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Have you ever stopped to think about what happens between crude oil coming out of the ground and the gasoline that fuels your car? Well, there is quite sophisticated engineering behind all of this, and it all begins with an impressive structure: the oil distillation tower.
These towers operate in a very interesting way. Crude oil is heated to approximately 400°C in giant furnaces until it turns into vapor, then it enters through the base of the tower. As it rises, the vapor naturally cools, and here’s the crucial detail: each type of molecule condenses at a different height depending on its boiling point. In the colder upper regions, you collect light products like cooking gas and gasoline. In the hotter, lower sections, heavier products like diesel and asphalt residues remain. It’s basically a continuous and precise thermal separation.
But then a problem arises: often, crude oil contains more heavy molecules than the market actually needs. To solve this, there is cracking, which is literally breaking down these large and less valuable molecules into smaller, more commercial ones like gasoline and diesel. This happens in special units using heat and chemical catalysts. The process is so important that the ANP (National Agency of Petroleum) monitors everything strictly.
From a well-operated oil distillation tower, you can extract several products: LPG (cooking gas), gasoline for passenger cars, aviation kerosene for airplanes, and diesel for trucks and industry. A standard barrel contains 159 liters, but here’s the interesting part: after refining and cracking, the total volume increases slightly due to molecular expansion.
Proportions vary depending on the type of oil, but on average, one barrel yields about 46% gasoline, 26% diesel, 9% kerosene, and 19% other derivatives like asphalt. Now, regarding the environmental side: refineries are heavy facilities, emitting gases and effluents, so they use complex water treatment and chimney filtration systems. Environmental licensing is quite strict, and companies must follow regulations from the Ministry of the Environment. Many modern refineries are investing in cleaner technologies and energy efficiency, including recovering sulfur as a byproduct.
All this complexity of the oil distillation tower and its processes is essential to keep the national supply running. It’s engineering that literally moves the world.