F25J1/0269

PROCESS AND APPARATUS FOR THE RECOVERY OF BOIL-OFF GAS FROM THE LIQUEFACTION OF HYDROGEN

A hydrogen boil-off gas recovery method, comprises liquefying hydrogen by cooling a hydrogen feed stream in a first cryogenic cold box, further cooling the hydrogen in a second cryogenic cold box, liquefying the hydrogen in the second cryogenic cold box or downstream thereof, providing liquefied hydrogen a loading bay containing at least one hydrogen transport truck, sending boil-off gas from at least one hydrogen transport truck in the loading bay to which liquefied hydrogen has been provided to an indirect heat exchanger outside the first and second cryogenic cold boxes in order to warm the boil-off gas and mixing at least part of the warmed boil-off gas with the hydrogen feed stream upstream of the first cryogenic cold box or with hydrogen in a hydrogen refrigeration cycle used to provide refrigeration for the second cryogenic cold box as a function of the pressure of the boil-off gas.

Apparatus and Process for Pre-Liquefaction Fluid Processing for Improved Liquefaction Operations

An apparatus and process for pre-liquefaction processing of a fluid (e.g. hydrogen) can permit a reduction in capital costs and also an improvement in operational efficiency in flexibility. Embodiments can be configured to account for large variations in feed to be provided for liquefaction and also permit capital cost reductions associated with pre-liquefaction processing so the overall capital cost for liquefaction can be greatly reduced while also providing improved operational flexibility. For instance, embodiments can be configured to utilize one or more common pre-liquefaction processing elements to treat a fluid for pre-cooling of a fluid to a pre-selected liquefaction feed temperature.

Apparatus and Process for Pre-Liquefaction Fluid Processing for Improved Liquefaction Operations

An apparatus and process for processing of a fluid (e.g. hydrogen) for liquefaction can permit a reduction in power consumption and also an improvement in operational efficiency in flexibility. Embodiments can be configured to account for large variations in feed to be provided for liquefaction and also permit operational cost reductions associated with liquefaction processing so the overall power consumption and operational cost for liquefaction can be greatly reduced while also providing improved operational flexibility. For instance, embodiments can be configured to feed a fluid to multiple liquefiers of a train of liquefiers based on a pre-selected set of feed routing criteria for improving power consumption and providing greater operational flexibility for liquefaction operations.

SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR FLOATING DOCKSIDE LIQUEFACTION OF NATURAL GAS

System and methods for floating dockside liquefaction of natural gas are described. A system for floating dockside liquefaction of natural gas comprises a natural gas pretreatment facility located onshore proximate a dock, wherein the natural gas pretreatment facility is configured to process pipeline quality gas into pretreated natural gas, a floating liquefaction unit moored at the dock, wherein the floating liquefaction unit further comprises a natural gas liquefaction module on a deck, and an LNG storage tank for storing produced LNG below the deck, a pipeline coupling the onshore pretreatment facility to the dock, wherein the pipeline is configured to transport pretreated natural gas onto the dock, and a high pressure gas arm fluidly coupling the pipeline to the floating liquefaction unit, wherein the gas arm is configured to transfer pretreated natural gas to the floating liquefaction unit.

LIQUEFIED NATURAL GAS PRODUCTION FACILITY ON GRAVITY-BASED STRUCTURES

A liquefied natural gas (LNG) production facility includes gravity-based structures (GBSs) with process lines for liquefying natural gas. A GBS contains: tanks for each component of a mixed refrigerant, wherein a GBS process line includes a fractionating apparatus for mixed refrigerant component production from a broad fraction of light hydrocarbons; a stabilized gas condensate (SGC) storage tank; and a berth for offloading LNG and SGC into tankers. Each GBS contains an LNG storage tank. One tank per mixed refrigerant component from each GBS is connected by pipe to systems for preparing and compressing all process line refrigerants, thus forming a common component feed system. The SGC storage tank is connected by pipes to condensate-stabilizing apparatus for all process lines, thus forming a common system for storing and offloading SGC. The LNG storage tanks are interconnected by pipes, forming a common system for storing and offloading LNG.

PLANT AND METHOD FOR PRODUCING LIQUEFIED HYDROGEN

The invention relates to a plant and a method for producing liquefied hydrogen comprising a hydrogen gas generator, a liquefier, a feed line connecting an outlet of the hydrogen gas generator to an inlet of the liquefier, the liquefier comprising a refrigerator having a cycle circuit to cool the hydrogen gas from the feed line, the plant comprising a buffer store configured to store the compressed hydrogen gas between the hydrogen gas generator and the liquefier, the liquefier being configured to supply a cooling power and/or the liquefaction capacity that can be modified between at least two levels, the plant comprising a means for determining the fill level of the buffer store, the plant being configured to modify the cooling power and/or liquefaction capacity of the liquefier as a function of the fill level of the buffer store determined by the determining means.