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API Oil Separators

An API oil-water separator is a device that uses gravity to separate oil, suspended solids, and wastewater into three layers. The oil rises to the top and is skimmed off, the solids settle on the bottom and are removed, and the treated wastewater is in the middle layer. Parallel plate separators, which include tilted plates to improve coalescing of oil droplets, are also used. The first API separator was installed in 1933. Now they are widely used to treat oily wastewater from refineries and other industrial sites. Other applications also use oil-water separation, such as bilge water treatment on ships and cleanup of oil leaks at electrical substations.
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
1K views3 pages

API Oil Separators

An API oil-water separator is a device that uses gravity to separate oil, suspended solids, and wastewater into three layers. The oil rises to the top and is skimmed off, the solids settle on the bottom and are removed, and the treated wastewater is in the middle layer. Parallel plate separators, which include tilted plates to improve coalescing of oil droplets, are also used. The first API separator was installed in 1933. Now they are widely used to treat oily wastewater from refineries and other industrial sites. Other applications also use oil-water separation, such as bilge water treatment on ships and cleanup of oil leaks at electrical substations.
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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API oil-water separator

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search An API oil-water separator is a device designed to separate gross amounts of oil and suspended solids from the wastewater effluents of oil refineries, petrochemical plants, chemical plants, natural gas processing plants and other industrial sources. The name is derived from the fact that such separators are designed according to standards published by the American Petroleum Institute (API). [1][2]

Contents
[hide]

1 Description of the design and operation 2 History 3 Other oil-water separation applications 4 See also 5 References

[edit] Description of the design and operation

A typical gravimetric API separator

The API separator is a gravity separation device designed by using Stokes Law to define the rise velocity of oil droplets based on their density and size. The design of the separator is based on the specific gravity difference between the oil and the wastewater because that difference is much smaller than the specific gravity difference between the suspended solids and water. Based on that design criterion, most of the suspended solids will settle to the bottom of the separator as a sediment layer, the oil will rise to top of the separator, and the wastewater will be the middle layer between the oil on top and the solids on the bottom.[2] Typically, the oil layer is skimmed off and subsequently re-processed or disposed of, and the bottom sediment layer is removed by a chain and flight scraper (or similar device) and a sludge pump. The water layer is sent to further treatment consisting usually of a dissolved air flotation (DAF) unit for further removal of any residual oil and then to some type of biological treatment unit for removal of undesirable dissolved chemical compounds.

A typical parallel plate separator Parallel plate separators are similar to API separators but they include tilted parallel plate assemblies (also known as parallel packs).[2] The underside of each parallel plate provides more surface for suspended oil droplets to coalesce into larger globules. Any sediment slides down the topside of each parallel plate. Such separators still depend upon the specific gravity between the suspended oil and the water. However, the parallel plates enhance the degree of oil-water separation. The result is that a parallel plate separator requires significantly less space than a conventional API separator to achieve the same degree of separation.

[edit] History
The API separator was developed by the API and the Rex Chain Belt Company (now USFilter Envirex Products). The first API separator was installed in 1933 at the Atlantic Refining Company (ARCO) refinery in Philadelphia. Since that time, virtually all of the refineries worldwide have installed API separators in their wastewater treatment plants. The majority of those refineries installed the API separators using the original design

based on the specific gravity difference between oil and water. However, many refineries now use plastic parallel plate packing to enhance the gravity separation.[1][2]

[edit] Other oil-water separation applications


There are other applications requiring oil-water separation. For example:

Oily water separators (OWS) for separating oil from the bilge water accumulated in ships as required by the international MARPOL Convention.[3][4] Oil and water separators are commonly used in electrical substations. The transformers found in substations use a large amount of oil for cooling purposes. Moats are constructed surrounding unenclosed substations to catch any leaked oil, but these will also catch rainwater. Oil and water separators therefore provide a quicker and easier cleanup of an oil leak.[5]

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