Natural Gas Quality Enhancement: Training Report ON
Natural Gas Quality Enhancement: Training Report ON
ON
DURATION: 24/05/2018-25/06/2018
2. Piping:
Many wells are tied to a platform, and then from those multiple
platforms, the gas is tied together into large pipelines that go to the
gas plant for further processing.
3. Compression Stations:
The compression stations also called booster stations which are there
to pump the gas to make it move into the gas plant. In addition to this
these stations usually have inlet suction separators (scrubbers) to
remove condensed liquids. Some stations even have dehydration
facilities to reduce corrosion and mitigate hydrate formation. The
booster horsepower ranges from 10 to 1000.
4.Pigging
Pigging is the process of forcing a solid object through a pipeline. The
process involves inserting the pig, via a pig launcher, into the pipelines
and removing it by use of a pig receiver. Pigging is used to perform any
of the following functions:
1. Provide a barrier between liquid products that use the same pipeline
2. Check wall thickness and find damaged sections of lines
3. Remove debris such as dirt and wax from lines
4. Provide a known volume for calibrating flow meters
5. Coat inner pipe walls with inhibitors
6. Remove condensed hydrocarbon liquids and water in two phase
pipelines
INLET RECEIVING:
Gas and liquids that enter the gas plant pass emergency shutdown
valves, which
isolate the plant from incoming streams and pig receivers, and then go
to inlet
receiving, where condensed phases drop out.
The very first liquid-gas separations occurs in slug-catcher.
Slug Catcher:
A slug catcher is gas liquid separator cum liquid reservoir separator,
where separation typically occurs between the heavy liquid
hydrocarbons and the gaseous lighter ends i.e. the gas or vapor is
separated from the liquids. The slug catcher has been sized so as to
allow the separation of the maximum condensate flow from natural
gas.
Slug catchers are critical because downstream gas processing units
rely on a continuous gas stream free of liquids, even when surges of
liquid enter the plant problems occur. A slug catcher is a gas−liquid
separator sized to hold the biggest slug a plant will experience.
Depending upon slug catcher design, inlet receiving handles just slugs
or combines slug catching with liquid storage.
Separator principles:
Separators also called scrubbers, knock out pots, inlet receivers.
Effective
phase separators protect downstream equipment designed to process
a single
phase. It is the critical first step in most processes in gas plants and
typically is
a simple vessel with internal components to enhance separation.
Gas-liquid separators:
Separator vessel orientation can be vertical or horizontal. Vertical
separators are
most commonly used when the liquid-to-gas ratio is low or gas flow
rates are
low. They are preferred offshore because they occupy less platform
area. However,
gas flow is upwards and opposes the flow of liquid droplets. Therefore,
vertical separators can be bigger and, thus, more costly than horizontal
separators. Hazira has horizontal separators.
Vapor-liquid separator is one of the most common types of process
equipment in natural gas processing plants. A vapor-liquid separator is
a vessel into which a liquid and vapor mixture is fed and wherein the
liquid is separated by gravity, falls to the bottom of the vessel, and is
withdrawn. The vapor travels upward at a design velocity which
minimizes the entrainment of any liquid droplets in the vapor as it exits
the top of the vessel. A vapor-liquid separator might consist simply of
an empty vessel, which causes the fluid velocities in the entering pipe
to be reduced by enlarging the cross-sectional area of flow. Usually,
however the separator includes internal parts, to promote separation of
the process, such as:
Where,
Re = reynold number, dimensionless
μ = viscosity, cP
Iteration is needed to solve this problem since the terminal velocity (VT)
is involved in
both equations. Thus, the simplified equation is presented to avoid trial
and error
solution.
2. Intermediate Law
This law is applied for Reynolds number between 2 and 500.
3. Newton’s Law
Newton’s Law is applicable for a Reynolds number range of approximately
500-
200,000. Use value of 0.44 for drag coefficient (C’), thus the terminal
velocity is
For the Newton’s Law region, the upper limit to the Reynolds number is
200,000 and
KCR = 18.13.
Gas Sweetening/Treating Unit:
Gas treating involves reduction of the “acid gases” carbon dioxide (CO2)
and hydrogen sulfide (H2S), along with other sulfur species, to sufficiently
low levels to meet contractual specifications or permit additional
processing in the plant without corrosion and plugging problems.
Before going into the concept of GSU following questions comes in mind
for sure which needs to be answered:
1. Why are the acid gases a problem?
Answer: Hydrogen sulfide is highly toxic, and in the presence of water it
forms a weak,
corrosive acid. The threshold limit value (TLV) for prolonged exposure is
10 ppmv
and at concentrations greater than 1,000 ppmv, death occurs in minutes.
When H2S concentrations are well above the ppmv level, other sulfur
species can be present. These compounds include carbon disulfide (CS2),
mercaptans (RSH), and sulfides (RSR), in addition to elemental sulfur. If
CO2 is present as well, the gas may contain trace amounts of carbonyl
sulfide (COS). The major source of COS typically is formation during
regeneration of molecular-sieve beds. Carbon dioxide is nonflammable
and, consequently, large quantities are undesirable in a fuel. Like H2S, it
forms a weak, corrosive acid in the presence of water. Thus, the acid
gases present in the natural gas are required to be removed.
2. What are the acid gas concentrations in natural ga
Answer: A subquality gas is that contains CO2 ≥ 2%, N2 ≥ 4%, or H2S ≥
4 ppmv.
3. How much purification is needed?
Answer: The inlet conditions at a gas processing plant are generally
temperatures near ambient and pressures in the range of 300 to 1,000
psi (20 to 70 bar), so the partial pressures of the entering acid gases can
be quite high. If the gas is to be purified to a level suitable for
transportation in a pipeline and used as a residential or industrial fuel,
then the H2S concentration must be reduced to 0.25 gr/100 scf (6
mg/m3) and the CO2 concentration must be reduced to a maximum of 3
to 4 mol%.
4. What is done with the acid gases after separation from the
natural gas?
Answer: For CO2, if the quantities are large, it is sometimes used as an
injection
fluid in EOR (enhanced oil recovery) projects. Several gas plants exist to
support CO2 flooding projects; the natural gas and NGL are valuable
byproducts. If this option is unavailable, then the gas can be vented,
provided it satisfies environmental regulations for impurities. Moritis
(2001) gives a general discussion of the state of EOR in the United States.
Although the United
States has not ratified the Kyoto Treaty, which limits CO2 emissions to the
atmosphere, caps may be placed on these emissions because of the
preponderance of scientific data that shows CO2 is a significant
contributor to global warming.
In the case of H2S, four disposal options are available:
1. Incineration and venting, if environmental regulations regarding
sulfur dioxide emissions can be satisfied.
2. Reaction with H2S scavengers, such as iron sponge.
3. Conversion to elemental sulfur by use of the Claus or similar process.
4. Disposal by injection into a suitable underground formation.
5. What processes are available for acid gas removal?
Answer: Four scenarios are possible for acid gas removal from natural
gas:
1. CO2 removal from a gas that contains no H2S
2. H2S removal from a gas that contains no CO2
3. Simultaneous removal of both CO2 and H2S
4. Selective removal of H2S from a gas that contains both CO2 and H2S
Because the concentrations of CO2 and H2S in the raw gas to be
processed and the allowable acid gas levels in the final product vary
substantially, no single process is markedly superior in all circumstances,
and, consequently, many processes are presently in use.
Below chart suggests what process to select for various percentage of
CO2 and H2S present in the sour natural gas an to make it meet product
specifications.
HAZIRA GAS SWEETENING UNIT:
This is India’s first GSU based on the state of the art MDEA process for
selective removal of H2S from sour gas. Gas is treated with aqueous
solution of MDEA in 7 identical and independent trains each of 5
MMNM3/D capacity. Methyl diethanol amine(MDEA). A tertiary amine,
reacts with H2S selectively.
Amines are bases, and the important reaction in gas processing is the
ability of the amine to form salts with the weak acids formed by H2S and
CO2 in an aqueous solution. When a gas stream that contains the H2S,
CO2, or both, is contacted by a primary or secondary amine solution, the
acid gases react to form a soluble acid−base complex, a salt, in the
treating solution. The reaction between the amine and both H2S and CO2
is highly exothermic. Regardless of the structure of the amine, H2S reacts
rapidly with the primary, secondary, or tertiary amine via a direct proton
transfer reaction, as shown in Equation 5.1, to form the amine
hydrosulfide:
The reaction is shown for a tertiary amine but applies to primary and
secondary amines as well. The reaction between the amine and the CO2
is more complex because CO2 reacts via two different mechanisms.
First reaction mechanism:
When dissolved in water, CO2 hydrolyzes to form carbonic acid, which, in
turn, slowly dissociates to bicarbonate.The bicarbonate then undertakes
an acid−base reaction with the amine to yield the overall reaction shown
by Equation 5.2: