Natural gas adsorptive separation system and method
12083470 ยท 2024-09-10
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01D2253/204
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C10L2290/12
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C10L2290/542
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01D53/0446
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D53/0462
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C10L2290/54
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
Abstract
A natural gas adsorptive separation system and method is described. A method of separating natural gas includes directing a natural gas mixture through an activated carbon adsorption tower until the adsorption tower is saturated, collecting methane from the output of the adsorption tower, heating the saturated carbon adsorption tower with adsorbate using a heater and/or a vacuum pump in a closed loop circuit with the carbon adsorption tower until the input to the vacuum pump is within a specified temperature of the output of the heater, lowering the pressure in the heated activated carbon adsorption tower using the vacuum pump to desorb at least one hydrocarbon compound of the plurality of different hydrocarbon compounds, compressing and cooling the desorbed hydrocarbon compound, separating the cooled and compressed hydrocarbon compound into gas and liquid in a fluid separator, and collecting the liquid from the fluid separator.
Claims
1. A natural gas separation system, comprising: a plurality of adsorbent towers coupled to at least one first valve, the at least one first valve directing a natural gas inlet flow through one of: a first adsorbent tower of the plurality of adsorbent towers, when the at least one first valve is in a first position; or a second adsorbent tower of the plurality of adsorbent towers, when the at least one first valve in a second position; the first position further coupling the second adsorbent tower to a closed-loop circuit comprising a differential pressure pump and a heater; the first position further coupling the second adsorbent tower to a desorption circuit; and at least one second valve that selects between the closed-loop circuit and the desorption circuit in the first position; wherein in the first position: at least a portion of light hydrocarbons exits the first adsorbent tower through an outlet; and natural gas liquids exit the desorption circuit when the desorption circuit is selected.
2. The natural gas separation system of claim 1, wherein the natural gas inlet flow is gas output from one of a wellhead, wellpad, gas pipeline, an MRU, a JT or another gas separation system.
3. The natural gas separation system of claim 1, wherein the at least the portion of light hydrocarbons exiting the outlet of the first adsorbent tower is gas input for one of a wellhead, wellpad, gas pipeline, an MRU, a JT, the heater, an engine, a compressor, or a gas processing facility.
4. The natural gas separation system of claim 1, wherein the desorption circuit is located on a mobile unit.
5. The natural gas separation system of claim 1, wherein the plurality of adsorbent towers comprise activated carbon, zeolites, metal organic frameworks, molecular sieves or a combination thereof.
6. The natural gas separation system of claim 1, wherein at least one of the plurality of adsorbent towers comprise porous material with a majority of void space comprising micropores and mesopores.
7. The natural gas separation system of claim 1, wherein the desorption circuit comprises a compressor and a gas-liquid separator configured to produce ultrahigh purity methane.
8. The natural gas separation system of claim 1, wherein the desorption circuit comprises a compressor and a gas-liquid separator configured to recover natural gas liquids.
9. A method of separating natural gas, comprising: directing a natural gas mixture comprising a plurality of different hydrocarbon compounds through an adsorption tower until at least a portion of one or more of the different hydrocarbon compounds are captured; collecting methane from the output of the adsorption tower; heating the adsorption tower with adsorbate as a heating fluid using a pump and a heater in a closed loop circuit with the adsorption tower until the input to the pump is within a specified temperature of the output of the heater; and lowering the pressure in the heated adsorption tower to desorb at least one hydrocarbon compound of the captured hydrocarbon compounds.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the lowering the pressure in the heated adsorption tower occurs in stages to selectively desorb a hydrocarbon compound having a specific carbon number of the captured one or more different hydrocarbon compounds.
11. The method of claim 9, further comprising repeating the heating and lowering the pressure to selectively desorb a series of individual hydrocarbon compounds one at a time by carbon number.
12. The method of claim 9, further comprising liquefying the desorbed at least one hydrocarbon compound and mixing the liquid with oil.
13. The method of claim 9, further comprising compressing and cooling the desorbed at least one hydrocarbon compound, and cooling the adsorption tower with at least a portion of the cooled and compressed at least one hydrocarbon compound to prepare the adsorption tower for adsorption.
14. The method of claim 9, wherein the heat source for the heating fluid is waste heat from exhaust.
15. A method of separating hydrocarbons from a mixed stream comprising: directing a hydrocarbon mixture comprising a plurality of different hydrocarbon compounds through an adsorption tower; controlling which hydrocarbons of the plurality of different hydrocarbons are adsorbed by the adsorption tower by controlling the temperature and pressure within the adsorption tower; collecting hydrocarbons that are not adsorbed by the adsorption tower from the output of the adsorption tower; and desorbing previously adsorbed hydrocarbons one at a time by carbon number.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein the hydrocarbon mixture comprising a plurality of different hydrocarbons is gas output from an MRU, a JT or a gas separation system.
17. The method of claim 15, wherein directing the hydrocarbon mixture through the adsorption tower polishes the hydrocarbon mixture as output from another system or pretreats the hydrocarbon mixture as input to an MRU a JT or a gas separation system.
18. The method of claim 15, wherein the hydrocarbons that are not adsorbed by the adsorption tower comprise high quality methane that meets one of pipeline, engine or fuel specifications.
19. The method of claim 15, wherein ethane is adsorbed by the adsorption tower and subsequently desorbed such that the ethane is selectively removed.
20. The method of claim 15, wherein the desorbed hydrocarbons are mixed with oil and transported by an oil tanker.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Advantages of the present invention may become apparent to those skilled in the art with the benefit of the following detailed description and upon reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
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(18) While the invention is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments thereof are shown by way of example in the drawings and may herein be described in detail. The drawings may not be to scale. It should be understood, however, that the embodiments described herein and shown in the drawings are not intended to limit the invention to the particular form disclosed, but on the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents and alternatives falling within the scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(19) A natural gas adsorptive separation system and method will now be described. In the following exemplary description, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a more thorough understanding of embodiments of the invention. It will be apparent, however, to an artisan of ordinary skill that the present invention may be practiced without incorporating all aspects of the specific details described herein. In other instances, specific features, quantities, or measurements well known to those of ordinary skill in the art have not been described in detail so as not to obscure the invention. Readers should note that although examples of the invention are set forth herein, the claims, and the full scope of any equivalents, are what define the metes and bounds of the invention.
(20) As used in this specification and the appended claims, the singular forms a, an and the include plural referents unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Thus, for example, reference to an adsorption tower includes one or more adsorption towers.
(21) As used in this specification and the appended claims, low volume means 50,000 standard cubic feet per day or less.
(22) As used in this specification and the appended claims, automatic means occurring without human intervention.
(23) As used in this specification and the appended claims, high-quality means at least 90% purity of the specified fluid.
(24) In the art of hydrocarbon treatment, hydrocarbon compounds having two carbon atoms in a molecule of the referenced hydrocarbon are typically referred to as C2, hydrocarbon compounds having three carbon atoms in a molecule of the particular hydrocarbon are referred to as C3, etc. For example, methane may be referenced as C1, ethane as C2, propane as C3, etc. The annotation C2+ refers to hydrocarbon compounds having two or more carbon atoms per molecule of the hydrocarbon, such as ethane, propane, butane and heavier hydrocarbons.
(25) One or more embodiments of the invention provide a natural gas adsorptive separation system and method. While for ease of description and so as not to obscure the invention, illustrative embodiments are described in terms of separation of associated gas produced at a wellsite, nothing herein is intended to limit the invention to that embodiment. The invention may be applied equally to natural gas and/or natural gas liquids from other sources and/or may be used for the separation of other impurities such as water or hydrogen sulfide.
(26) Illustrative embodiments may separate an associated gas stream including a mixture of methane (C1), ethane (C2), propane (C3), butane (C4), isobutane (C4), pentane (C5) and/or natural gasoline (C5+) using an improved adsorption, absorption and desorption process. Illustrative embodiments may provide a comprehensive solution to process associated gas for small scale applications and/or may complement a refrigeration system. Precise temperature and pressure swing methods may control adsorption and desorption to purify and fractionate natural gas mixtures in order to minimize the cost of processing while maximizing the value of downstream products. Illustrative embodiments may eliminate or reduce the need for flaring. Illustrative embodiments may have low capital cost, may be portable, economical for low gas volumes, and capable of selective fractionation in order to reduce flaring and allow high quality CNG and NGL output that has low Reid vapor pressure (RVP).
(27) Illustrative embodiments may separate a mixed gas stream at ambient temperatures using an activated carbon adsorbent/absorbent. The higher binding energy of heavy alkanes may result in their selective removal from the inlet gas stream. As a mixed gas stream flows through an adsorption tower, initially lighter hydrocarbons may be adsorbed, but the lighter hydrocarbons are replaced with heavier hydrocarbons as flow progresses. Multiple adsorbent columns may alternate between being loaded and being regenerated after saturation with the heavier hydrocarbons. Rather than thermally treating the entire gas stream, only the heavier alkanes that have been trapped within the sorbent may be heated by circulating adsorbate as a heat carrying fluid. High pressure (e.g., 10 PSIG, 10 inHg or 20 inHg) may be circulated to add heat to the carrying fluid. For example, if pressure is increased, the fluid density may be increased, and as a result the circulating fluid has the ability to carry more heat per unit of volume. Once the adsorbent is hot, a vacuum or lower pressure may be applied in the adsorbent tank for regeneration. Methane may flow through the adsorbent without reacting (or the adsorbent may be selected such that methane and ethane flow through). Ethane, propane and butane may be adsorbed by the activated carbon sorbent, and the heavier isotopes C5+ may be absorbed by the sorbent. Once the methane is initially separated, the C2+ isotopes may be selectively released from the activated carbon by methodically controlling the temperature and pressure of the regeneration cycle in a desorptive fractionation process.
(28) In order to recover the trapped hydrocarbons respectively, sorbents may be heated step by step, and a vacuum and/or reduction in pressure gradually applied. Ethane may then be released and ejected firstly due to its smaller dimension and weaker interaction with sorbents. Then C3 and C4 may be released subsequently. Finally, heavier hydrocarbons (C5+) may be released individually through heating and vacuuming and/or reduction of pressure. A technical vacuum may not be required and/or it may not be necessary to reduce the pressure below atmospheric pressure, depending on the particular hydrocarbon. For example, stubborn hydrocarbons, such as C6 or C7 and heavier, may be present in small fractions but accumulate over many cycles. In such instances, a monitored supervised cycle may be conducted by increasing temperature to flush out those molecules, which may be present in 0.02% of a mole. Pressure may then be reduced. The most stubborn hydrocarbons may only use a fraction of 1% of carbon capacity. Alternatively, the activated carbon may be replaced after a certain number of cycles, or periodically regeneration may be conducted offsite to remove stubborn heavier hydrocarbons. A nitrogen environment may be employed at high pressures so even if there are leaks, the hydrocarbons may not ignite. Care must be taken since heavier carbons have a lower temperature of autoignition.
(29) A two-column device with an automatic controller that switches between columns may allow the adsorption system of illustrative embodiments to operate continuously. While one column is running for adsorption, the other column may be under regeneration with a vacuum pump. From the outlet on the bottom of the adsorption column, the pipeline quality natural gas may be released and transported into a gas pipeline network. At the outlet of the vacuum pump the C3+ or C2+ rich gas may be collected for further usage. An industrial-scale portable system may successfully convert well head associated gas into high-quality (at least 90% methane) automotive grade natural gas suitable for high-efficiency engines while simultaneously producing one or more separate streams of valuable heavy hydrocarbons (i.e., propane, butane, pentane, etc.).
(30) Illustrative embodiments may provide high deliverability of heat using pressurized fluid. Rather than heating the entire gas stream, only the heavier hydrocarbons within the adsorption tower may be heated. A slip stream of gas coming through the inlet may maintain a heat of desorption during the desorption step. After desorption, the adsorption tower may be cooled using at least a portion of cooled and compressed desorbed gas.
(31) Illustrative embodiments may be paired with the output of a mechanical refrigeration unit (MRU) to polish the output of the MRU. MRU's typically do not remove enough ethane from the natural gas to meet pipeline specifications. MRUs are inefficient where the ethane content is high, since MRUs do not reach low enough temperatures to condense significant quantities of ethane (more than 25%). The adsorption system of illustrative embodiments may process the gaseous output of the MRU to adjust the ethane content or collect more propane in order to generate a high methane content gas output and a lower value Y-grade that can be used as specialty fuel. In some embodiments, illustrative embodiments may polish the output of a Joule-Thomson (J-T) unit.
(32) In some embodiments a stationary adsorption unit may be paired with mobile regeneration. A mobile regeneration unit may serve multiple adsorption sites. In some embodiments, natural gas liquids separated in the system of illustrative embodiments may be mixed with oil to improve oil production percentage, and taken away by oil tankers.
(33) An adsorbent of illustrative embodiments may be layers of high porous activated carbons. Zeolites, molecular sieves, metal organic frameworks and/or alumina may also be employed as adsorbents. An adsorbent may be selected by sizing the micropores and mesopores of activated carbon by tuning the average pore size to the average dynamic diameter of the molecule of interest. It may not be desirable for the molecule diameter to be smaller than the average pore size since doing so may leave too much empty space in the sorbent. Exemplary adsorbents are offered by Cabot (Georgia, USA), Calgon Carbon Corporation (Pennsylvania, USA), and Ingevity (South Carolina, USA). Adsorbents employed in the adsorbent towers herein may be the adsorbents described as natural gas storage materials in U.S. Pub. No. 2014/0274659 to Romanos et al., which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety, provided that in the event of a conflict, the present disclosure shall prevail. Adsorbents may be packed inside columns (towers) with two open ends. An orifice and pressure regulator may provide precise gas flow through the column. A back-pressure regulator may place the system under a presetting pressure. A heating element with a temperature controller may generate heat on the adsorbent for temperature swing adsorption. The connection of a vacuum pump may favor the generation ability for the adsorbents.
(34) Illustrative embodiments may include a dual-tower adsorption apparatus that may operate in a cyclic four-step process.
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(37) Cooling heat exchangers 145a, 145b may be air heat exchangers, shell and tube heat exchangers, plate heat exchangers, or any other suitable heat exchanger known to those of skill in the art. Separator 155 may separate gas 165 and liquid 170 based on the differing densities. Gas 165 exiting separator 155 may return to natural gas inlet 105 if the gas 165 does not condense. Back pressure control valve 190 may maintain a back pressure during NGL separation. A fluid moving pump or compression device may be employed, for example, a centrifugal pump, positive displacement pump, piston, rotary piston, or lobes (fixed volume displacements). For net differential, a centrifugal pump may be beneficial since the impeller will impart energy to result in a discharge pressure. A variable speed centrifugal pump may be operated for high inlet pressures at low speeds to generate head (pressure). For operating at low pressures, higher speeds may be employed to compensate for the need to generate more head. In another example, positive displacement pump may move a physical volume independent of the pressure. The heater may be a low-pressure plate type heat exchanger or shell and fin heat exchanger. A shell and tube heat exchanger may be employed where higher pressures are maintained. Other heaters well known to those of skill in the art may be employed.
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(40) A control panel and/or computer may control the valves and/or switches of illustrative embodiments or the valves and switches may be manual. In embodiments with a control panel and/or computer, the controller may be pre-programmed to automatically switch between phases and/or towers or an operator may monitor the progress of the adsorption and/or desorption and direct the progression of the cycle. Where the controller is automatic, it may be programmed with temperatures and/or pressures (monitored by sensors well known to those of skill in the art) that when detected, trigger the next phase (adsorption, heating, desorption or cooling, as the case may be).
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(42) In some embodiments, there may be only a single tower 100a or 100b, or there may be more than two towers 100a and/or 100b to permit growth in scale. More than one tower may be used at each phase, or several towers may be at different phases in the cycle at any given time.
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(44) By using vacuum pump 130 and heater 135 and/or a blower or compressor, the temperature may be increased with closed-loop heating through adsorption tower 100a, 100b, and then the pressure may be reduced inside adsorption tower 100a, 100b during the desorption phase 215.
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(46) The adsorption system of illustrative embodiments, for example, the adsorption system of
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(48) In some embodiments, natural gas liquids may be separated from wellhead production fluid and combined with the oil in order to increase oil production. Illustrative embodiments may increase oil production from a well by about 4% or up to 10% depending on gas-oil-ratio (GOR) and gas composition.
(49) In some embodiments, separation and regeneration equipment may all be located onsite proximate a well.
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(51) A natural gas adsorptive separation system and method has been described. Further modifications and alternative embodiments of various aspects of the invention may be apparent to those skilled in the art in view of this description. Accordingly, this description is to be construed as illustrative only and is for the purpose of teaching those skilled in the art the general manner of carrying out the invention. It is to be understood that the forms of the invention shown and described herein are to be taken as the presently preferred embodiments. Elements and materials may be substituted for those illustrated and described herein, parts and processes may be reversed, and certain features of the invention may be utilized independently, all as would be apparent to one skilled in the art after having the benefit of this description of the invention. Changes may be made in the elements described herein without departing from the scope and range of equivalents as described in the following claims. In addition, it is to be understood that features described herein independently may, in certain embodiments, be combined.