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Company type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Engineering |
Predecessor | Universal Oil Products National Hydrocarbon Company |
Founded | 1914; 111 years ago (1914) |
Headquarters | , United States |
Number of locations | 30 |
Key people | Rajesh Gattupalli(President) |
Products | Catalysts Adsorbents Process Technology |
Number of employees | 5000[1] |
Parent | Honeywell |
Website | www |
Honeywell UOP, formerly known asUOP LLC orUniversal Oil Products, is an American multi-national company developing and delivering technology to the petroleumrefining, gas processing,petrochemical production, and major manufacturing industries.
The company's roots date back to 1914, when the revolutionary Dubbsthermal cracking process created the technological foundation for today's modern refining industry.[citation needed] In the ensuing decades, UOP engineers generated thousands of patents, leading to important advances in process technology, profitability consultation, and equipment design.[2]
UOP was founded in 1914 to exploit the market potential of patents held by inventors Jesse A. Dubbs and his son, Carbon Petroleum (C. P.) Dubbs. Perhaps because he was born in Pennsylvania oil country, Jesse Dubbs was enamored with the oil business. He even named his son Carbon after one of the elemental constituents of oil. Later, Carbon added the P. to make his name "euphonious," he said. People started calling him "Petroleum" for fun, and the name stuck. C. P.'s son and grandson were also named Carbon, but each had a different middle initial.[3][4]
When founded in 1914 it was a privately held firm known as theNational Hydrocarbon Company.J. Ogden Armour provided initial seed money and kept the firm going the first years it lost money.[5][4] Most of the losses were incurred during lengthy legal battles with petroleum firms that were using technology patented by Dubbs.[citation needed]
In 1919 the firm's name became Universal Oil Products.[citation needed]
By 1931, petroleum firms saw a possible competitive advantage to owning UOP. A consortium of firms banded together to purchase the firm. These firms were Shell Oil Company, Standard Oil Company of California, Standard Oil Company of Indiana, Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, The Texas Company, and N. V. de Bataafsche Petroleum Maatschappij. This worried oil firms that were not part of the group and it helped prompt the Justice Department to begin an investigation of this arrangement as a possible violation of antitrust laws.[citation needed]
The oil firms placed the assets of UOP into a trust to support theAmerican Chemical Society (ACS). In 1959 UOP went public and the income from that sale still provides monies to ACS to administer grants to universities worldwide.[3]
In the 1970s UOP was acquired by The Signal Companies, which merged with Allied Corporation in 1985, becomingAlliedSignal.[6]
In August 1988Union Carbide Corporation and AlliedSignal formed a joint venture combining the latter's wholly owned subsidiary, UOP Inc., and the Catalyst, Adsorbents and Process Systems (CAPS) business of Union Carbide.
AlliedSignal acquiredHoneywell in 1999 and assumed the latter's name. In 2005, what was now known as Honeywell acquired Union Carbide's stake in UOP, making it again a wholly owned subsidiary. The reported payment to Union Carbide was $835 million, valuing UOP at $1.6 billion.[7]
The UOP Riverside research and development laboratory inMcCook, Illinois was conceived in 1921 byHiram J. Halle, the chief executive officer of Universal Oil Products (now simply UOP), as a focal point where the best and brightest scientists could create new products and provide scientific support for the oil refining industry. Between 1921 and 1955, Riverside research resulted in 8,790 U.S. and foreign patents and provided the foundation on which UOP built its success.[3]
The company benefited immensely by the addition to its research staff of ProfessorVladimir Ipatieff, famous Russian scientist known internationally for his work in high-pressure catalysis. His contribution in catalytic chemistry gave UOP a position of leadership in the development ofcatalysis as applied to petroleum processing, the first being catalyticpolymerization. Vladimir Haensel, a student of Ipatieff’s, joined UOP and developed Platforming in the 1950s. This process used very small amounts ofplatinum as a catalyst for the high yield of high-octane gasoline from petroleum-based feeds.[8]
In 1963 Universal Oil Products purchased a chemical plant inEast Rutherford, New Jersey. The plant was used for solvent recovery operations from waste chemicals. Operations ended in 1979, and ownership of the site was retained by Honeywell. Some of the chemical operations had contaminated adjacent soils, groundwater and waterways in theNew Jersey Meadowlands. TheNew Jersey Department of Environmental Protection and theU.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ordered cleanup of the plant site, and in 1983 EPA designated the plant as aSuperfund site. Honeywell signed agreements and orders to cooperate with EPA in the cleanup operations. As of 2023, several stages of the cleanup have been completed. Remediation of the adjoining wetlands and plans for long-term site maintenance are pending.[6]
The Riverside facility was recognized as aNational Historic Chemical Landmark by theAmerican Chemical Society in 1995.[3]
Distillation is the most common way to separate chemicals with differentboiling points. The greater the difference in boiling points, the easier it is to do. However, when boiling points are too similar, this isn't feasible. Adsorption separation might be possible. In adsorption separation, a mixture of chemicals flows past a porous solid called the adsorbent and some chemicals tend to "hang out" longer. A valid analogy is to imagine a busy street with people walking in the same direction past great places to eat. The hungriest people will tend to stop right away. The people that were pretty full will make it far down the street. Now imagine flooding the whole town with water and everyone runs out where you can collect them according to how hungry they were. In technical terms the liquid flush is called the desorbent.
This type of separation was first commonly used in the laboratory to separate small test samples. UOP pioneered a method of separating large volumes of chemicals. They call the counter-current embodiment of it the Sorbex family of processes.[9] These are the major ones designed by UOP:
Parex: separation ofpara-xylene from a mixture ofxyleneisomers
MX Sorbex: separation ofmeta-xylene from a mixed of xylene isomers
Molex:linear paraffins from branched and cyclic hydrocarbons
Olex: olefins from paraffins
Cresex: para-cresol or meta-cresol from other cresol isomers
Cymex: para-cymene or meta-cymene from other cymene isomers
Sarex: fructose from mixed sugars
In 2008, UOP revealed its Ecofining process which takesvegetable oils, orlipids, and converts them into replacements for diesel and jet fuels. The resultant fuels from this refining process are indistinguishable from existing fossil-based petro-diesels and jet fuels.[10]
Most of UOP's work is not known to the general public since most applications are within refineries and petrochemical plants. However, one technology UOP helped develop is familiar to automobile owners. During the 1970s, UOP worked on pioneering a combinedmufflercatalytic converter. To help publicize their work they sponsoredCanAm andFormula One teams. The race cars used were developed byShadow Racing Cars. Many race fans were drawn to the team's innovative designs and underdog status. UOP finally achieved a goal when California adopted the catalytic converter after the UOP governmental relations rep, Donald Gazzaniga, helped push legislation through the state Senate and Assembly.[11]