Lecture 9 - Natural Gas Processing Notes
Lecture 9 - Natural Gas Processing Notes
Lecture 9 - Natural Gas Processing Notes
PROCESSING
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INTRODUCTION
Natural gas produced from either an oil or gas
reservoir is a complex mixture with different
compounds of hydrocarbons and non hydrocarbons
Compounds of hydrocarbons includes: methane and
varying amounts of ethane, propane, butane, and even
higher molecular weight hydrocarbons)
Non hydrocarbons may include: small amounts of
hydrogen sulfide, carbon dioxide, and mercaptans such
as methanethiol and ethanethiol, water vapor, and
even neutral gases such as nitrogen and helium, etc.
The gas composition depends on the geological area,
as well as the underground deposit type, depth, and
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location.
INTRODUCTION
The gas that is finally transported in pipeline, as such
it must meet the quality standards specified by
pipeline companies.
Those quality standards vary from pipeline to
pipeline and are usually a function of a pipeline
system’s design, its down- stream interconnecting
pipelines, and its customer base.
In general, these standards specify how a
commercially acceptable natural gas should be.
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SOME OF THE GAS SPECIFICATIONS INCLUDES :
It must be within a specific Btu content range
It should be delivered at a specified hydrocarbon
dew point temperature level. This would prevent
liquids to condense and form liquid slugs which
could be very damaging to the pipeline.
The gas should not contain more than trace
amounts of compounds or elements such as
hydrogen sulfide, carbon dioxide, mercaptans,
nitrogen, water vapor, and oxygen.
The water vapor must be removed (i.e., dehydrate
the gas) sufficiently to prevent corrosion and the
formation of gas hydrates in the processing plant or
the pipelines. 4
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INTRODUCTION
The purpose of gas processing is to produce a gas
stream that meets sales requirements and
specifications including heating value and the
recovery of maximum amount of NGLs (Natural Gas
Liquids).
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A generalized flow diagram is shown below
INTRODUCTION
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8
INTRODUCTION
In addition to those four processes (to remove oil, water
(dehydration), compounds, or elements such as sulfur,
helium, carbon dioxide, and natural gas liquids),
It is often necessary to install scrubbers and heaters at or
near the wellhead.
The scrubbers serve primarily to remove sand and other
large particle impurities.
The heaters ensure that the temperature of the natural
gas does not drop too low to form a hydrate with the
water vapor content of the gas stream.
Natural gas hydrates are crystalline solids that
block the passage of natural gas through valves
and pipes. 9
NATURAL GAS AND LIQUID SEPARATION
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NATURAL GAS AND LIQUID SEPARATION
The cyclone separator uses only centrifugal force
to effect the separation between gas and liquid.
This type of separator is used primarily as a
scrubber, i.e., for the separation of small volumes
of liquid from relatively large volumes of gas.
Because a cyclone separator requires a relatively
small diameter, it can be constructed very
economically
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NATURAL GAS AND LIQUID SEPARATION
The selection of the separator type and its size is
dictated by
the gas and liquid flow rates,
the type of natural gas as denoted by its
specific gravity,
the specifications of the produced oil and
water,
the separator operating conditions (pressure
and temperature),
the presence of solids,
the floor space availability such as on an
offshore plat- form, cost, etc.
Since vertical and horizontal gravity separators
are widely used 13
TYPES OF LIQUID/GAS SEPARATORS
FB
FD
Liquid Droplet Vp
ap
FG
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GRAVITY SEPARATION MECHANISM
Therefore, the primary design feature of gravity
separation is to size the separator so that the drag
and buoyancy forces become less than the gravity
force.
This forces the liquid droplets to separate from
the flowing gas.
The net gravity force is given by
M p (rl rg ) g
FG
rl g c 18
GRAVITY SEPARATION MECHANISM
𝜋𝑑𝑝 3
Buoyancy force FB is given by 𝐹𝐵 = 𝜌𝑙 − 𝜌𝑔
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Where FG is the gravity force, MP is droplet mass
in lb, l is liquid density, in lb/ft3, 𝜌𝑔 is gas
density in lb/ft3, g is gravity acceleration (32.17
ft/s2), and gc is dimensional proportionality
constant equal to 32.2 lbf/lbm-ft/s2.
(𝜋/8)𝐶𝐷 𝑑𝑝2 𝑣 2 𝜌𝑔
𝐹𝐷 =
𝑔𝑐
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GRAVITY SEPARATION MECHANISM
where CD is the drag coefficient, dP is droplet
diameter in ft, and vV is vertical velocity in ft/s.
When FB equals FD, the liquid droplets will
settle at a constant terminal velocity, vT.
Substituting the mass of the droplet and assuming a
spherical shape 3
4 dp
M p l
3 2
4𝑔𝑑𝑝 (𝜌𝑙 − 𝜌𝑔 )
𝑉𝑇 =
3𝐶𝐷 𝜌𝑔 20
GRAVITY SEPARATION MECHANISM
As long as the vapor velocity, vV, is less than vT,
the liquid droplets will settle out. The above
equation can be rewritten as follows
( l g )
VT K
g
4 gd p
where K
3C D
(a well-known Souders-Brown (1934) form)
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GRAVITY SEPARATION MECHANISM
K = the terminal velocity constant in ft/s for
vertical gravity settling. dP = the liquid droplet
diameter in ft (microns × 3.2808 × 10-6).
CD is the drag coefficient, dimensionless
For a separator without mist eliminator and with
the droplet diameter known, the drag coefficient
can be calculated by using the following
correlation
2 4
C D exp(8.4111 2.243 X 0.273 X 1.865 *10 X 5.201*10 X
2 3 4
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GRAVITY SEPARATION MECHANISM
Where
0.95 *108 d 3p g ( l g )
X ln
g 2
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GRAVITY SEPARATION MECHANISM
For very small droplets, it is not practical to
separate them from the main flow stream by gravity
alone
A coalescing device such as a mist eliminator is
required.
The complication is that the droplet diameter
changes as the droplets coalesce, and therefore, the K
factor for coalescing devices is usually an empirical
value, determined from experiments, published data,
or vendors (for their particular coalescing devices).
A commonly used source of empirical K factors for
mist eliminators is the GPSA (Gas Processors24
Suppliers Association engineering Data Book).
GRAVITY SEPARATION MECHANISM
Horizontal separators have an additional
complication because the liquid droplets to be
separated are subjected to a horizontal drag force,
which is perpendicular to gravity, and therefore,
different from the case of vertical separators.
The time that it takes for the droplet to travel
from the inlet to the outlet of the horizontal
separator must be greater than the time it
takes for the droplet to travel the vertical
distance to the liquid surface.
This design requirement implies that the vertical K
values listed in literature have to be modified 25
GRAVITY SEPARATION MECHANISM
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GRAVITY SEPARATION MECHANISM
As should be expected, the above equation
suggests that the terminal settling velocity is
inversely proportional to the viscosity of the
continuous phase.
Therefore the bigger the viscosity of the
continuous phase is, as would be the case in
heavy crude, the more difficult would be to settle
droplets out of the continuous phase. In
separator design, vT is usually limited to 10
in./min
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THREE-PHASE SEPARATOR DESIGN
Three-phase separators can be either vertical or
horizontal, but almost invariably are
horizontal.
Vertical orientation is used when large
amounts of gas need to be separated from a
relatively small amount of light and heavy
liquids (<10–20 wt%).
To further facilitate the liquid separation, a
baffle is commonly used.
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THREE-PHASE SEPARATOR DESIGN
Baffles are fitted downstream of the inlet
device in the separator. ... Intended to
distribute the liquid flow evenly over the cross-
section, prior to entry into the liquid/liquid
separation region, this baffle plays an important
role in maximizing the liquid/liquid separation.
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THREE-PHASE SEPARATOR DESIGN
Definitions:
Holdup time —the time it takes to reduce the
liquid level from normal to empty while
maintaining a normal outlet flow without feed
makeup. This allows for control and safe
operation
Surge time—the time it takes for the liquid level
to rise from normal to maximum, while
maintaining a normal feed without any outlet
flow (i.e., accumulating liquid as result of
upstream or downstream variations or an upset,
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such as a slug).
THREE-PHASE SEPARATOR DESIGN
In the absence of specific requirements, surge
time may be taken as one half of the holdup
time.
Holdup time can be obtained from experiences or
published data.
It is usually between 2 to 10 minutes multiplied
by a factor of 1.0 to 1.5 depending on the
personnel (experienced or inexperienced) and
instrumentation (good or poor).
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THREE-PHASE SEPARATOR DESIGN
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Basic Steps on the design of Vertical
and Horizontal separator
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STEP BY STEP DESIGN
Step 1: Calculate the vertical terminal vapor
velocity.
For a conservative design, set
𝑉𝑉 = 0.75 𝑈𝑇
where p is in psia.
A = 𝜋D2 / 4
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STEP BY STEP DESIGN
The “high liquid level above interface” can be
obtained from Figures in literature refers to HL +
HR , where the minimum value for HR is 9 in.
Assume WD = 4 in., calculate x = WD /D. Then use
the following equation to calculate y = AD /A
where
a cx ex gx ix
2 3 4
y
1.0 bx dx fx hx
2 3 4
H L AL H H ALh
tr ,Ll tr ,Hl
QLl QHl
o Step 10: Calculate the height of the light liquid above the outlet
(holdup height) based on the required holdup time:
Compare this value with the assumed one in Step 8 and check
whether the assumed value is reasonable.
Calculate the surge height, Hs, (minimum of 6 in.) based on
surge time if surge is not specified:
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STEP BY STEP DESIGN
t s (QLl QHl )
HS
A
Step 11: Calculate the vessel total height
HT = HH + HL + HR + HA + HBN + HD
WLl WHl
QLl QHl
60 Ll Hl
Step 3: Calculate the vertical terminal velocity, vT,
(select a K value) and set vV = 0.75vT.
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THREE-PHASE HORIZONTAL SEPARATOR
DESIGN PROCEDURE
Step 4: Select holdup and surge times from
experiences or published data, and calculate the
holdup and surge volumes, VH and VS , (unless
surge is otherwise specified, such as a slug
volume),
Step 5: Obtain an L/D from Table below and
initially calculate the diameter according to
Vessel operating pressure, L/D
psig
0 < p ≤ 250 1.5–3.0