Title of Invention

PROCESS TO PREPARE A BASE OIL FROM SLACK-WAX

Abstract No. 1921/CHENP/2003 ABSTRACT PROCESS TO PREPARE A BASE OIL FROM SLACK-WAX The present invention relates to a process to prepare a base oil starting from a slack wax containing feedstock by (a) contacting the feedstock in the presence of hydrogen with a sulphided hydrodesulphurisation catalyst comprising nickel and tungsten on an acid amorphous silica-alumina carrier and (b) performing a pour point reducing step on the effluent of step (a) to obtain the base oil, wherein the hydrodesulphurisation catalyst is obtained in a process wherein nickel and tungsten were impregnated on the acid amorphous silica- alumina carrier in the presence of a chelating agent.
Full Text

The invention is directed to a process to prepare a base oil starting from
a slack wax containing feedstock by contacting the feedstock in the presence
of hydrogen with a catalyst comprising a Group VIB metal and a non-noble
Group VIII metal on an amorphous carrier.
GB-A-1493620 describes a hydroisomerisation process to prepare base
oils. The catalysts, which are known to be used in such a reaction generally,
comprise a hydrogenation component and an acid component.
GB-A-1493 620 discloses a catalyst comprising nickel and tungsten as
hydrogenation components, supported on an alumina carrier. The required
acidity for the catalyst is provided by the presence of fluorine.
There have been many efforts to obtain a fluorine free
hydroisomerisation catalyst. For example WO-A-9941337 describes a
hydroisomerisation process wherein a slack-wax containing feed is contacted
with a fluorine free catalyst. The disclosed catalyst consists of a platinum or
palladium metal on a silica-alumina carrier. According to this publication a
hydrotreatment step is preferably performed prior to the hydroisomerisation
step in order to reduce the sulphur and nitrogen content to below 2 ppm, in
order to avoid deactivation of the noble metal containing hydroisomerisation
catalyst.
US-A-5370788 describes a hydroisomerisation catalyst optionally
containing fluorine. US-A-5370788 describes a slack wax
hydroisomerisation process wherein a non-fluorided nickel-molybdenum on
silica-alumina carrier catalyst is used having almost only pores with
diameters between 60-130 A, a total surface area of 249 m^/g an a total pore
volume of 0.5 cc/g, wherein the pore volume of the pores having a pore
diameter of above 500 A is 0.05 cc/g. The catalyst is said to be sulphur
tolerant. The highest base oil yield on slack-wax reported in this publication

is about 38 wt% obtained when the hydroisomerisation process was
performed at about 70 bar and 370 °C.
EP-A-537969 describes a hydroisomerisation catalyst optionally
containing fluorine. A slack wax hydroisomerisation process is described
wherein a nickel-molybdenum on silica-alumina carrier catalyst is used
having almost only pores with diameters below 100 A, a total surface area of
between 100 and 250 m^/g. The catalyst is said to be sulphur tolerant. The
high base oil yield on slack-wax are reported in this publication when the
hydroisomerisation process was performed at about 70 bar and at
temperatures about 400 °C. According to this publication the products
require a hydrofinishing step to improve their UV stability.
EP-A-666894 describes a hydroisomerisation catalyst containing no
fluorine. A slack wax hydroisomerisation process is disclosed wherein a
nickel-molybdenum on silica-alumina carrier catalyst is used having a certain
macroporosity. The macroporosity is defined in that a considerable part of
the pores have a diameter greater than 100 nm. The total pore volume is
between 0.6 and 1.2 ml/g. The highest base oil yield on slack-wax reported in
this publication is about 42 wt% obtained when the hydroisomerisation
process was performed at 140 bar and at 391 °C.
US-A-5292989 describes a wax hydroisomerisation process wherein a
catalyst is used comprising cobah, nickel and molybdenum on a silica-
alumina carrier wherein silica was deposited on the surface of the carrier.
Slack wax is, according to the description, a possible feed. The sulphur and
nitrogen content in the slack wax feed are preferably reduced to below 2 ppm
before hydroisomerisation.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a slack wax
hydroisomerisation process, which can be operated at relatively low
pressures, i.e. less than 100 bar. A disadvantage of the above-described
processes, which also operate at such lower pressures, is that they are

performed at relatively high temperatures, i.e. higher than 390 °C. A
disadvantage of such higher temperatures is that the level of poly-aromatic
(PCA) compounds in the product becomes too high, i.e. higher than 10
mmol/100 grams of product. Additional hydrofmishing will then be required
to saturate these PCA compounds to a level lower than 10 mmol/100 grams.
The object of the present invention is to provide a hydroisomerisation
process to prepare base oils from slack-wax which can be performed at lower
pressures and lower temperatures. A further object is that the product
obtained by said process is low in polyaromatic compounds, preferably
having a PCA content of less than 10 mmol/100 grams. A related aim is that
the products as obtained do not require an additional hydrofmishing step in
order to reduce the PCA content. A further aim is to provide a process, which
is tolerant for higher levels of sulphur and nitrogen in the feed, such that a
prior hydrotreating step is not necessary. Additional advantages of the
present invention will become clear from the description.
The above aims are achieved with the following process. Process to
prepare a base oil starting from a slack wax containing feedstock by
(a) contacting the feedstock in the presence of hydrogen with a sulphided
hydrodesulphurisation catalyst comprising nickel and tungsten on an acid
amorphous silica-alumina carrier and
(b) performing a pour point reducing step on the effluent of step (a) to
obtain the base oil.
Applicants have found that by using a nickel/tungsten containing
catalyst having a relatively high hydrodesulphurisation (HDS) activity and an
acid amorphous silica-alumina carrier in step (a) a base oil can be prepared in
a high yield at low pressures and temperatures, wherein the base oil product
has an acceptable content of polyaromatic compounds. With relatively high
hydrodesulphurisation activity is here meant a higher activity when

compared to state of the art nickel/tungsten containing catalysts. Further
advantages will be apparent from the below description.
The slack-wax containing feed may also contain other wax sources, for
example Fischer-Tropsch derived wax. Suitably the content of slack-wax in
the feed will be more than 50 \vt%, preferably more than 80 wt% up to
100 wt%.
The slack-wax is suitably obtained in a solvent dewaxing process,
which can be part of a process to prepare base oils. The slack wax thus
obtained suitably has a mean boiling point between 400 and 600 °C. The oil
content in the wax, as determined by ASTM D721, is suitably between 0 and
50 wt%. The slack-wax feed may contain between 0 and 1 wt% sulphur and
between 0 and 150 ppm nitrogen. It has been found that the catalyst
employed in the The process as claimed in the invention is relatively stable
when sulphur and/or nitrogen are part of the feed. This is advantageous
because a prior desulphurisation step, also referred to as hydrotreating step,
can thus be avoided.
If one base oil grade, having for example a specific kinematic viscosity
at 100 °C, is made at a time the boiling range of the slack wax feed is
preferably rather narrow, more preferably the difference between the
temperature at which 10 wt% is recovered and the temperature at which 90
wt% is recovered is preferably between 80 and 160 °C and preferably below
130 °C. If one intends to prepare two or more base oil grades having
different viscosity properties at a time a more wider boiling slack wax feed is
preferably used. Such a more wider boiling slack wax feed preferably has a
difference between the temperature at which 10 wt% is recovered and the
temperature at which 90 wt% is recovered of between 170 °C and 300 °C
and more preferably between 170 °C and 250 °C. The different base oil
grades having a kinematic viscosity at 100 °C of between 2 and 10 cSt and
having excellent Noack volatility properties of at most 17 wt% for the lower

viscosity grades and even lower for the more heavier viscosity grades may be
advantageously be prepared by isolating such grades from preferably the
effluent of step (a) by means of a distillation step.
The catalyst employed in step (a) preferably comprises between 2-10
wt% nickel and between 5-30 wt% tungsten.
The sulphided hydrodesulphurisation catalyst used in step (a) has a
relatively high hydrodesulphurisation activity. With relatively high activity is
here meant a considerably higher activity when compared to state of the art
nickel/tungsten containing catalysts based on a silica-alumina carrier.
Preferably the hydrodesulphurisation activity of the catalyst is higher than
30% and more preferably below 40%, and most preferably below 35%,
wherein the hydrodesulphurisation activity is expressed as the yield in weight
percentage of C4-hydrocarbon cracking products when thiophene is
contacted with the catalyst under standard hydrodesulphurisation conditions.
The standard conditions consists of contacting a hydrogen/thiophene mixture
with 200 mg of a 30-80 mesh sulphided catalyst at 1 bar and 350 °C, wherein
the hydrogen rate is 54 ml/min and the thiophene concentration is 6 vol% in
the total gas feed.
Catalyst particles are to be used in the test are first crushed and sieved
through a 30-80 mesh sieve. The catalyst is then dried for at least 30 minutes
at 300 °C before loading 200 mg of dried catalyst into a glass reactor. Then
the catalyst is pre-sulphided by contacting the catalyst for about 2 hours with
an H2S/H2 mixture, wherein the H2S rate is 8.6 ml/min and the H2 rate is
54 ml/min. The temperature during the pre-sulphiding procedure is raised
from room temperature, 20 °C, to 270 °C at 10 °C/min and held for 30
minutes at 270 °C before raising it to 350 °C at a rate of 10 °C/min. During
pre-sulphiding nickel and tungsten oxides are converted to the active metal
sulphides. After pre-sulphiding the H2S flow is stopped and H2 is bubbled at

a rate of 54 ml/min through two thermostatted glass vessels containing
thiophene. The temperature of the first glass vessel is kept at 25 °C and the
temperature of the second glass vessel is kept at 16 °C. As the vapour
pressure of thiophene at 16 °C is 55 mmHg, the hydrogen gas that enters the
glass reactor is saturated with 6 vol% thiophene. The test is performed at 1
bar and at a temperature of 350 °C. The gaseous products are analysed by an
online gas liquid chromatograph with a flame ionisation detector every 30
minutes for four hours.
In order to obtain a reproducible value for the hydrodesulphurisation
activity the test values as obtained by the above method are corrected such to
correspond to the hydrodesulphurisation activity of a reference catalyst. The
reference catalyst is the commercial C-454 catalyst as obtainable at the date
of filing of Criterion Catalyst Company (Houston) and its reference
hydrodesulphurisation activity is 22 wt% according to the above test. By
testing both the reference catalyst ("test C-454") and the test catalyst
("measured val") one can easily calculate a consistent actual
hydrodesulphurisation activity according to the above test with the below
equation:
Actual activity = "measured val" +((22-"test C-454")/22)*"measured
val"
The hydrodesulphurisation activity of the nickel/tungsten catalyst can
be improved by using chelating agents in the impregnation stage of the
preparation of the catalyst as for example described by Kishan G., Coulier L.,
de Beer V.H.J., van Veen J.A.R., Niemantsverdriet J.W., Journal of Catalysis
196, 180-189 (2000). Examples of chelating agents are nitrilotriacetic acid,
ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) and 1,2-cyclohexanediamine-
N,N,N',N',-tetraacetic acid.
The carrier for the catalyst is amorphous silica-alumina. The term
"amorphous" indicates a lack of crystal structure, as defined by X-ray

diffraction, in the carrier material, although some short range ordering may
be present. Amorphous silica-alumina suitable for use in preparing the
catalyst carrier is available commercially. Alternatively, the silica-alumina
may be prepared by precipitating an alumina and a silica hydrogel and
subsequently drying and calcining the resulting material, as is well known in
the art. The carrier is an amorphous silica-alumina carrier. The amorphous
silica-alumina preferably contains alumina in an amount in the range of from
5 to 75% by weight, more preferably from 10 to 60% by weight as calculated
on the carrier alone. A very suitable amorphous silica-alumina product for
use in preparing the catalyst carrier comprises 45% by weight silica and 55%
by weight alumina and is commercially available (ex. Criterion Catalyst
Company, USA).
The total surface area of the catalyst as determined by is preferably
above 100 m^/g and more preferably between 200 and 300 m^/g. The total
pore volume is preferably above 0.4 ml/g. The upper pore volume will be
determined by the minimum surface area required. Preferably between 5 and
40 volume percent of the total pore volume is present as pores having a
diameter of more than 350 A. References to the total pore volume are to the
pore volume determined using the Standard Test Method for Determining
Pore Volume Distribution of Catalysts by Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry,
ASTM D 4284-88.
The catalyst is sulphided. Sulphidation of the catalyst may be effected
by any of the techniques known in the art, such a ex-situ or in-situ
sulphidation. For example, Sulphidation may be effected by contacting the
catalyst with a sulphur-containing gas, such as a mixture of hydrogen and
hydrogen sulphide, a mixture of hydrogen and carbon disulphide or a mixture
of hydrogen and a mercaptan, such as butylmercaptan. Alternatively,
sulphidation may be carried out by contacting the catalyst with hydrogen and
sulphur-containing hydrocarbon oil, such as sulphur-containing kerosene or

gas oil. The sulphur may also be introduced into the hydrocarbon oil by the
addition of a suitable sulphur-containing compound, for example dimethyl-
disulphide or tertiononylpolysulphide.
The feedstock will preferably comprise a minimum amount of sulphur
in order to keep the catalyst in a sulphided state. Preferably at least 200 ppm
sulphur and more preferably at least 700 ppm sulphur is present in the feed.
It may be therefore be necessary to add additional sulphur, for example as
dimethylsulphide, or a sulphur containing co-feed to the feed of step (a) if the
slack wax contains a lower level of sulphur. Examples of slack wax feed,
which contain lower levels of sulphur, are slack waxes obtained from oil,
which has been obtained in a hydrocracking process. Such slack waxes may
contain between 10-200 ppm sulphur.
The amorphous silica-alumina carrier of the catalyst preferably has a
certain minimum acidity or, said in other words, a minimum cracking
activity. Examples of suitable carriers having the required activity are
described in WO-A-9941337. More preferably the catalyst carrier, after
having been calcined, at a temperature of suitably between 400 and 1000 °C,
has a certain minimum n-heptane cracking activity as will be described in
more detail below.
The n-heptane cracking is measured by first preparing a standard
catalyst consisting of the calcined carrier and 0.4 wt% platinum. Standard
catalysts are tested as 40-80 mesh particles, which are dried at 200 °C before
loading in the test reactor. The reaction is carried out in a conventional fixed-
bed reactor having a length to diameter ratio of 10 to 0.2. The standard
catalysts are reduced prior to testing at 400 °C for 2 hrs at a hydrogen flow
rate of 2.24 Nml/min and a pressure of 30 bar. The actual test reaction
conditions are: n-heptane/H2 molar ratio of 0.25, total pressure 30 bar, and a
gas hourly space velocity of 1020 Nml/(g.h). The temperature is varied by
decreasing the temperature from 400 °C to 200 °C at 0.22 °C/minute.

Effluents are analysed by on-line gas chromatography. The temperature at
which 40 wt% conversion is achieved is the n-heptane test value. Lower n-
heptane test values correlate with more active catalyst.
Preferred carriers have an n-heptane cracking temperature of less than
360 °C, more preferably less than 350 °C and most preferably less than
345 °C as measured using the above-described test. The minimum n-heptane
cracking temperature is preferably more than 310 °C and more preferably
greater than 320 °C.
The cracking activity of the silica-alumina carrier can be influenced by,
for example, variation of the alumina distribution in the carrier, variation of
the percentage of alumina in the carrier, and the type of alumina, as is
generally known to one skilled in the art. Reference in this respect is made to
the following articles which illustrate the above: Von Bremer H., Jank M.,
Weber M., Wendlandt K.P., Z. anorg. allg. Chem. 505, 79-88 (1983);
Leonard A.J., Ratnasamy P., Declerck F.D., Fripiat J.J., Disc, of the Faraday
Soc. 1971, 98-108; and Toba M. et al, J. Mater. Chem., 1994, 4(7), 1131-
1135.
The catalyst may also comprise up to 8 wt% of a large pore molecular
sieve, preferably an aluminosilicate zeolite. Such zeolites are well known in
the art, and include, for example, zeolites such as X, Y, ultrastable Y,
dealuminated Y, faujasite, ZSM-12, ZSM-18, L, mordenite, beta, offretite,
SSZ-24, SSZ-25, SSZ-26, SSZ-31, SSZ-33, SSZ-35 and SSZ-37, SAPO-5,
SAPO-31, SAPO-36, SAPO-40, SAPO-41 and VPI-5. Large pore zeolites
are generally identified as those zeolites having 12-ring pore openings. W.
M. Meier and D. H. Olson, "ATLAS OF ZEOLITE STRUCTURE TYPES"
3rd Edition, Butterworth-Heinemann, 1992, identify and list examples of
suitable zeolites. If a large pore molecular sieve is used then the well-known
synthetic zeolite Y as for example described in US-A-3130007 and
ultrastable Y zeolite as for example described in US-A-3536605 are suitable
10

molecular sieves. Other suitable molecular sieves are ZSM-12, zeolite beta
and mordenite. Such molecular sieve containing catalysts, containing
between 0.1 and 8 wt% of the sieve, are especially used when the reactor
containing the catalyst is altematingly used as a hydrocracker reactor to
prepare middle distillate fuels and as a reactor to prepare base oils.
The catalyst for use in step (a) may be prepared by any of the suitable
catalyst preparation techniques known in the art. A preferred method for the
preparation of the carrier comprises mulling a mixture of the amorphous
silica-alumina and a suitable liquid, extruding the mixture and drying and
calcining the resulting extrudates as for example described in EP-A-666894.
The extrudates may have any suitable form known in the art, for example
cylindrical, hollow cylindrical, multilobed or twisted multilobed. A most
suitable shape for the catalyst particles is cylindrical. Typically, the
extrudates have a nominal diameter of from 0.5 to 5 mm, preferably from 1
to 3 mm. After extrusion, the extrudates are dried. Drying may be effected at
an elevated temperature, preferably up to 800 °C, more preferably up to
300 °C. The period for drying is typically up to 5 hours, preferably from 30
minutes to 3 hours. Preferably, the extrudates are calcined after drying.
Calcination is effected at an elevated temperature, preferably between 400
and 1000 °C. Calcination of the extrudates is typically effected for a period
of up to 5 hours, preferably from 30 minutes to 4 hours. Once the carrier has
been prepared, nickel and tungsten may be deposited onto the carrier
material. Any of the suitable methods known in the art may be employed,
for example ion exchange, competitive ion exchange and impregnation.
Preferably nickel and tungsten are added by means of impregnation using a
chelating agent as described above. After impregnation, the resulting catalyst
is preferably dried and calcined at a temperature of between 200 and 500 °C.
The hydroisomerisation process is conducted at elevated temperature
and pressure. Suitable operating temperatures for the process are in the
11

range of from 290 °C to 370 °C, preferably in the range of from 320 °C to
360 °C. Preferred total pressures are in the range of from 20 to 100 bar and
more preferred from 40-90 bar. Base oil having a viscosity index of between
120-150 can be obtained under these conditions in high yields. The
hydrocarbon feed is typically treated at a weight hourly space velocity in the
range of from 0.5 to 1.5 kg/l/h, more preferably in the range of from 0.5 to
1.2kg/l/h.
The feed may be contacted with the catalyst in the presence of pure
hydrogen. Alternatively, it may be more convenient to use a hydrogen-
containing gas, typically containing greater than 50% vol. hydrogen, more
preferably greater than 60% vol hydrogen. A suitable hydrogen-containing
gas is gas originating from a catalytic reforming plant. Hydrogen-rich gases
from other hydrotreating operations may also be used. The hydrogen-to-oil
ratio is typically in the range of from 300 to 5000 1/kg, preferably from 500
to 2500 1/kg, more preferably 500 to 2000 1/kg, the volume of hydrogen
being expressed as standard litres at 1 bar and 0 °C.
In step (b) the effluent of step (a) is subjected to a pour point reducing
treatment. With a pour point reducing treatment is understood every process
wherein the pour point of the base oil is reduced by more than 10 °C,
preferably more than 20 °C, more preferably more than 25 °C.
The pour point reducing treatment can be performed by means of a so-
called solvent dewaxing process or by means of a catalytic dewaxing
process. Solvent dewaxing is well known to those skilled in the art and
involves admixture of one or more solvents and/or wax precipitating agents
with the base oil precursor fraction and cooling the mixture to a temperature
in the range of from -10 °C to -40 °C, preferably in the range of from -20 °C
to -35 °C, to separate the wax from the oil. The oil containing the wax is
usually filtered through a filter cloth which can be made of textile fibres,
such as cotton; porous metal cloth; or cloth made of synthetic materials.
12

Examples of solvents which may be employed in the solvent dewaxing
process are C3-C6 ketones (e.g. methyl ethyl ketone, methyl isobutyl ketone
and mixtures thereof), Cg-Cjo aromatic hydrocarbons (e.g. toluene),
mixtures of ketones and aromatics (e.g. methyl ethyl ketone and toluene),
autorefrigerative solvents such as liquefied, normally gaseous C2-C4
hydrocarbons such as propane, propylene, butane, butylene and mixtures
thereof. Mixtures of methyl ethyl ketone and toluene or methyl ethyl ketone
and methyl isobutyl ketone are generally preferred. Examples of these and
other suitable solvent dewaxing processes are described in Lubricant Base
Oil and Wax Processing, Avilino Sequeira, Jr, Marcel Dekker Inc., New
York, 1994, Chapter?.
The wax obtained in the solvent dewaxing step (b) is preferably
recycled to step (a).
Alternatively step (b) is performed by means of a catalytic dewaxing
process. Such a process is preferred when for example lower pour points are
desired than which can be achieved with solvent dewaxing. Pour points of
well below -30 °C can be easily achieved. The catalytic dewaxing process
can be performed by any process wherein in the presence of a catalyst and
hydrogen the pour point of the base oil precursor fraction is reduced as
specified above. Suitable dewaxing catalysts are heterogeneous catalysts
comprising a molecular sieve and optionally in combination with a metal
having a hydrogenation function, such as the Group VIII metals. Molecular
sieves, and more suitably intermediate pore size zeolites, have shown a good
catalytic ability to reduce the pour point of the base oil precursor fraction
under catalytic dewaxing conditions. Preferably the intermediate pore size
zeolites have a pore diameter of between 0.35 and 0.8 nm. Suitable
intermediate pore size zeolites are ZSM-5, ZSM-12, ZSM-22, ZSM-23, SSZ-
32, ZSM-35 and ZSM-48. Another preferred group of molecular sieves are
13

the silica-aluminaphosphate (SAPO) materials of which SAPO-11 is most
preferred as for example described in US-A-4859311. ZSM-5 may optionally
be used in its HZSM-5 form in the absence of any Group VIII metal. The
other molecular sieves are preferably used in combination with an added
Group VIII metal. Suitable Group VIII metals are nickel, cobalt, platinum
and palladium. Examples of possible combinations are Ni/ZSM-5, Pt/ZSM-
23, Pd/ZSM-23, Pt/ZSM-48 and Pt/SAPO-11. Further details and examples
of suitable molecular sieves and dewaxing conditions are for example
described in WO-A-9718278, US-A-5053373, US-A-5252527 and
US-A-4574043.
The dewaxing catalyst suitably also comprises a binder. The binder can
be a synthetic or naturally occurring (inorganic) substance, for example clay,
silica and/or metal oxides. Natural occurring clays are for example ofcthe
montmorillonite and kaolin families. The binder is preferably a porous binder
material, for example a refractory oxide of which examples are: alumina,
silica-alumina, silica-magnesia, silica-zirconia, silica-thoria, silica-beryllia,
silica-titania as well as ternary compositions for example silica-alumina-
thoria, silica-alumina-zirconia, silica-alumina-magnesia and silica-magnesia-
zirconia. More preferably a low acidity refractory oxide binder material
which is essentially free of alumina is used. Examples of these binder
materials are silica, zirconia, thanium dioxide, germanium dioxide, boria and
mixtures of two or more of these of which examples are listed above. The
most preferred binder is silica.
A preferred class of dewaxing catalysts comprise intermediate zeolite
crystallites as described above and a low acidity refractory oxide binder
material which is essentially free of alumina as described above, wherein the
surface of the aluminosilicate zeolite cr>'stallites has been modified by
subjecting the aluminosilicate zeolite crystallites to a surface dealumination
treatment. These catalysts may be advantageously used because they allow
14

small amounts of sulphur and nitrogen in the feed. A preferred dealumination
treatment is by contacting an extrudate of the binder and the zeolite with an
aqueous solution of a fluorosilicate salt as described in for example US-A-
5157191 or WO-A-0029511. Examples of suitable dewaxing catalysts as
described above are silica bound and dealuminated Pt/ZSM-5, silica bound
and dealuminated Pt/ZSM-23, silica bound and dealuminated Pt/ZSM-12,
silica bound and dealuminated Pt/ZSM-22, as for example described in WO-
A-0029511 andEP-B-832171.
Catalytic dewaxing conditions are known in the art and typically
involve operating temperatures in the range of from 200 to 500 °C, suitably
from 250 to 400 °C, hydrogen pressures in the range of from 10 to 200 bar.
Although lower pressures between 40 to 70 bar are generally preferred for
the dewaxing step, the pressure will suitably be in the same range as step (a).
Thus when step (a) is performed at a pressure above 70 bar, the dewaxing
step will suitably also be performed at a pressure above 70 bar. The weight
hourly space velocities (WHSV) is suitably in the range of from 0.1 to 10 kg
of oil per litre of catalyst per hour (kg/l/hr), and preferably from 0.2 to
5 kg/l/hr, more preferably from 0.5 to 3 kg/l/hr and hydrogen to oil ratios in
the range of from 100 to 2,000 litres of hydrogen per litre of oil.
Before performing a catalytic dewaxing step hydrogen sulphide and
ammonia formed in step (a) are preferably removed from the effluent of step
(a). This can be performed by for example stripping, preferably using
hydrogen as stripping gas.
The effluent of a catalytic dewaxing step (b) is optionally subjected to
an additional hydrogenation step (c), also referred to as a hydrofinishing step
to saturate any olefins formed in the catalytic dewaxing step. In this
hydrogenation step any (poly)aromatic compounds still present in the
dewaxed oil can be saturated and/or the oxidative stability of base oil may be
improved. This step is suitably carried out at a temperature between 230 and
15

380 °C, a total pressure of between 10 to 250 bar and preferably above 100
bar and more preferably between 120 and 250 bar. The WHSV (Weight
Hourly Space Velocity) ranges from 0.3 to 2 kg of oil per litre of catalyst per
hour (kg/l.h).
The hydrogenation catalyst is suitably a supported catalyst comprising a
dispersed Group VIII metal. Possible Group VIII metals are cobalt, nickel,
palladium and platinum. Cobalt and nickel containing catalysts may also
comprise a Group VIB metal, suitably molybdenum and tungsten. Suitable
carrier or support materials are low acidity amorphous refractory oxides.
Examples of suitable amorphous refractory oxides include inorganic oxides,
such as alumina, silica, titania, zirconia, boria, silica-alumina, fluorided
alumina, fluorided silica-alumina and mixtures of two or more of these.
Examples of suitable hydrogenation catalysts are nickel-molybdenum
containing catalyst such as KF-847 and KF-8010 (AKZO Nobel) M-8-24 and
M-8-25 (BASF), and C-424, DN-190, HDS-3 and HDS-4 (Criterion); nickel-
tungsten containing catalysts such as NI-4342 and NI-4352 (Engelhard) and
C-454 (Criterion); cobalt-molybdenum containing catalysts such as KF-330
(AKZO-Nobel), HDS-22 (Criterion) and HPC-601 (Engelhard). Preferably
platinum containing and more preferably platinum and palladium containing
catalysts are used. Preferred supports for these palladium and/or platinum
containing catalysts are amorphous silica-alumina. Examples of suitable
silica-alumina carriers are disclosed in WO-A-9410263. A preferred catalyst
comprises an alloy of palladium and platinum preferably supported on an
amorphous silica-alumina carrier of which the commercially available
catalyst C-624 of Criterion Catalyst Company (Houston, TX) is an example.
The invention will be illustrated with the following non-limiting
examples.
16

Example 1
An LH-21 catalyst as obtained from Criterion Catalyst Company
(Houston) was loaded into a reactor and retained as a fixed bed. The LH-21
catalyst had a hydrodesulphurisation activity of 32%. The carrier of this
catalyst had a heptane cracking test value of between 320 and 345 °C.
A slack wax, having an oil content of 34.7 wt% (as determined by
solvent dewaxing at -27 °C), nitrogen content of 3 mg/kg, a sulphur content
of 10 mg/kg and a boiling range:

Initial boiling point 347 °C
30 wt% 468 °C
50 wt% 491 °C
95 wt% 591 °C
Final boiling point 596 °C
vas fed to the reactor at a weight hourly space velocit' / of 1 kg/l/h. The feec
was spiked with dimethyldisulphide such that the total content of sulphur in
the feed was 0.1 wt%. Hydrogen was fed to the reactor at an inlet pressure of
50 bar and at a flowrate of 1500 Nl/h. The reaction temperature was 350 "C.
The hydrocarbon product was distilled to remove that fraction of the
product having a boiling point below 370 °C and further refined by solvent
dewaxing at a temperature of -27 °C. The remaining oil was collected. The
yield of oil, expressed as wt% of the feed, was 45 wt%. The viscosity index
was 138. The kinematic viscosity at 100 °C was 5.1 cSt and at 40 °C was 25
cSt. The content of aromatics, including polyaromatics, was below 6
mmol/100 grams of product.
17

Example 2
Example 1 was repeated at 90 bar and at 354 °C. The yield of oil,
expressed as wt% of the feed, was 40 wt%. The viscosity index was 138 and
the content of aromatics, including polyaromatics, was below 2 mmol/100
grams.
Comparative Experiment A
Example 1 was repeated with a commercial fluorided C-454 catalyst as
obtained from the Criterion Catalyst Company at 390 °C. The yield of oil,
expressed as wt% of the feed, was 47 wt%. A darker base oil product was
obtained, wherein the content of mono aromatics was 17.1 mmol/100 g and
the amount of diaromatics and polyaromatics was 11.4 mmol/100 g.
18


WE CLAIM:
1. A process to prepare a base oil starting from a slack wax containing feedstock
by
(a) contacting the feedstock in the presence of hydrogen with a sulphided
hydrodesulphurisation catalyst comprising nickel and tungsten on an
acid amorphous silica-alumina carrier and
(b) performing a pour point reducing step on the effluent of step (a) to
obtain the base oil, wherein the hydrodesulphurisation catalyst is
obtained in a process wherein nickel and tungsten were impregnated on
the acid amorphous silica-alumina carrier in the presence of a chelating
agent.

2. The process as claimed in claim 1, wherein the sulphided
hydrodesulphurisation catalyst has a hydrodesulphurisation activity of higher
than 30%, wherein the hydrodesulphurisation activity is expressed as the yield
in weight percentage of C4-hydrocarbon cracking products when thiophene is
contacted with the catalyst under standard hydrodesulphurisation conditions,
wherein the standard conditions consist of contacting a hydrogen-thiophene
mixture with 200 mg of a 30-80 mesh catalyst at 1 bar and 350 °C, wherein the
hydrogen rate is 54 ml/min and the thiophene concentration is 6 vol% in the
mixture.
3. The process as claimed in claim 2, wherein the hydrodesulphurisation activity
of the catalyst is lower than 40%.
4. The process as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 3, wherein the chelating agent
is nitrilotriacetic acid, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) or
1,2-cyclohexanediamine-N,N,N',N',-tetraacetic acid.
5. The process as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 4, wherein the alumina
content of the hydrodesulphurisation catalyst is between 10 and 60 wt% as
calculated on the carrier alone.
19

6. The process as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 5, wherein the silica-alumina
carrier has an n-heptane cracking test value of between 310 and 360 °C,
wherein the cracking test value is obtained by measuring the temperature at
which 40 wt% of n-heptane is converted when contacted, under standard test
conditions, with a catalyst consisting of said carrier and 0.4 wt% platinum.
7. The process as claimed in claim 6, wherein the silica-alumina carrier has an n-
heptane cracking test value of between 320 and 350 °C.
8. The process as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 7, wherein the catalyst
comprises between 2-10 wt% nickel and between 5-30 wt% tungsten.
9. The process as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 8, wherein the surface area of
the hydrodesulphurisation catalyst is between 200 and 300 m^/g.
10. The process as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 9, wherein the total pore
volume of the hydrodesulphurisation catalyst is above 0.4 ml/g.
11. The process as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 10, wherein between 5 and 40
volume percent of the total pore volume of the hydrodesulphurisation catalyst
is present as pores having a pore diameter of more than 350 A.
12. The process as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 11, wherein the feedstock in
step (a) contains more than 700 ppm sulphur.
13. The process as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 12, wherein the temperature in
step (a) is between 320 and 370 °C.
14. The process as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 13, wherein the pressure in
step (a) is between 40 and 90 bar.
15. The process as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 14, wherein step (b) is
performed by means of solvent dewaxing.
16. The process as claimed in claim 15, wherein the wax as obtained by solvent
dewaxing is recycled to step (a).
17. The process as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 14, wherein step (b) is
performed by means of catalytic dewaxing.
18. The process as claimed in claim 17, wherein the effluent of step (b) is subjected
to a hydrogenation step (c).
20

19. The process as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 18, wherein the slack wax has
a mean boiling point of between 400 and 600 °C and an oil content of between
0 and 50 wt% as determined by ASTM D721.
20. The process as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 19, wherein the difference
between the temperature at which 10 wt% of the slack wax containing
feedstock is recovered and the temperature at which 90 wt% of the slack wax
containing feedstock is recovered is between 80 and 160 °C.
21. The process as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 19, wherein the difference
between the temperature at which 10 wt% of the slack wax containing
feedstock is recovered and the temperature at which 90 wt% of the slack wax
containing feedstock is recovered is between 170 and 300 °C.
22. The process as claimed in claim 21, wherein two or more base oils are prepared
by isolating two or more intermediate fractions from the effluent of step (a) and
performing step (b) on the isolated fractions to obtain the different base oils.
23. The process as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 22, wherein the base oil as
obtained in step (b) has a viscosity index of between 120 and 150.
24. The process as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 23, wherein the catalyst in
step (a) also comprises of up to 8 wt% of a large pore molecular sieve.
25. The process as claimed in claim 24, wherein the large pore molecular sieve is a
Y, ultrastable Y, ZSM-12, zeolite beta or mordenite molecular sieve.

21

Documents:

1921-chenp-2003 abstract.pdf

1921-chenp-2003 claims-duplicate.pdf

1921-chenp-2003 claims.pdf

1921-chenp-2003 correspondences others.pdf

1921-chenp-2003 correspondences po.pdf

1921-chenp-2003 description (complete)-duplicate.pdf

1921-chenp-2003 description (complete).pdf

1921-chenp-2003 form-1.pdf

1921-chenp-2003 form-18.pdf

1921-chenp-2003 form-26.pdf

1921-chenp-2003 form-3.pdf

1921-chenp-2003 form-5.pdf

1921-chenp-2003 others.pdf

1921-chenp-2003 pct.pdf

1921-chenp-2003 petition.pdf


Patent Number 230414
Indian Patent Application Number 1921/CHENP/2003
PG Journal Number 13/2009
Publication Date 27-Mar-2009
Grant Date 26-Feb-2009
Date of Filing 05-Dec-2003
Name of Patentee SHELL INTERNATIONALE RESEARCH MAATSCHAPPIJ B.V
Applicant Address CAREL VAN BYLANDTLAAN 30, NL-2596 HR THE HAGUE,
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 BENARD GERARD ROUTE DEPARTMENTALE NO. 3, F-76650 PETIT COURONNE,
2 DUPREY, ERIC ROUTE DEPARTMENTALE NO. 3, F-76650 PETIT COURONNE,
3 VAN VEEN, JOHANNES ANTHONIUS, ROBERT, BADHUISWEG 3, NL-1031 CM AMSTERDAM,
PCT International Classification Number C10G65/04
PCT International Application Number PCT/EP02/06301
PCT International Filing date 2002-06-07
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 01401491.4 2001-06-07 EUROPEAN UNION