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Petrochemicals

Petrochemicals are the foundation of modern materials and energy systems. They are widely used to produce fuels, solvents, polymers, synthetic rubbers, fibers, coatings, detergents, and countless industrial intermediates. Across refining and petrochemical operations, small shifts in composition—such as hydrocarbon distribution, sulfur/nitrogen species, trace metals, water/halides, or additive carryover—can strongly affect process efficiency, catalyst life, product quality, and regulatory compliance.

We provide analytical testing and materials characterization for petrochemical feedstocks, process streams, intermediates, and finished products, supporting R&D, incoming QC, production monitoring, supplier qualification, and root-cause investigations. Our multi-technique approach delivers clear, decision-ready reporting—from rapid screening to deep unknown identification.

Why Testing Matters for Petrochemicals

Petrochemical quality and process reliability depend on controlling:

  • Hydrocarbon distribution and compositional fingerprint (process control and product consistency)

  • Impurities and trace species (sulfur/nitrogen/oxygenates—method and matrix dependent)

  • Volatiles and residual components impacting safety, odor, and downstream compatibility

  • Trace metals and ionic contaminants that poison catalysts or accelerate degradation/corrosion

  • Residues, deposits, and foulants linked to downtime, plugging, or heat-transfer loss

  • Supplier/feed variability and equivalency for procurement and blending decisions

Our lab supports both routine monitoring and targeted investigations with orthogonal methods designed for complex hydrocarbon matrices.

FAQs

Yes, within method and matrix limits. Heavy fractions may require different prep and measurement strategies; we’ll recommend the best approach.

Yes—provide your acceptance limits and any preferred standards or internal methods.

We can run a structured unknown-ID workflow using orthogonal tools (GC-MS/LC-MS/FTIR/Raman + ICP/IC as needed).

Yes. We identify whether residues are organic/inorganic, characterize particles, and help differentiate process-derived material vs external contamination.

Very. A known-good stream or “before change” sample makes conclusions faster and more defensible.

Often yes (project-dependent). Trace metals/ions screening plus comparative stream analysis can help identify likely sources.

Have additional questions?