Results 1-10 of 32 for Article Date:03-01-2012. (0.026787 seconds)
relevance / newest first / oldest first
Canadian oil sands producers have formed a new alliance named Canada's Oil Sands Innovation Alliance (COSIA), seeking to accelerate the pace of ... View this article
Because our memories are imperfect and we don't want to risk making mistakes, we learned to jot down brief reminder notes on paper. ... View this article
New tools enable refiners to fine-tune refinery configuration and maximize profits. View this article
Boost refinery reliability by controlling potential amine recycle loops. View this article
Qatargas has signed an engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract with Samsung Engineering Ltd. for ... View this article
Linear program (LP) modeling can provide an unbiased, cost-based preview of a refinery or petrochemical plant design. View this article
In this issue of HPInsight, workforce, fuel quality and capacity overhang are a few of the challenges that the hydrocarbon processing industry (HPI ... View this article
Portable flowmeter offers rapid response. The new DXN portable ultrasonic flow and heat meter is said to be built on a truly ... View this article
A blend of art and science with a history worth recounting. View this article
Improve furnace temperature and sulfur recovery. View this article
1 | 2 | 3 | 4
A searchable database of project activity in the global hydrocarbon processing industry
Engineers and designers are highly skilled individuals. Forcing them to enter design changes using tables, forms and spreadsheets is unproductive and uneconomical, and it increases the likelihood of human error—this is the way that most instrumentation software systems currently work. For too long, software vendors have denied engineers and designers the simple practicality of a graphical visual engineering interface with “drag and drop” capability and inbuilt intelligence, ensuring changes are automatically replicated into all the associated data and databases.
D. GIBSON, AVEVA
Compared to the rest of the world, how long will the US hold its "ethane advantage" of cheap petrochemical feedstock?
Up to 5 years 29%
Up to 10 years 52%
Longer 19%