j - o ^ V >"" ^-Μ
681,000,000 POUNDS A YEAR ^.ViV-^'V: '- ^?^?ί^^5ν^-\ϊ'-
..ENGINEERED BY KELLOGG Annual capacity of ethylene manufactur ing or recovery plants completed or under construction b y Trie M . W . Kellogg Com pany and subsidiaries—in the United States, Great Britain, Italy—will add u p to 681 milliori pounds! If you are thinking of new or expanded facilities to meet pre dicted demands for ethylene, consider this Kellogg experience^—especially as i t con cerns t h e economics of obtaining high yields with exceptionally high purity. M . W . Kellogg is prepared t o engineer and boild plants now to meet any future situation in t h e manufacture of ethylene or recovery from refinery streams, a n d t o guarantee optimum returns. With Kellogg's
PETROCHEMICAL
steam-pyrolysis process, manufacturing plants can be designed for the continuous production of over 9 9 % purity ethylene from a variety of feedstocks, including ethane, propane, naphtha, natural gas, casinghead or natural gasoline, gas oil, even reduced crude. In ethylene recovery from various petroleum processes, Kellogg engineering means low initial investment and'Jlow- operating costs. For detailed information, write for 8-page booklet- Interested firms arc also invited to review, with M. W. Kellogg process en gineers, the cost d a t a Kellogg h a s accumu lated on ethylene manufacturing in pilot plant and commercial production.
PROCESSES
AND
PLANTS
CHEMICAL PROCESS DIVISION T H E M . W. KELLOGG COMPANY, 711 T H I R D AVENUE, NEW YORK 17, Ν- Υ. A SUBSIDIARY OF PULLMAN INCORPORATED The Canadian Kellogg Company Kellogg Pan American Corporation,
Limited, Toronto · Kellogg International New York · Companhia Kellogg Brasileira,
Corporation, London · Société Kellogg, Paris Rio de Janeiro · Compania Kellogg de Venezuela, Caracat
MAY
7, 1956 C & E N
2305