Multi-product liquefaction method and system
10619917 ยท 2020-04-14
Assignee
Inventors
- Laurent Marc Brussol (Paris, FR)
- David Joseph Holzer (Suresnes, FR)
- Sylvain Vovard (Louveciennes, FR)
- Russell Shnitser (Coopersburg, PA, US)
- Adam Adrian Brostow (Emmaus, PA, US)
- Mark Julian Roberts (Kempton, PA, US)
Cpc classification
F25J3/061
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0219
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J2210/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/004
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J2215/64
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J2245/90
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J2245/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J2210/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0055
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0245
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J2215/62
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0236
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0291
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J2210/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0212
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0022
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J2215/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0264
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0047
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0231
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J3/064
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0255
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0237
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J2220/62
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F25J1/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A liquefaction system is capable of sequentially or simultaneously liquefying multiple feed streams of hydrocarbons having different normal bubble points with minimal flash. The liquefying heat exchanger has separate circuits for handling multiple feed streams. The feed stream with the lowest normal boiling point is sub-cooled sufficiently to suppress most of the flash. Feed streams with relatively high normal boiling points are cooled to substantially the same temperature, then blended with bypass streams to maintain each product near its normal bubble point. The system can also liquefy one stream at a time by using a dedicated circuit or by allocating the same feed to multiple circuits.
Claims
1. A method for cooling and liquefying at least two feed streams in a coil-wound heat exchanger, the method comprising: (a) introducing that at least two feed streams into a warm end of the coil-wound heat exchanger, the at least two feed streams comprising a first feed stream having a first normal bubble point and a second feed stream having a second normal bubble point that is lower than the first normal bubble point; (b) cooling by indirect heat exchange in the con-wound heat exchanger at least a first portion of each of the first feed stream and the second feed stream against a refrigerant to form at least two cooled feed streams comprising a first cooled feed stream and a second cooled feed stream; (c) withdrawing the at least two cooled feed streams from a cold end of the coil-would heat exchanger at substantially the same withdrawal temperature; (d) providing at least two product streams, each of the at least two product streams being downstream from and in fluid flow communication with one of the at least two cooled feed streams, each of the at least two product streams being maintained within a predetermined product stream temperature range of a predetermined product stream temperature, the at least two product streams comprising a first product stream and a second product stream, the predetermined product stream temperature for the first product stream being the first predetermined product stream temperature and the predetermined product stream temperature of the second product stream being the second predetermined product stream temperature; (e) withdrawing a first bypass stream from the first feed stream upstream from the cold end of the coil-wound heat exchanger; and (f) forming the first product stream by mixing the first cooled feed stream with the first bypass stream, the first predetermined product stream temperature being warmer than the withdrawal temperature of the first cooled feed stream.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein each of the at least two feed streams comprises a hydrocarbon fluid.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein step (e) comprises: (e) withdrawing a first bypass stream from the first feed stream upstream from the warm end of the coil-wound heat exchanger.
4. The method of claim 1, further comprising: (g) phase separating the second cooled feed stream into a second flash vapor stream and the second product stream, the predetermined product stream temperature of the second product stream being lower than the withdrawal temperature of the second cooled feed stream.
5. The method of claim 4, further comprising: (h) compressing and cooling the second flash vapor stream to form a compressed second flash gas stream; and (i) mixing the compressed second flash vapor stream with the second feed stream upstream from the coil-wound heat exchanger.
6. The method of claim 5, further comprising: (j) warming the second flash vapor stream by indirect heat exchange against the first bypass stream.
7. The method of claim 1, further comprising: (k) storing the second product stream in a second storage tank at a second storage pressure; wherein the predetermined product stream temperature of the second product stream is a temperature at which no more than 10 mole % of the second product stream vaporizes at the second storage pressure.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the at least two feed streams further comprise a third feed stream having third volatility that is higher than the first volatility and lower than the second volatility, the at least two cooled feed streams further comprise a third cooled feed stream, the at least two product streams further comprise a third product stream.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein step (d) further comprises providing the third product stream having a predetermined product stream temperature that is the same as the withdrawal temperature of the third cooled feed stream.
10. The method of claim 1, further comprising: (l) separating impurities from the second feed stream downstream from the second cooled feed stream in a phase separator to produce a second vapor stream containing the impurities and the second product stream.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein the predetermined product stream temperature range for each of the at least two product streams is 4 degrees C.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Exemplary embodiments will hereinafter be described in conjunction with the appended figures wherein like numerals denote like elements:
(2)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF INVENTION
(8) The ensuing detailed description provides preferred exemplary embodiments only, and is not intended to limit the scope, applicability, or configuration of the claimed invention. Rather, the ensuing detailed description of the preferred exemplary embodiments will provide those skilled in the art with an enabling description for implementing the preferred exemplary embodiments of the claimed invention. Various changes may be made in the function and arrangement of elements without departing from the spirit and scope of the claimed invention.
(9) Reference numerals that are introduced in the specification in association with a drawing figure may be repeated in one or more subsequent figures without additional description in the specification in order to provide context for other features. In the figures, elements that are similar to those of other embodiments are represented by reference numerals increased by factors of 100. For example, the MCHE 150 associated with the embodiment of
(10) In the claims, letters are used to identify claimed steps (e.g. (a), (b), and (c)). These letters are used to aid in referring to the method steps and are not intended to indicate the order in which claimed steps are performed, unless and only to the extent that such order is specifically recited in the claims.
(11) Directional terms may be used in the specification and claims to describe portions of the present invention (e.g., upper, lower, left, right, etc.). These directional terms are merely intended to assist in describing exemplary embodiments, and are not intended to limit the scope of the claimed invention. As used herein, the term upstream is intended to mean in a direction that is opposite the direction of flow of a fluid in a conduit from a point of reference. Similarly, the term downstream is intended to mean in a direction that is the same as the direction of flow of a fluid in a conduit from a point of reference.
(12) The term fluid flow communication, as used in the specification and claims, refers to the nature of connectivity between two or more components that enables liquids, vapors, and/or two-phase mixtures to be transported between the components in a controlled fashion (i.e., without leakage) either directly or indirectly. Coupling two or more components such that they are in fluid flow communication with each other can involve any suitable method known in the art, such as with the use of welds, flanged conduits, gaskets, and bolts. Two or more components may also be coupled together via other components of the system that may separate them, for example, valves, gates, or other devices that may selectively restrict or direct fluid flow.
(13) The term conduit, as used in the specification and claims, refers to one or more structures through which fluids can be transported between two or more components of a system. For example, conduits can include pipes, ducts, passageways, and combinations thereof that transport liquids, vapors, and/or gases. The term circuit, as used in the specification and claims, refers to a path through which a fluid can flow in a contained manner and may comprise one or more connected conduits, as well as equipment that contains conduits, such as compressors and heat exchangers.
(14) The term natural gas, as used in the specification and claims, means a hydrocarbon gas mixture consisting primarily of methane.
(15) The terms hydrocarbon gas or hydrocarbon fluid, as used in the specification and claims, means a gas/fluid comprising at least one hydrocarbon and for which hydrocarbons comprise at least 80%, and more preferably at least 90% of the overall composition of the gas/fluid.
(16) The term liquefaction, as used in the specification and claims, means cooling the fluid in question to a temperature at which at least 50 mole % of the fluid remains liquid when let down to a storage pressure of 1.5 bara or less. Similarly, the term liquefier refers to the equipment in which liquefaction takes place. In the context of the liquefaction processes disclosed herein, it is preferable that more than 75 mole % of the fluid remains liquid when let down to the storage pressure used by that process. Typical storage pressures are in the range of 1.05 to 1.2 bara. Feed streams are often supplied at a supercritical pressure and do not undergo a discrete phase transition during the cooling associated with liquefaction.
(17) The term sub-cooling, as used in the specification and claims, means that the fluid in question is further cooled (beyond what is necessary for liquefaction) so that, when let down to the storage pressure of the system, at least 90 mole % of the fluid remains liquid.
(18) The terms boiling point and boiling temperature are used interchangeably in the specification and claims and are intended to be synonymous. Similarly, the terms bubble point and bubble temperature are also used interchangeably in the specification and claims and are intended to be synonymous. As is known in the art, the term bubble point is the temperature at which the first bubble of vapor appears in a liquid. The term boiling point is the temperature at which the vapor pressure of a liquid is equal to the pressure of the gas above it. The term bubble point is typically used in connection with a multi-component fluid in which at least two of the components have different boiling points. The terms normal boiling point and normal bubble point, as used the specification and claims, mean the boiling point and bubble point, respectively, at a pressure of 1 atm.
(19) Unless otherwise state herein, introducing a stream at a location is intended to mean introducing substantially all of the said stream at the location. All streams discussed in the specification and shown in the drawings (typically represented by a line with an arrow showing the overall direction of fluid flow during normal operation) should be understood to be contained within a corresponding conduit. Each conduit should be understood to have at least one inlet and at least one outlet. Further, each piece of equipment should be understood to have at least one inlet and at least one outlet.
(20) The term essentially water-free, as used in the specification and claims, means that any residual water in the stream in question is present at a sufficiently low concentration to prevent operational problems due to water freeze out in any stream downstream from, and in fluid flow communication with, the stream in question. Typically, this will mean less than 0.1 ppm water.
(21) The term substantially the same temperature, as used in the specification and claims in relation to temperature differences between cooled feed streams at the cold end of an MCHE, means that no cooled feed stream has a temperature difference of more than 10 degrees C. (preferably, no more than 5 degrees C.) from any other cooled feed stream.
(22) As used herein, the term compressor in intended to mean a device having at least one compressor stage contained within a casing and that increases the pressure of a fluid stream.
(23) Described embodiments provide an efficient process for the simultaneous liquefaction of multiple feed gas streams and are particularly applicable for the liquefaction of hydrocarbon gases. Possible hydrocarbon gasses include ethane, ethane-propane mix (E/P Mix), ethylene, propane, and natural gas.
(24) As used in the specification and claims, a temperature range of X degrees is intended to mean a range of X degrees above and below the temperature at issue.
(25) Referring to
(26) An essentially water-free first feed stream 100, and/or, multiple additional feed streams (one or more) such as the second feed stream 120, are cooled in a MCHE 150. The first feed stream 100 may be combined with a first feed recycle stream 118 to form a combined first feed stream 119. The combined first feed stream 119 may, optionally, be divided into a first MCHE feed stream 101 and a first feed bypass stream 102. The first MCHE feed stream 101 is cooled and liquefied in the MCHE 150 to form a liquefied first product stream 103. The first feed bypass stream 102 may be reduced in pressure in valve 107 to produce a reduced pressure first feed bypass stream 108.
(27) The liquefied first product stream 103 is withdrawn from the MCHE 150 and reduced in pressure though valve 104 to produce a two-phase first product stream 105. The two-phase first product stream 105 may be combined with the reduced pressure first feed bypass stream 108, resulting in a combined two-phase first product stream 109. The combined two-phase first product stream 109 is fed to a first end flash drum 126, in which the combined two-phase first product stream 109 is separated into a first end flash drum vapor stream 110 and a first end flash drum liquid stream 111. The first end flash drum vapor stream 110 may contain impurities.
(28) The first end flash drum liquid stream 111 is further reduced in pressure through valve 112, resulting in a reduced pressure first end flash drum liquid stream 113, which is fed to a first storage tank 134. A final first liquid product stream 115 is extracted from the lower end of the first storage tank 134, and is the final product of the first feed stream 100. The system 160 is operated to deliver the first liquid product stream 115 at temperature that is within a predetermined product temperature range, which is preferably a range of 4 degrees C. (i.e., 4 degrees above or below a set point temperature) and, more preferably, a range of 2 degrees C.
(29) A first storage tank vapor stream 114 may be extracted from an upper end of the first storage tank 134 is compressed in a compressor 138 to create a compressed storage tank first product vapor stream 117, which is cooled to ambient temperature in aftercooler 152 to create the first feed recycle stream 118.
(30) Optionally, a portion of either of the vapor streams (first end flash drum vapor stream 110 or first storage tank vapor stream 114) may also be used as fuel elsewhere in the plant. The compressor 138 may have multiple stages with intercoolers, with fuel withdrawn between stages (not shown).
(31) A second feed stream 120 is divided into the second MCHE feed stream 121 and second feed bypass stream 122. The second MCHE feed stream 121 is cooled and liquefied in the MCHE 150 to form a liquefied second product stream 123. The second feed bypass stream 122 is reduced in pressure in valve 127 to produce a reduced pressure second feed bypass stream 128. The liquefied second product stream 123 is withdrawn from the MCHE 150, reduced in pressure though valve 124, resulting in a two-phase second product stream 125.
(32) The two-phase second product stream 125 is combined with the reduced pressure second feed bypass stream 128 to form a combined two-phase second product stream 129, which is fed into to a second end flash drum 136. The second end flash drum 136 separates the combined two-phase second product stream 129 into a second end flash drum vapor stream 130 and a second end flash drum liquid stream 131. The second end flash drum vapor stream 130 may contain impurities. The second end flash drum liquid stream 131 may be stored in a product tank (not shown).
(33) It should be noted that, depending upon operational conditions, either or both of the bypass streams (the first feed bypass stream 102 and the second feed bypass stream 122) may have a zero flow.
(34) In this embodiment, the system 160 provides two ways to control the product temperature for each feed stream, by adjusting the amount of fluid flowing through the bypass line associated with that stream and adjusting the amount of recycling flash vapor associated with that stream. For example, increasing the fraction of the combined first feed stream 119 that flows through the first feed bypass stream 102 increases results in the combined two-phase first product stream 109 becoming warmer (assuming all other process variables remain constant). Conversely, increasing the flow rate of the first feed recycle stream 118 will result in the cold end of the MCHE 150 being warmer for all streams leaving the cold end of the MCHE 150 (including the liquefied first product stream 103 and the liquefied second product stream 123, or any other liquefied product stream). Although
(35) The system 160 provides the ability for flexible, multi-feed stream operation. For example, the MCHE 150 could be operated so that the feed stream having the lowest boiling point is supplied to its storage tank at the bubble point temperature for that feed stream. The liquefied product stream associated with each other feed stream (with a higher boiling point) is warmed by its bypass stream to prevent excessive sub-cooling. Operating the system 160 in this way is particularly useful if feed streams for feeds having relatively high boiling points also have contaminants that require warmer operating temperatures for removal. For example, the second end flash drum vapor stream 130 could be used to remove contaminants from the combined two-phase second product stream 129.
(36) Alternatively, the MCHE 150 could be operated at the bubble point temperature of the highest boiling feed or an intermediate temperature between the highest-boiling feed and the lowest-boiling feed. The latter method of operating would result in a significant flash vapor stream, such the first storage tank vapor stream 114, at the storage tank of a lowest-boiling feed. The first storage tank vapor stream 114 can be used in other parts of the plant or compressed and recycled to the warm end of the MCHE 150 to avoid producing net vapor export stream, as described before and shown on
(37) In this MCHE 150, at least a portion of, and preferably all of the refrigeration is provided by vaporizing at least a portion of sub-cooled refrigerant streams after pressure reduction across reducing valves.
(38) As noted above, any suitable refrigeration cycle could be used to provide the refrigeration to the MCHE 150. In this exemplary embodiment, a low-pressure gaseous mixed refrigerant (MR) stream 140 is withdrawn from the bottom of the shell-side of the MCHE 150 and is compressed in a compressor 154 to form a high pressure gaseous MR stream 132, which is at a pressure of less than 10 bar. The high pressure gaseous MR stream 133 is cooled in an aftercooler 156 to a temperature at or near ambient temperature to form a high-pressure two-phase MR stream 141.
(39) The high-pressure two-phase MR stream 141 is separated in a phase separator 158 into a high-pressure liquid MR stream 143 and a high-pressure vapor MR stream 142. The high-pressure liquid MR stream 143 is cooled in the warm bundle of the MCHE 150 to form a cooled high-pressure liquid MR stream 144 reduced in pressure across a valve 145 to form a reduced pressure liquid MR stream 146. The reduced pressure liquid MR stream 146 is then introduced to the shell side of the MCHE 150 between the warm and cold bundles to provide refrigeration the pre-cooling and liquefaction step.
(40) The high-pressure vapor MR stream 142 is cooled and liquefied in the warm and cold bundles of the MCHE 150 to produce a liquefied MR stream 147. The liquefied MR stream 147 is reduced in pressure across a valve 148 to produce a reduced pressure liquid MR stream 149, which is introduced into the shell side of the MCHE 150 at the cold end of the MCHE 150 to provide refrigeration in the sub-cooling step.
(41) In this exemplary embodiment, the compressor 154 typically has two stages with an intercooler 137. A medium pressure MR stream 139 is withdrawn after the first compressor stage and is cooled in the intercooler 137 to produce a cooled medium pressure MR stream 151. The cooled medium pressure MR stream 151 then flows through a phase separator 153 and is separated into a medium pressure vapor MR stream 155 and a medium pressure liquid MR stream 157. The pressure of the medium pressure liquid MR stream 157 is then increased by pump 159 before being combined with the high pressure gaseous MR stream 132.
(42)
(43) The system of 560
(44) In
(45) In order to enable the propane to be stored at or near its bubble point in its storage tank 534b at a pressure of no more than 1.5 bara, a bypass portion of the propane is directed to a bypass circuit 522 and a feed portion of the propane stream flows through the hydrocarbon cooling circuit 583b, then the bypass portion is recombined with the feed portion of the propane stream downstream from the cold end of the MCHE 550 and before the propane enters the storage tank 534b. A bypass valve 527 is at least partially open to allow flow through the bypass circuit 522. The amount of the propane feed stream that is directed to the bypass circuit 522 is selected to sufficiently warm propane exiting the cold end of the MCHE 550 to a temperature that is at or near the bubble point when stored in the storage tank 534b at a pressure of no more than 1.5 bara. Optionally, a portion of any flash gas from the first storage tank 534a could be compressed, cooled, and mixed with the natural gas feed 500a upstream from the MCHE 550.
(46) The operational configurations shown in
(47)
(48) In the system 660 of
(49)
(50) In this exemplary embodiment, the system 660 is operationally configured to produce a temperature at the cold end of the MCHE 650 that is close to the bubble point of ethylene in the storage tank 634d to suppress flash. Under these operating conditions, there is no need to recycle ethylene.
(51) Alternatively, the system 660 could be operationally configured to maintain a temperature at the cold end of the MCHE 650 that is warmer than ethylene's bubble point but colder than ethane's bubble point. In this case, a portion of the ethylene flash stream 611d is recycled (via recycle circuit 614) to the feed stream 600c to avoid net flash export. This operational configuration could be desirable if electric motors are used to drive the compressors of system 660 and it is desirable to configure the system to be capable of processing more volatile feed streams that ethylene.
(52)
EXAMPLES
(53) The following are exemplary embodiments of the invention with the data based on simulations of an SMR process similar to embodiment shown in
(54) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Operating regimes and resulting production of the liquefaction unit. E/P Mix (blend 81/19 Ethane Natural Name Ethane Propane) Ethylene Propane Gas Example 1 - 2.25 Design Case MTPA Example 2 - 1.25 0.625 0.625 Rating Case MTPA MTPA MTPA Example 3 A&B - 0.4 Rating Case MTPA
Example 1
(55) In Example 1, only ethane is processed. This example is used to set the sizing of critical equipment, such as the MCHE 150 and refrigeration compressor C1. In this example, ethane enters the MCHE 150 at 30 degrees Celsius and 75 bar and is cooled to 124.5 degrees Celsius. Feed and product rates and compositions are specified in Table 2 below.
(56) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Name Ethane Feed Ethane Product Flowrate, kg-mol/hr 11271 10524 Component, mol % Methane 4.65 1.47 Ethane 92.28 95.37 Ethylene 1.13 1.10 Propane 1.87 2.00 Heavier HCs 0.00 0.00 CO2 0.07 0.06 Total 100.00 100.00 Feed bypass (%) 0 1
(57) The low-pressure gaseous MR stream 140 has a flow rate of 17448 kg moles per hour. The MR has the composition shown in Table 3 and leaves the MCHE 150 at a temperature close to ambient temperature, for example, 38.3 degrees Celsius. The MR is compressed the compressor C1 from 8.0 bar to 49.6 bar, cooled by the high-pressure aftercooler 156 to 54.0 degrees Celsius, then separated in the phase separator 158 into the high-pressure vapor MR stream 142 and the high-pressure liquid MR stream 143.
(58) TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Component, mol % Methane 21.11 Ethane 43.45 Butanes 35.44 Total 100.00
Example 2
(59) For Example 2, pretreated feed streams of ethane, ethylene, and ethane/propane mix enter the MCHE 150 unit at 30 degrees Celsius and 75 bar and are cooled to 154 degrees Celsius. In this example, process flow is as shown in
(60) TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 4 Feed composition and rate Name Ethane Ethylene Ethane/Propane Flowrate, kg-mol/hr 5641 1630 2171 Component, mol % Methane 4.65 0.01 3.91 Ethane 92.28 0.04 75.65 Ethylene 1.13 99.95 0.00 Propane 1.87 0.00 17.75 Heavier HCs 0.00 0.00 2.62 CO2 0.07 0.00 0.07 Total 100.00 100.00 100.00 Feed bypass, % 10.1 0.0 14.4
(61) TABLE-US-00005 TABLE 5 Product composition and rate Name Ethane Ethylene Ethane/Propane Flowrate, kg-mol/hr 5257 1630 1859 Component, mol % Methane 1.24 0.01 0.36 Ethane 95.60 0.04 76.08 Ethylene 1.10 99.95 0.00 Propane 2.00 0.00 20.47 Heavier HCs 0.00 0.00 3.06 CO2 0.06 0.00 0.03 Total 100.00 100.00 100.00 Normal Bubble 94.5 102.4 85.0 Point, C.
(62) The low-pressure gaseous MR stream 140 has a flow rate of 17493 kg moles per hour. The MR has the composition shown in Table 6, leaves the MCHE 150 at close to ambient temperature, for example, 38.9 degrees Celsius, is compressed in the MR Compressor C1 from 8.0 bar to 50.8 bar, and cooled by the high-pressure aftercooler 156 to 54.0 degrees Celsius. The rest of the process of Example 2 is identical to Example 1.
(63) TABLE-US-00006 TABLE 6 Mixed Refrigerant Composition Component, mol % Methane 28.48 Ethane 36.37 Butanes 35.15 Total 100.00
Example 3
(64) For Examples 3A & 3B, pretreated natural gas feed stream enters the MCHE at 30 degrees Celsius and 75 bar. Example 3A used the configuration of
(65) TABLE-US-00007 TABLE 7 Feed composition and rates Example 3A Example 3B Name Natural Gas Flowrate, kg-mol/hr 5641 1630 Component, mol % Nitrogen 0.89 Methane 88.81 Ethane 8.22 Ethylene 0.00 Propane 1.39 Heavier HCs 0.69 CO2 50 ppm Total 100.00 Feed bypass, % 0 0
(66) TABLE-US-00008 TABLE 8 Product composition and rates Example 3A Example 3B Name Natural Gas Flowrate, kg-mol/hr 3548 6311 Component, mol % Nitrogen 1.00 0.89 Methane 88.75 88.81 Ethane 8.18 8.22 Ethylene 0.00 0.00 Propane 1.38 1.39 Heavier HCs 0.69 0.69 CO2 45 ppm 50 ppm Total 100.00 100.00
(67) MR compositions for Examples 3A & 3B are shown below in Table 9. For Example 3A, the low-pressure gaseous MR stream 240 has a flow rate of 12066 kg moles per hour. The MR leaves the MCHE 250 at close to ambient temperature, for example, 45.1 degrees Celsius, is compressed from 5.4 bar to 54.9 bar, and cooled by the aftercooler 256 to 54.0 degrees Celsius. For Example 3B, the low-pressure gaseous MR 340 has a flow rate of 14333 kg moles per hour. It leaves the MCHE 350 at close to ambient temperature, for example, 41.0 degrees Celsius, is compressed from 6.7 bar to 49.2 bar, and cooled by the high-pressure aftercooler 256 to 54.0 degrees Celsius.
(68) TABLE-US-00009 TABLE 9 Mixed Refrigerant Compositions Component, mol % Example 3A Example 3B Nitrogen 8.83 0.00 Methane 29.76 30.45 Ethane 35.57 37.76 Propane 0.00 0.00 Butanes 21.89 31.79 Pentanes 3.95 0.00 Total 100.00 100.00
The rest of the processes of Examples 3A and 3B are the same as Example 1.