mixing device for mixing the oil-water mixture with hydrogen to form a feed mixture; a hydrothermolysis reactor for reacting the feed mixture at a temperature in the range of 250°C to about 560°C and a pressure greater than about 75 bar to produce a reaction effluent; a hydrotreater for hydrotreating the reaction effluent; and a separator for separating water and hydrogen from hydrocarbons in the hydrotreated effluent.

[0007] Other aspects and advantages will be apparent from the following description and the appended claims.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

[0008] Figure 1 is a simplified process flow diagram of a process according to embodiments herein.

[0009] Figure 2 is a simplified process flow diagram of a process according to embodiments herein.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

[0010] In one aspect, embodiments disclosed herein relate generally to production of useful hydrocarbons, such as paraffins, from triacylglycerides-containing oils, such as from renewable feedstocks. In another aspect, embodiments disclosed herein relate to processes and systems for converting triacylglycerides-containing oils into crude oil precursors and/or distillate hydrocarbon fuels,

[0011] Renewable feedstocks having triacylglycerides-containing oils useful in embodiments disclosed herein may include fatty acids, saturated triacylglycerides, and triacylglycerides having one or more olefinic bonds. For example, triacylglycerides-containing oils may include oils from at least one of camelina, carinata, lesquerella, physaria, jatropha, karanja, moringa, palm, castor, cotton, corn, linseed, peanut, soybean, sunflower, tung, babassu, and canola, or at least one triacylglycerides-containing oil from at least one of, shea butter, tall oil, tallow, waste vegetable oil, algal oil, and pongamia.

[0012] A mixture of the triacylglycerides-containing oil with water and hydrogen, fed as ¾, diatomic hydrogen, may be reacted at a temperature in the range from about 250°C to about 560°C and a pressure greater than about 75 bar to convert at least a portion of the triacylglycerides to a hydrocarbon or mixture of hydrocarbons comprising one or more of isoolefins, isoparaffins, cycloolefins, cycloparaffins, and aromatics. In some embodiments, the reaction conditions are such that the temperature and pressure are above the supercritical temperature and pressure of water. The resulting reaction effluent may then be further treated and separated to recover the hydrocarbon products.

[0013] To form the triacylglycerides-water-hydrogen mixture, a triacylglycerides- containing oil may be mixed with water and diatomic hydrogen in any order or with a mixture of water and diatomic hydrogen.

[0014] At supercritical water hydrothermolysis reaction conditions, protonic hydrogen may be generated in situ. For example, U.S. Patent No. 7,691 ,159 hypothesizes that, for each mole of soybean oil, 1 ,5 moles of H 2 are extracted from the water and added to the resulting hydrocarbon. While presenting this in terms of diatomic hydrogen equivalents, the in situ derived protonic hydrogen atoms would rapidly react and incorporate into the carboxylate molecules derived from the triacylglycerides. The diatomic hydrogen feed used in embodiments herein is in addition to any monoatomic hydrogen that may be generated in situ from water or other components in the hydrothermolysis reactor, and, although being an additional operating expense, may provide the benefits of enhanced reactivity within the hydrothermolysis reactor as well as an increased H/C ratio in the resulting product. Externally supplied diatomic hydrogen also provides an independent means of controlling the process performance, which cannot be obtained via in situ monoatomic hydrogen production alone, as it is dependent upon the hydrothermolysis reaction conditions and the composition of the triacylglycerides-containing feedstock. Overall, adding an external supply of diatomic hydrogen to the catalytic hydrothermolysis reactor, along with the super critical water and the renewable oil feed provides a different process, different reaction mechanism, and added performance over in situ monoatomic hydrogen generation alone.

[0015] Another advantage of co-feeding externally supplied diatomic hydrogen to the catalytic hydrothermolysis reactor is the hydrogen capping effect of stabilizing any free radicals formed during the catalytic hydrothermolysis reactions, thereby avoiding formation of oligomeric and/or polymeric materials, often referred to as coke or coke precursors or coke deposits, that would otherwise form as a result of condensation of these free radicals. Thus, co-feeding externally supplied diatomic hydrogen provides improved on-stream operability relative to processes that do not co-feed diatomic hydrogen gas.

[0016] In some embodiments, to form the triacylglycerides-water-diatomic hydrogen mixture, triacylglycerides-containing oil is first mixed with water to form a triacylglyceride-water mixture. The resulting triacylglycerides-water mixture is then mixed with diatomic hydrogen to form the triacylglycerides-water-diatomic hydrogen mixture.

[0017] The triacylglycerides-water-diatomic hydrogen mixture may have a water to triacylglycerides mass ratio in the range from about 0.001 : 1 to about 1 : 1 in some embodiments; from about 0.01 :1 to about 1 : 1 in other embodiments; and from about 0.1 : 1 to about 1 : 1 in yet other embodiments.

[0018] The triacylglycerides-water-diatomic hydrogen mixture may have a diatomic hydrogen to triacylglycerides mass ratio in the range from about 0.001 : 1 to about 1 : 1 in some embodiments; from about 0.005: 1 to about 0.5: 1 or 1 : 1 in other embodiments; from about 0.01 : 1 to about 0.5:1 in other embodiments; and from about 0.1 : 1 to about 0.5: 1 in yet other embodiments. In some embodiments, the diatomic hydrogen to triacylglycerides mass ratio may be in the range from about 0.1 : 1 to about 0.2: 1. The total diatomic hydrogen feed rate in some embodiments may be sufficient to supply a portion or all of the hydrogen necessary for the hydrothermolysis as well as any close-coupled downstream processing steps, such as hydrotreatment.

[0019] The reaction effluent may then be directly catalytically hydrotreated, without intermediate separations of water, unreacted diatomic hydrogen, or other light gas byproducts, to form additional distillate range hydrocarbons and/or to convert precursors in the reaction effluent to distillate range hydrocarbons. Homogeneously catalyzed hydrothermolysis produces a crude oil that requires heterogeneously catalyzed hydrotreatment to be converted to useful infrastructure-compatible distillate fuels. Catalytic hydrotreatment processes may operate at elevated pressures, such as 500-2000+ psig, using supported catalysts having activity towards both heteroatom removal and double bond saturation reactions. Also required is an excess flow of diatomic hydrogen gas over and above the stoichiometric requirement, which for the case of catalytic hydrothermolysis-derived crude oil feedstocks may be in the range of 1000 to 2000 scf per barrel, the latter depending upon renewable feedstock type and catalytic hydrothermolysis reaction conditions. The need for excess diatomic hydrogen gas is to: a) drive the desired hydrotreatment reactions to a high degree of conversion; and b) to provide a heat sink to control unmanageable exotherms that would otherwise result from the high heats of hydrotreatment reactions. The adiabatic temperature rise, i.e., the temperature increase from reactant inlet stream to product effluent stream across the hydrotreating catalyst bed, can amount to about 180-200°F per each thousand standard cubic feet hydrogen consumed. An advantage of co- feeding externally supplied diatomic hydrogen to the hydrothermolysis reactor is that the diatomic hydrogen contained in the effluent gas stream from the catalytic hydrothermolysis reactor can provide a part or all of the diatomic hydrogen gas feed requirement for the downstream catalytic hydrotreating reactor, as well as enhancing the reaction within the catalytic hydrothermolysis reactor itself, as discussed above.

[0020] In some embodiments, the above-mentioned triacylglycerides-containing oils, following hydrothermolysis, may be co-processed in the hydrotreatment zone with other hydrocarbon feedstocks, such as atmospheric gas oil (AGO), vacuum gas oil (VGO), or other feeds derived from petroleum, shale oil, tar sands, coal-derived oils, organic waste oils, and the like.

[0021] Following hydrotreatment, the hydrotreatment effluent may then be processed to separate water, unreacted diatomic hydrogen, and light gases from the hydrotreatment effluent and to fractionate the hydrocarbons into one or more hydrocarbon fractions, such as those boiling in the range of naphtha, diesel, or jet. The water and diatomic hydrogen may then be recycled for admixture with the triacylglycerides-containing oil as described above.

[0022] The reaction of the triacylglycerides to produce hydrocarbons may be primarily one or more hydrothermolysis reactions catalyzed by water and performed at a reaction temperature in the range from about 250°C to about 560°C; from about 350°C to about 550°C in some embodiments; and from about 425°C to about 525°C in other embodiments. Reaction conditions may also include a pressure of greater than 75 bar; greater than 150 bar in other embodiments; greater than 200 bar in other embodiments; between about 75 bar and about 300 bar in some embodiments; and between about 150 bar and about 250 bar in other embodiments. Conditions of temperature and/or pressure may be selected to be above the critical temperature and/or pressure of water. In all embodiments, the hydrothermolysis reactions may be performed in the absence of added catalysts, such as an inorganic heterogeneous catalyst or a soluble metallic catalyst.

[0023] Referring now to Figure 1, a simplified process flow diagram of a process for converting triacylglycerides-containing oils into crude oil precursors and/or distillate hydrocarbon fuels according to embodiments herein is illustrated. A triacylglycerides-containing oil may be provided to the system via flow line 2, filtered if necessary in a filter 4, and stored in feed tank 6. The triacylglycerides-containing oil may then be fed via pump 8 and mixed with water fed via flow line 10. Mixing of the triacylglycerides-containing oil with water may be performed in a mixing device, such as a mixing tee, an agitated vessel, an in-line mixer or other mixing devices as known to those of skill in the art.

[0024] The triacylglycerides-water mixture 12 may then be combined with diatomic hydrogen fed via flow line 14 to form a triacylglycerides-water-diatomic hydrogen mixture 16. Mixture 16 may then be fed to hydrothermolysis reactor 18 and maintained at reaction conditions for a time sufficient to convert at least a portion of the triacylglycerides to distillate hydrocarbons or precursors thereof. Reaction conditions may include a temperature in the range from about 250°C to about 525°C and a pressure of at least 75 bar. The residence time required in reactor 18 to convert the triacylglycerides may vary depending upon the reaction conditions as well as the specific triacylglycerides-containing oil used. In some embodiments, residence times in reactor 18 may be in the range from about 3 to about 6 minutes. To elevate the temperature of the feed to reaction conditions, heat may be supplied to the feed via one or more of a feed-effluent exchanger 20, an indirect heat exchanger 22 to heat the triacylglycerides-water mixture 12, and an indirect heat exchanger 24 to heat the triacylglycerides-water-diatomic hydrogen mixture 16, among other options. The hydrothermolysis reaction can also include some exothermic reactions, which may supply additional heat to maintain the required reaction temperature conditions and to reduce external heat input requirements. In some embodiments, one or more water feed lines 26 may be provided to control the exotherm and the temperature or temperature profile in hydrothermolysis reactor 18.

Following reaction of the triacylglycerides in hydrothermolysis reactor 18, the reaction effluent 28 may be used to preheat the feed in feed-effluent exchanger 20, and further processed to recover the distillate hydrocarbons. For example, hydrothermolysis effluent 28 may then be fed, without separation of the water from the hydrothermolysis effluent, to a hydro treatment system 29 to further treat the effluent. Hydrotreatment system 29 may include one or more reactors (hydrotreaters) (not shown) containing a hydro conversion catalyst to convert at least a portion of the hydrothermolysis effluent to distillate hydrocarbons. Additional diatomic hydrogen, if necessary, may be added to hydrotreatment system 29 via flow line 27. Further, as noted above, additional hydrocarbon feedstocks may be co-processed with hydrothermolysis effluent 28, and may be fed to hydrotreatment system 29 via flow line 25. Non-renewable hydrocarbon feedstocks, for example, may include one or more of petroleum distillates; shale oil distillates; tar sands-derived distillates; coal gasification byproduct oils; and coal pyrolysis oils, among others. If necessary, some sulfur-containing compound such as, for example, dimethyl disulfide dissolved in a suitable hydrocarbon solvent, may be fed to hydrotreatment system 29 via flow line 31 in order to maintain the catalysts in their most active states.

[0026] The hydrothermolysis reactor and the hydrotreatment system may be "close- coupled," where the effluent from the hydrothermolysis reaction step is passed to the hydrotreatment system 29 without phase separation (no separation of water, oil, and diatomic hydrogen). In some embodiments, the effluent from the hydrothermolysis reaction step may be passed to the hydrotreatment system under autogeneous pressure, i.e., without any pressure letdown between hydrothermolysis and hydrotreatment other than that which may occur by normal flow-induced pressure drops in piping and feed-effluent heat exchangers. In some embodiments, the effluent from the hydrothermolysis reaction step may be passed to the hydrotreatment system with pressure let down to a lower pressure level of the hydrotreatment system. Additionally, due to the diatomic hydrogen feed to the hydrothermolysis reactor, little or no additional diatomic hydrogen, and thus minimal or no hydrogen compression or re-compression is necessary for hydrotreatmemt. Due to compatible reaction conditions, including pressures and diatomic hydrogen to triacylglycerides ratios, and space velocities, the diatomic hydrogen may be carried through the entire reaction system, providing enhanced system performance including suppressed coking rates and at higher thermal efficiencies and lower cost.

[0027] The hydrotreatment effluent 34 may then be fed to effluent treatment system

30 for separation and recovery of reaction products. Effluent treatment system 30 may, for example, separate water 32 and diatomic hydrogen 36 from the hydrocarbons. The resulting hydrocarbons may also be fractionated into two or more fractions, which, as illustrated, may include distillate hydrocarbons boiling in the range of naphtha 38, diesel 41, or jet 40, and vacuum gas oil (VGO) 42. Some offgas 44 may also be produced.

[0028] As noted above, the effluent from the hydrothermolysis reaction step may be close-coupled, being passed to the hydrotreatment system 29 under autogeneous pressure, i.e., without any pressure letdown between hydrothermolysis and hydrotreatment other than that which may occur by normal flow-induced pressure drops in piping and feed-effluent heat exchangers. In such embodiments, a pressure letdown valve or valves 35 may be provided intermediate hydrotreatment system 29 and separation system 30 to decrease the pressure from an autogeneous pressure, for example, at or above the supercritical pressure of water, to a pressure less than the supercritical pressure of water, such as atmospheric pressure, in one or more letdown steps. The pressure letdown system may also provide for an initial phase separation of light gases (including diatomic hydrogen), water, and hydrocarbons.

[0029] A portion of water fraction 32 may be purged via flow line 33, if and as necessary, to avoid buildup of organic acids or other reaction byproducts. The water fraction 32 and the diatomic hydrogen fraction 36 may then be recycled and combined, as necessary, with makeup water 46 and makeup diatomic hydrogen 48, respectively, for mixture with the triacylglycerides-containing oil as described above. Compressor 52 may be used to pressurize the diatomic hydrogen recycle. In some embodiments, a heavy hydrocarbon recycle fraction 43 may also be recovered, and may be recycled to the hydrothermolysis reactor system 18, hydrotreatment system 29, or a combination thereof.

[0030] Referring now to Figure 2, a simplified process flow diagram of a process for converting triacylglycerides-containing oils into crude oil precursors and/or distillate hydrocarbon fuels according to embodiments herein is illustrated, where like numerals represent like parts. In this embodiment hydrotreatment system 29 may include a hydrotreater 82 for further converting the crude oil precursors and/or distillate hydrocarbon fuels in hydrothermolysis effluent 28. The hydrothermolysis effluent 28, 62, including diatomic hydrogen and water, may be fed to a hydrotreater 82 and contacted with a suitable catalyst to produce desired end products, such as jet, naphtha, and diesel boiling range hydrocarbons. If necessary, additional diatomic hydrogen may be added to the hydrothermolysis effluent prior to hydrotreatment via flow line 86.

[0031] Following hydrotreatment, the hydrotreated effluent 84 may then be fed to effluent treatment system 30. As illustrated in Figure 2, effluent treatment system 30 may include a drum 60 for separation of the gaseous components from the liquid components in the cooled effluent 62. The gaseous components, including diatomic hydrogen and possibly some light reaction byproducts, may be recovered from drum 60 via flow line 64. Liquid components may settle in the bottom of drum 60, resulting in formation of a two-phase system, where the water may be recovered via flow line 32 and the hydrocarbons may be recovered via flow line 68. The water fraction 32 recovered from drum 60 may then be purged and/or recycled as described above.

[0032] Following separations in drum 60, the gaseous products in flow line 64 may be separated via a gas separation device 70 to result in a recycle diatomic hydrogen fraction 36 and an off-gas fraction 44a, as described above. The liquid hydrocarbon products may then be fed to a fractionator 80 for separation of the hydrocarbons into one or more boiling range fractions including naphtha 38, jet 40, diesel 41 , and vacuum gas oil (VGO) 42. An additional off-gas fraction 44b and water fraction 32b may also result from separations in fractionator 80.

[0033] To produce additional distillate range fuels, such as where C20+ hydrocarbons are produced in hydrothermolysis reactor 18, some of the VGO fraction 42 may be recycled back to the hydrothermolysis reactor 18 for additional processing, such as via flow line 43.

[0034] As described with respect to the embodiments of Figures 1 and 2, there is no phase separation of the hydrothermolysis effluent before hydrotreatment. The hydrothermolysis step and feed of the entire hydrothermolysis effluent stream is performed in a close-coupled system, where no intermediate separations are performed. One skilled in the art may anticipate that such a close-coupled system would not be technically feasible, expecting the active metals in the supported catalysts to be solubilized or decrepitated. However, it has been found that catalyst activity may be maintained, over several hundred hours of pilot plant operations, even in the presence of high water concentrations and high organic acid concentrations (i.e., a much higher level of oxygenates than are normally encountered with typical petroleum feedstocks). Injection of water, hydrocarbons, free fatty acids, alcohols, and unconverted triacylglycerides directly to a hydrotreatment zone may thus provide for a significant reduction in unit operations and processing steps required to produce the desired distillate fuels.

[0035] Catalysts useful in hydrotreater 82 may include catalysts that may be used for the hydrotreating or hydrocracking of a hydrocarbon feedstock. In some embodiments, the hydrotreating catalyst may effectively hydrodeoxygenate and/or decarboxylate the oxygen bonds contained in the hydrotreater feed reduce or eliminate the organic acid concentration in effluent 28. In some embodiments, greater than 99%, 99.9%, or 99.99% of the organic acids may be converted over the hydrotreatment catalyst.

[0036] Hydrotreating catalysts that may be useful include catalysts selected from those elements known to provide catalytic hydrogenation activity. At least one metal component selected from Group 8-10 elements and/or from Group 6 elements is generally chosen. Group 6 elements may include chromium, molybdenum and tungsten. Group 8-10 elements may include iron, cobalt, nickel, ruthenium, rhodium, palladium, osmium, iridium and platinum. The amount(s) of hydrogenation component(s) in the catalyst suitably range from about 0.5% to about 10% by weight of Group 8-10 metal component(s) and from about 5% to about 25% by weight of Group 6 metal component(s), calculated as metal oxide(s) per 100 parts by weight of total catalyst, where the percentages by weight are based on the weight of the catalyst before sulfiding. The hydrogenation components in the catalyst may be in the oxidic and/or the sulfidic form. If a combination of at least a Group 6 and a Group 8 metal component is present as (mixed) oxides, it will be subjected to a sulfiding treatment prior to proper use in hydrocracking. In some embodiments, the catalyst comprises one or more components of nickel and/or cobalt and one or more components of molybdenum and/or tungsten or one or more components of platinum and/or palladium. Catalysts containing nickel and molybdenum, nickel and tungsten, platinum and/or palladium are useful.

[0037] In some embodiments, hydrotreater 82 may include two or more beds or layers of catalyst, such as a first layer including a hydrocracking catalyst and a second layer including a hydrotreating catalyst.

[0038] In some embodiments, the layered catalyst system may include a lower catalyst layer that includes a bed of a hydrocracking catalyst suitable for hydrocracking any vacuum gas oil (VGO) range hydrothermolysis products or added feeds to diesel range or lighter hydrocarbons. The hydrocracking catalysts used may also be selected to minimize or reduce dearomatization of the alkylaromatics formed in the hydrothermolysis reactor. VGO hydrocracking catalysts that may be used according to embodiments herein include one or more noble metals supported on low acidity zeolites wherein the zeolite acidity is widely distributed throughout each catalyst particle. For example, one or more catalysts as described in US4990243, US5069890, US5071805, US5073530, US5141909, US5277793, US5366615, US5439860, US5593570, US6860986, US6902664, and US6872685 may be used in embodiments herein, each of which are incorporated herein by reference with respect to the hydrocracking catalysts described therein. In some embodiments, the inclusion of the VGO hydrocracking may result in extinctive hydrocracking of the heavy hydrocarbons, such that the only net hydrocarbon products include diesel range and lighter hydrocarbons.

[0039] One skilled in the art will recognize that the various catalyst layers may not be made up of only a single catalyst, but may be composed of an intermixture of different catalysts to achieve the optimal level of metals and deoxygenation for that layer, Although some olefmic bond hydrogenation will occur in the lower portion of the zone, the removal of oxygen, nitrogen, and sulfur may take place primarily in the upper layer or layers. Obviously additional metals removal also will take place. The specific catalyst or catalyst mixture selected for each layer, the number of layers in the zone, the proportional volume in the bed of each layer, and the specific hydroprocessing conditions selected will depend on the feedstock being processed by the unit, the desired product to be recovered, as well as commercial considerations such as cost of the catalyst. All of these parameters are within the skill of a person engaged in the petroleum processing industry and should not need further elaboration here.

[0040] While the above-described systems are described with respect to a single hydrothermolysis reactor 18 and a single hydrotreater 82, the reaction zones may include two or more reactors arranged in series or in parallel. Likewise, back-up compressors, filters, pumps, and the like may also be used. Further, compressors may be single stage or multi-stage compressors, which in some embodiments may be used to compress a single gas stream in sequential stages or may be used to compress separate gas streams, depending on plant layout.

[0041] As described above with respect to Figure 2, fractionator 80 may be used to recover various hydrocarbon fractions. Where hydrotreater 82 includes a bed or layer of hydrocracking catalyst, production of heavy hydrocarbons may be reduced or eliminated. In such embodiments where the heavy hydrocarbons are eliminated, fractionator 80 may be used to recover a diesel fraction as the bottoms from the column, and recycle of heavy hydrocarbons, such as VGO, may be unnecessary. When produced, the VGO may be recycled, as described above, or may be recovered as a low sulfur fuel oil product.

[0042] As described above, processes disclosed herein may be performed in a system or apparatus for converting triacylglycerides-containing oils into crude oil precursors and/or distillate hydrocarbon fuels. The system may include one or more mixing devices for mixing a triacylglycerides-containing oil feed with water and diatomic hydrogen. For example, the system may include a first mixing device for mixing a triacylglycerides-containing oil feed with water to form an oil-water mixture, and a second mixing device for mixing the oil-water mixture with diatomic hydrogen to form a feed mixture.

[0043] The resulting mixture may then be fed via a flow conduit to a hydrothermolysis reactor for reacting the feed mixture at a temperature in the range of 250°C to about 560°C and a pressure greater than about 75 bar to produce a reaction effluent. The hydrothermolysis reactor may include, for example, one or more tubular conduits within a furnace configured to maintain a temperature of the hydrothermolysis reactor effluent proximate an outlet of the hydrothermolysis reactor at reaction conditions, such as a temperature in the range from about 400°C to about 560°C, or at a temperature and pressure greater than the critical temperature and pressure of water. The furnace may be, for example, an electrically heated furnace, or a furnace fired with a fuel gas, such as a natural gas, synthesis gas, or light hydrocarbon gases, including those produced in and recovered from the hydrothermolysis reactor. Reaction conditions may be achieved by use of one or more pumps, compressors, and heat exchangers. In other embodiments, the hydrothermolysis reactor may be an adiabatic reactor. A separator may then be used for separating water and hydrogen from hydrocarbons in the reaction effluent.

[0044] The system may also include a compressor for compressing diatomic hydrogen recovered from the separator, as well as one or more fluid conduits for recycling the compressed diatomic hydrogen and/or the recovered water to the mixing device for mixing diatomic hydrogen or the mixing device for mixing water. The system also includes a hydrotreater to hydrotreat at least a portion of the hydrothermolysis reaction effluent.

[0045] The system may also include a fractionator for fractionating hydrocarbons in the hydrotreater effluent to form one or more hydrocarbon fractions boiling in the naphtha, jet or diesel range.

[0046] To control reaction temperatures and exotherms in the hydrothermolysis reactor, the system may include one or more fluid conduits for injecting water into the hydrothermolysis reactor.

[0047] As described above, embodiments disclosed herein provide processes for the conversion of renewable feedstocks to infrastructure-compatible distillate fuels. For example, in some embodiments, the jet fraction recovered may have a total acid number of less than 0.1 in some embodiments, expressed as mg KOH per gram; less thanO.015 expressed as mg KOH per gram in other embodiments; and less than 0.010 in other embodiments. The jet may have an olefins content of less than about 5 vol% and an aromatics content of less than about 25 vol% in some embodiments. These properties, among others, may allow the jet and/or the diesel fractions produced in embodiments herein to be used directly as a fuel without blending. In some embodiments, the whole hydrocarbon liquid product recovered from the hydrotreatment reaction zone may be used to produce distillate fuels meeting military, ASTM, EN, ISO, or equivalent fuel specifications.

[0048] The process may be carried out in an economically feasible method at a commercial scale. Embodiments herein may maximize the thermal efficiency of the triacylglycerides-containing oil conversion in an economically attractive manner without being hampered by operability problems associated with catalyst fouling. During the hydrothermolysis process, water, such as about 5% of the feed water, may be consumed in the hydrolysis reaction. In the hydrotreater, much of the glycerin byproduct produced may be further hydrogenated and converted to propane. Diatomic hydrogen is consumed during the hydrotreating step, and the average specific gravity of the product may be reduced, such as from approximately 0.91 to about 0.81. Decarboxylation reactions form COx and that carbon loss may result in a reduced mass yield of liquid products, and an equivalent lower volumetric yield. The actual crude yield may be in the range from about 75% to about 90%, such as in the range from about 80% to 84%, depending on how the hydrothermolysis process is executed.

[0049] Naphtha, jet, and diesel fuels may be produced by processes disclosed herein.

A higher boiling gas oil material may also be produced, and may contain high-quality, high hydrogen content paraffins in the CI 7 to C24 boiling range. These heavier hydrocarbons may be recycled to the hydrothermolysis reactor for further treatment and production of naphtha, jet, and diesel range products. Fuel gases (off gases) may also be produced, which may be used in some embodiments for process heat, hydrogen production, or recovered as individual products (LPG, ethylene, propylene, n-butane, iso-butane, etc.).

[0050] Fuels produced by embodiments herein may: contain cycloparaffins and aromatics; exhibit high density; exhibit high energy density; exhibit good low- temperature properties (freezing point, cloud point, pour point, and viscosity); exhibit natural lubricity; exhibit a wide range of hydrocarbon types and molecular weights similar to petroleum; and/or have good thermal stability. These fuels may thus be true "drop in" analogs of their petroleum counterparts and do not require blending to meet current petroleum specifications.

[0051] Coupling of the hydrothermolysis reaction and hydrotreating is unique and may result in many process and economic benefits. For example, benefits may include: elimination of a hydrothermolysis product cool down and separation of gas, oil, and water components; elimination of acid water production and treatment; elimination of additional liquid pumping, gas compression, and heat exchange operations for the hydrotreater feed; reduced heat loss; and/or reduced power consumption.

[0052] EXAMPLES

[0053] Two catalytic hydrothermolysis (CH) reaction runs were performed to investigate the effect of co-feeding externally supplied diatomic hydrogen. The reactions were performed in the same reaction system at roughly equivalent operating pressures and temperatures under the following conditions. H2/CARINATA PER PASS TAG PER PASS CH Reactor CH Re actor

OIL FEED RATIO, CONVERSION, AROMATICS YIELD, Pressure, Tempe rature ,

RUN# Std L/Gm Oil Wt% Wt% psig C

1 0 68.4 32.6 3250 468

2 0.26 79.7 37.6 3250 470

[0054] By co-feeding just 0.26 L diatomic hydrogen per gram Carinata oil feed, triacylglyceride (TAG) conversion increased by more than 11 percentage points on TAG feed, equivalent to more than a 16% relative increase in conversion performance. Also, total aromatics yield increased some 5 percentage points on TAG feed, equivalent to more than a 15% relative increase in aromatics production performance. Aromatics, especially in the jet fuel fraction, typically exist in petroleum-derived fuels up to a maximum specification of 25 liquid volume percentage in the jet fraction. Therefore another advantage of co-feeding externally supplied diatomic hydrogen is to enhance the aromatics production rate, especially in the jet fuel fraction. The total aromatics yields shown in the table are expressed as percentages on the whole hydrothermolysis crude oil and these values when corrected for the equivalent jet fuel compositions are still within the 25 liquid volume % maximum specification in the jet fuel fraction. While the reaction temperature between the two runs was slightly different, the temperature alone cannot account for the large changes in conversion and aromatics yield, indicating that hydrogen co-feed may have significant advantages.

[0055] While the disclosure includes a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art, having benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate that other embodiments may be devised which do not depart from the scope of the present disclosure. Accordingly, the scope should be limited only by the attached claims.