The concern of CO emissions
No refinery can operate without hydrogen (H2) because it is needed in all hydroprocessing technologies to remove sulfurous impurities and produce products at the correct specifications. With each passing day, the importance of H2 in refineries is increasing as crude oil gets heavier and more sour while product specifications are simultaneously getting tighter.
IP: 3.139.234.68
This is a preview of our premium content. Thank you for your interest—please
log in or
subscribe to read the full article.
The Authors
Chaudhuri, D. - Fluor, New Delhi, India
Debopam Chaudhuri is a Senior Process Specialist for Fluor in New Delhi, India and a subject matter expert of sulfur recovery processes. He has more than 21 yr of experience in petroleum refining, petrochemical complexes and upstream projects. Chaudhuri earned BTech degrees in chemistry and chemical engineering from the University of Calcutta.
Gupta, V. - Fluor, Delhi, India
Vivek Gupta has more than 30 yr of rich experience in design safety and fire protection engineering for project execution globally, serving clients ranging from oil and gas, chemicals, mining and metals and power sectors in government and private setups. He has been with Fluor New Delhi for more than 15 yr, providing safety and fire protection design services to projects and leading in developing the HSE engineering discipline as an organization goal.
Kumar, V. S. - Fluor, New Delhi, India
Venkata Sravan Kumar is a Process Engineer with Fluor New Delhi. He has more than 14 yr of experience in petroleum refining, petrochemicals and fertilizer projects. He earned a Bch degree in chemical engineering from Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University in India.
Related Articles
From the Archive
Comments