RI 3607 Survey Of Fuel Consumption At Refineries In 1940 - Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
G. R. Hopkins
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
9
File Size:
3571 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1942

Abstract

The average heat requirement per barrel of crude processed in the United states rose from 555,000 B. t. u. in 1939 to 579,000 B. t. u. in 1940, although crude runs increased from 1,237,840,000 barrels to 1,294,162,000 barrels in that period. Thus the almost invariable rule that the average amount of heat needed to refine a barrel of crude oil declines when total crude runs to stills increases was broken. (See fig. 1.) The reasons underlying the apparent loss in fuel efficiency in 1940 are quite obscure. There is little question but that the principle of heat exchange, the most important fuel saver, was used as extensively in 1940, as in 1939. A few companies replaced purchased power with electricity made at their plants, but for the country as a whole purchased electricity increased 7 percent, as compared with a 5-percent gain in crude runs to stills. Furthermore, the premise -the more complex the products the more fuel required -does not hold, as the yield of ?complex" products, including gasoline, declined in 1940.
Citation

APA: G. R. Hopkins  (1942)  RI 3607 Survey Of Fuel Consumption At Refineries In 1940 - Summary

MLA: G. R. Hopkins RI 3607 Survey Of Fuel Consumption At Refineries In 1940 - Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1942.

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