Process Control in Jet A Fuel Production

Introduction

Modern Jet A production demands tight control of compositional variables that drive critical product specifications (smoke point, flash point, freeze point) and overall product stability. Analysis via laboratory methods (e.g. ASTM D1322, D56/D93, D5972/D2386, D1655 compliance) ensures certification, but lags the overall production process of Jet A. HORIBA Process Instruments’ brand of Process Raman analyzers provides continuous, online composition-based measurements that provide critical Jet A quality properties in real time. The result is faster feedback to unit operations, reduced property variability, fewer off-spec events, a reduced laboratory burden while maintaining conformance to certification testing and an increase in overall production efficiency.

Jet A Production Control Challenges

Jet A is cut primarily from the kerosene fraction upstream, then hydrotreated and in some specific refinery configurations, selectively blended to meet ASTM D1655 requirements. Key quality drivers include total aromatics, polycyclic/naphthalenic contents, sulfur impurities, and distillation profile.

Control Pain Points for Jet A Production:

  1. Variability in aromatics and naphthalenes from crude oil shifts and hydrotreater severity changes impart a direct impact on final fuel smoke point and fuel combustor performance.
  2.  Flash point margins are sensitive to light end entrainment during kerosene cut control and blending.
  3.  Freeze point headroom is strongly impacted by paraffinic and isoparaffinic balance and trace heavy components in the final Jet A fuel.
  4.  Sampling lag times: Lab sampling cycles are slower than process dynamics, leading to an innate delay between the two, which is exacerbated even further during transition, crude switches, or after unit upsets.
  5.  Cost of Jet A re-blending and giveaways when over-conservative blending margins are used to compensate for slow feedback for processes.

Why HORIBA Process Raman?

Process Raman is a non-invasive optical method that measures molecular vibrational fingerprints. Just like humans have fingerprints that are self-identifying, molecules also have clearly defined and well-known fingerprints with Raman spectroscopy. In Jet A fuels, diagnostically rich spectroscopic
features for aromatic, aliphatic, isoparaffinic, etc. classes of molecules can be used to quantitatively track fuel composition and important fuel properties through its processing in a refinery. These spectral features in Raman spectroscopy are stable and linear over refinery operating ranges. Raman spectroscopy is mainly insensitive to temperature changes, water presence, bubbles, particulate matter, etc. allowing minimal sample preparation or conditioning. HORIBA Process Raman unites continuously collected Raman spectra with chemometric models calibrated to site-specific reference data. Each HORIBA PI-200 system is calibrated and modeled using site-specific reference data, ensuring consistency with your refinery’s own measurements. This enables direct concentrations (e.g. total aromatics, naphthalene indexes) and fuel properties (smoke point, flash point, etc.) to be predicted from compositional Raman fingerprints. HORIBA Process Raman outputs are communicated to the refinery’s DCS/PLC via standard protocols to accomplish advanced process control in Jet A fuel production. With rapid, industry-leading measurements of 30-90 seconds for Jet A streams, HORIBA Process Raman’s analyzers follow process changes in real time, continuously, 24-7. Common installation points for process measurement in Jet A applications are the hydrotreater outlet, kerosene side-draws, Jet A blend headers/rundowns, and product tank recirculation lines.

In-Line Process Raman Monitoring of Jet A Fuel Streams

Figure 1: In-Line Process Raman Monitoring of Jet A Fuel Streams

Benefits of HORIBA Process Raman for Jet A Production

HORIBA Process Raman analyzers are better thought of as a long-term control asset for Jet A production than just another analytical instrument.

Return on Investment
  • Giveaway Savings: Eliminate over-treating and over-blending by tightening costly property margins for aromatics, smoke point, freeze point, and flash point confidently.
  • Optimize Unit Efficiencies: In hydrotreating, hydrogen is among the most expensive consumables in the process. Enable finetuned hydrogen management and consumption through optimizing your hydrotreater’s operating conditions.
  • Fewer Off-specs & Re-blends: Off-spec Jet A batches trigger costly and disruptive tank reblends. HORIBA Process Raman converts reactive QC to proactive, predictive control for Jet A blending.

 

Operational Performance
  • Faster Feedback: Seconds-level updates versus minute-long cycles seen with traditional online analyzers and hourly/daily lab cycles.
  • Reduced Variability: Tighter control of cut and blend decisions and tighter control of aromatics content reduces property scatter for smoke, flash, and freeze point specs.
  • Optimized Property Margins: Maintain spec headroom without excessive giveaway (Example: Keep aromatic content just below the limit while preserving your smoke point targets.)

Real Results from HORIBA Process Raman for Jet A Customers

Figure 2: Real Results from HORIBA Process Raman for Jet A Customers

Conclusion: Translating Process Insights into Measurable Returns

By transforming Jet A production from a sampled to a continuously measured process, HORIBA’s PI-200 Raman analyzer enables predictive control of key quality properties. The result is reduced variability, minimized giveaway, and fewer reblends while maintaining ASTM compliance. Over time, the analyzer’s stability further reduces laboratory sampling frequency and frees resources, all while sustaining full Jet A certification confidence.

Related Brochures

PI-200-I
PI-200-I

Multi-channel Process Raman Analyzer

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