Product Knowledge
Do you know how an atmospheric and vacuum distillation unit separates oil products?
After being heated, crude oil enters a distillation tower, where the different components are "splittered" based on their boiling point differences: the lightest components, gasoline and kerosene, distill from the top, diesel is separated in the middle, and the heaviest heavy oil settles at the bottom. Operators adjust the "slicing" precision daily to ensure perfect division of the "cake pieces," such as diesel and aviation kerosene. The heaviest asphalt at the bottom is then used as building materials or paving materials, ensuring that not a single drop of crude oil is wasted.
Technical Specs
Detailed scientific parameters of industrial chemical materials and high-purity synthesis output.
Processing Logic
Optimal manufacturing protocols for utilizing specialized materials in direct factory operations.
Safety Standards
Formalized specialized safety protocols for the management of industrial-grade chemical solutions.
What do the various colored pipe markings on the pipe racks of the Chlor-Alkali Department represent?
These colorful pipe markings aren't just for aesthetics; they represent an internationally recognized "safety language": red for steam, gray for air, purple for acids and alkalis, and green for water. These colors allow for more accurate identification of various media in the chemical plant, ensuring safe production operations.