(228a) Comparison of the Acceptability of Various Oil Shale Processes | AIChE

(228a) Comparison of the Acceptability of Various Oil Shale Processes

Authors 

Burnham, A. K. - Presenter, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
McConaghy, J. R. - Presenter, Antero Engineering, LLC


While oil shale has the potential to provide a substantial fraction of our nation's liquid fuels for many decades, cost and environmental acceptability are significant issues to be addressed. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) examined a variety of oil shale processes between the mid 1960s and the mid 1990s, starting with retorting of rubble chimneys created from nuclear explosions and ending with in-situ retorting of deep, large volumes of oil shale. In between, it examined modified-in-situ combustion retorting of rubble blocks created by conventional mining and blasting, in-situ retorting by radio-frequency energy, aboveground combustion retorting, and aboveground processing by hot-solids recycle (HRS). This paper reviews various types of processes in both generic and specific forms and outlines some of the tradeoffs for large-scale development activities. Particular attention is given to hot-recycled-solids processes that maximize yield and minimize oil shale residence time during processing and true in-situ processes that generate oil over several years that is more similar to natural petroleum.

This work was performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by the University of California, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, under Contract No. W-7405-Eng-48. UCRL-ABS-216985.

Checkout

This paper has an Extended Abstract file available; you must purchase the conference proceedings to access it.

Checkout

Do you already own this?

Pricing

Individuals

2006 Spring Meeting & 2nd Global Congress on Process Safety
AIChE Pro Members $150.00
AIChE Graduate Student Members Free
AIChE Undergraduate Student Members Free
AIChE Explorer Members $225.00
Non-Members $225.00
6th Natural Gas Utilization only
AIChE Pro Members $100.00
Fuels and Petrochemicals Division Members Free
AIChE Graduate Student Members Free
AIChE Undergraduate Student Members Free
AIChE Explorer Members $150.00
Non-Members $150.00