1938
DOI: 10.6028/jres.021.008
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Separation, by distillation with acetic acid, of the aromatic hydrocarbons from the fraction of a midcontinent petroleum boiling between 154 and 162 C

Abstract: A method is presented for the separation, by distillation with an azeotropie agent, acetic acid, of narrow-boiling petroleum fractions into concentrates containing (1) a mixture of paraffins and naphthenes and (2) the aromatic hydrocarbons. This procedure simplifies the subsequent task of separating the individual components and is applicable to p etrol eum fractions boiling in the range 130 0 to 175 0 C. Data are given on the behavior of synthetic mixtures of n-nonane and isopropylbenzene with acetic acid. Ex… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 25 publications
(45 reference statements)
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“…Similar behavior has been found in azeotropic distillations of other oil fractions with acetic acid [25,26].…”
supporting
confidence: 80%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Similar behavior has been found in azeotropic distillations of other oil fractions with acetic acid [25,26].…”
supporting
confidence: 80%
“…A binary mixture in which the paraffin hydrocarbon is the lower-,; boiling component and the naphthene the higher can usually be readily resolved by azeotropic distillation [23,25,26]. Methyl alcohol was selected as the azeotropic agent here because it was known to form azeotropic mixtures with both naphthenes and paraffins [11,3,24,27,28] and it had served to concentrate naphthenic material from the fraction boiling at 91.8 0 C (see sections II and III).…”
Section: Resolution Of the Materials Boiling Between 90° And 912°mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rose and W11ite [19] have described in detail the separation of the aromatic hydrocarbons from narrow-boiling fractions of petroleum of the range 154 0 to 162 0 C by azeotropic distillation with acetic acid (boiling point 118 0 C).…”
Section: -Diagrams Illustrating the Separation Of Aromatic Hydrocarbomentioning
confidence: 99%