What is the difference between RFCC and FCC in refinery?
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In a refinery, FCC and RFCC are both cracking units used to convert heavy oil into lighter valuable products like gasoline, LPG, and diesel.
The main difference is the type of feedstock they process and how “heavy” that feed is.
FCC (Fluid Catalytic Cracking)
Purpose
Converts relatively lighter heavy oils into:
Typical Feed
These feeds are cleaner and contain:
Characteristics
Main Products
RFCC (Residue Fluid Catalytic Cracking)
Purpose
Processes much heavier refinery residue to maximize valuable products.
Typical Feed
These feeds are much dirtier and heavier:
Characteristics
Main Products
Simple Difference
Easy Operator-Level Understanding
Think of it like this:
RFCC is basically a tougher, heavier-duty version of FCC designed to extract value from low-quality residual oil.
Key Operational Difference for Operators
In RFCC units operators usually monitor more carefully:
Because residue feed creates:
Typical Refinery Use
Examples: