Abstract
The diminishing clean oil reserve is driving the search for new or improved ways to reduce the level of NSO-containing species found in high abundance in heavy crude oils. Hydrotreatment is the currently preferred technique to remove those polar species. Unfortunately, nitrogen-containing compounds cause coke formation on the surface of the hydrotreatment catalyst, leading to partial or complete deactivation. Here, positive- and negative-ion electrospray ionization Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (ESI FT-ICR MS) identify those nitrogen compounds that resist hydrotreatment. ESI preferentially ionizes polar (e.g., heteroatom-containing) species: basic molecules are detected as positive ions and acidic/neutral molecules as negative ions. FT-ICR MS resolves thousands of species in a single mass spectrum, allowing for unambiguous determination of elemental composition, C c H h N n O o S s , for identification of compound “class” (numbers of N, O, S heteroatoms, “type” (rings plus double bonds), and carbon number (revealing the extent of alkylation). We find that hydrotreatment-resistant compounds typically contain a single nitrogen atom, both pyridinic benzalogs and pyrollic benzalogs. Compounds with more than one heteroatom, such as O x , N x O y , N x S y and N x , are partially removed. Compound classes with lower double bond equivalents or fewer CH 2 groups are preferentially removed. Species that contain O x S y are fully removed by hydrotreatment.
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