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The fate of bio-carbon in FCC co-processing products
Author(s) -
Gabriella Fogassy,
Nicolas Thégarid,
Y. Schuurman,
C. Mirodatos
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
green chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.221
H-Index - 221
eISSN - 1463-9270
pISSN - 1463-9262
DOI - 10.1039/c2gc35152h
Subject(s) - gasoline , refinery , coke , pyrolysis , fluid catalytic cracking , carbon fibers , vacuum distillation , fraction (chemistry) , fossil fuel , biomass (ecology) , refining (metallurgy) , waste management , biofuel , co processing , distillation , cracking , environmental science , chemistry , materials science , organic chemistry , engineering , raw material , geology , oceanography , composite number , composite material
INGENIERIE+GFO:NTE:YSC:CMIA promising alternative to the first generation of bio-fuels is to produce mixed bio- and fossil fuels by co-processing mixtures of biomass pyrolysis oil with crude oil fractions obtained from distillation in a conventional oil refinery. This was demonstrated to be technically feasible for fluid catalytic cracking (FCC), which is the main refinery process for producing gasoline. However, co-processing leads to more coke formation and to a more aromatic gasoline fraction. A detailed understanding is necessary on how the oxygenated moieties effect the reaction mechanism to further improve the process/catalysts. Moreover, for technical and marketing reasons, it is absolutely required to accurately determine the proportion of renewable molecules in the commercialized products. The carbon-14 method (also called radiocarbon or C-14) has been used as the most accurate and powerful method to discriminate fossil carbon from bio-carbon, since fossil fuel is virtually C-14-free, while biofuel contains the present-day "natural" amount of C-14. This technique has shown that not all FCC products share bio-carbon statistically. The coke formed during a FCC cycle and to a lesser extent the gases are found richer in C-14 than gasoline. This result gives valuable information on the co-processing mechanism, supporting that the bio-oil oxygenated molecules are processed more easily at the expenses of the crude oil hydrocarbons, favouring the bio-coke and the bio-light gases production

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