None
Embodiments of the invention relate to methods and systems for removing mercury from water.
Recovered fluids from wells drilled into hydrocarbon reservoirs often include water. Separators remove the water from oil and gas products also produced. However, the water from some reservoirs contains mercury. The mercury in the water presents environmental and safety concerns and may prevent ability to discharge the water without first being treated.
Techniques utilizing solid absorbents for mercury removal from the produced water tend to result in fouling of mercury removal beds. Other factors limiting applicability of prior approaches to remove mercury include expense and size requirements given limited space available when used at platforms. Due to mercury solubility in the water, effectiveness problems arise with some of the prior approaches since the mercury contaminating the water tends to be part of inorganic compounds or a mixture of the inorganic compounds and elemental mercury.
Therefore, a need exists for improved methods and systems for removing mercury from water.
In one embodiment, a process of removing mercury from water includes separating crude production into a gaseous hydrocarbon stream, a liquid hydrocarbon stream and an aqueous stream. Water forms a majority of the aqueous stream. Removing mercury from a contaminated gas stream including the gaseous hydrocarbon stream provides a treated gas stream. Further, contacting the treated gas stream with the aqueous stream transfers mercury from the aqueous stream to the treated gas stream such that mercury removal from the aqueous stream is independent from the liquid hydrocarbon stream.
According to one embodiment, a method of removing mercury from water includes adding a reducing agent to an aqueous stream such that mercury-containing compounds in the aqueous stream are converted to form elemental mercury. The method further includes transferring the elemental mercury from the aqueous stream to a methane-containing gas stream. The transferring occurs upon contacting the gas stream with the aqueous stream combined with the reducing agent. In addition, the method includes removing the elemental mercury from the gas stream.
For one embodiment, a process of removing mercury from water includes separating crude production into a gaseous hydrocarbon stream, a liquid hydrocarbon stream and an aqueous stream. Water forms a majority of the aqueous stream. Transferring mercury from the liquid hydrocarbon stream to a first portion of a treated gas stream occurs by contacting the first portion of the treated gas stream with the liquid hydrocarbon stream. Furthermore, transferring mercury from the aqueous stream to a second portion of the treated gas stream by contacting the second portion of the treated gas stream with the aqueous stream is independent of the first portion of the treated gas stream being contacted with the liquid hydrocarbon stream. The treated gas stream forms by removing mercury from the gaseous hydrocarbon stream mixed with the first and second portions of the treated gas stream recycled after the contacting with the liquid hydrocarbon and aqueous streams.
The invention, together with further advantages thereof, may best be understood by reference to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Embodiments of the invention relate to removal of mercury from water. The removal relies on transferring mercury from an aqueous stream to a natural gas stream upon contacting the aqueous stream with the natural gas stream. Processing of the natural gas stream after used to strip the mercury from the aqueous stream removes the mercury from the natural gas stream.
In some embodiments, the water comes from crude production and is thus recovered from reservoirs along with hydrocarbons that may be liquid and gaseous. Mercury concentrations in the water that is produced often prevent outputting the water as waste due to environmental issues and regulations. The removal of the mercury from the water thereby enables discharge of the water separated from the hydrocarbons. As used herein, “mercury” refers to mercury within or from compounds, such as mercuric chloride, mercury oxide and combinations thereof, containing mercury and at least one other element and/or elemental mercury. Location for removing the mercury depends on application and can be performed onsite at offshore platforms with limited space and facilities.
Part of the treated gas stream 122 forms a recycle gas stream 120, which is introduced into a water-gas contactor 112 for contact with at least a portion of the aqueous stream 106 that also enters the water-gas contactor 112. Through such contacting, at least a portion of the mercury contained in the aqueous stream 106 transfers to the recycle gas stream 120, thereby forming a water-passed gas stream 116 output from the water-gas contactor 112 and a treated water “H2O” stream 114 output from the water-gas contactor 112. The water-passed gas stream 116 hence includes hydrocarbon gas and mercury “HC(G)+HG.” For some embodiments, the water-passed gas stream 116 mixes with the hydrocarbon gas stream 104 and provides a portion of the mercury-containing gas that feeds into the MRU 118.
In some embodiments, an optional chemical additive stream 110 mixes with the aqueous stream 106 to introduce a reducing agent into the aqueous stream 106 upstream from passing of the recycle gas stream 120 in contact with the aqueous stream 106. The reducing agent breaks molecular bonds between mercury atoms and other elements in mercury-containing compounds. As used herein, the reducing agent may be provided as a liquid and includes any substance that forms a compound with such released non-mercury elements to prevent recombination with elemental mercury. Examples of the reducing agent include stannous chloride (SnCl2; “SNCL2”), sodium borohydride, and hydrazine. Amount of the reducing agent introduced via the additive stream depends on concentration of mercury in the aqueous stream 106 and may be sufficient to establish an excess mole ratio of the reducing agent relative to the mercury.
The reducing agent supplied through the additive stream 110 may facilitate effectiveness of sparging within the water-gas contactor 112 since mercury removal ability via the sparging is higher for elemental mercury relative to when not in elemental form. Reducing inorganic compounds, such as mercury oxide or mercuric chloride, in the aqueous stream 106 tends to promote the mercury removal. Even though the mercury in the aqueous stream 106 can tend to remain in elemental form while at elevated formation temperatures, the elemental mercury may convert into mixed element compounds due to cooling of the aqueous stream 106 and temperature influence on solubility of the elemental mercury. In operation, the aqueous stream 106 may cool upon coming out of the well making introduction of the additive stream 110 desirable to reduce the inorganic compounds to the elemental mercury.
For some embodiments, the treated water stream 114 passes through an optional filtration system 124 to remove suspended particulates from the treated water stream 114. The filtration system 124 operates based on size exclusion to trap or retain particles above a certain size, such as about 0.2 micron or about 0.4 micron. The cooling that is inevitable after the input stream 100 comes out of the well promotes adherence of the mercury to the particulates. Generation of a filtered water stream 126 flowing out of the filtration system 124 thus results in further mercury removal .since residual mercury still within the treated water stream 114 is associated with the particulates.
In some embodiments, the water-gas contactor 112 includes multiple (e.g., 2, 4, 6 or more) theoretical stages of separation between vapor and liquid phases. Either trays or packing material of the water-gas contactor 112 may form the theoretical stages by being in a flow path of fluids described herein passing through the water-gas contactor 112. For example, the packing material making up an internal part of the water-gas contactor 112 may include random oriented objects or a shaped structure and may be made of metallic, ceramic, plastic or other solid material. For some embodiments, amount of the packing material utilized depends on a desired number of the stages provided by the packing material.
The MRU 118 defines a fixed bed including any mercury sorbent material capable of removing mercury from gases. In some embodiments, the treated gas stream 122 includes less than about 20 weight percent (wt. %) of the mercury within the mercury-containing gas, less than about 10 wt. % of the mercury within the mercury-containing gas, or less than about 1 wt. % of the mercury within the mercury-containing gas. The treated water stream 114 or the filtered water stream 126 may contain less than about 50 wt. %, 10 wt. %, or 1 wt. % of the mercury contained in the aqueous stream 106. The aqueous stream 106 for some embodiments contains at least about 5 parts-per-billion (ppb), 100 ppb or 500 ppb mercury.
For some embodiments, the recycle gas stream 120 contacts the aqueous stream 106 at ambient temperature, such as about 21° C., or from about 0° C. to about 300° C.; a pressure in the range of from about 0.1 Bars to about 15 Bars, from about 0.5 Bars to about 10 Bars, or from about 1 Bar to about 5 Bars; and a gas to liquid ratio in the range of from about 50 to about 300 standard cubic feet of gas/barrel of liquid (SCF/bbl) or from about 100 to about 200 SCF/bbl.
Independence with respect to removing mercury from the aqueous stream enables mercury to be removed from the water alone or tailoring amount of mercury to be removed from each of the water and the hydrocarbon liquids as desired. Referring to
The preferred embodiment of the present invention has been disclosed and illustrated. However, the invention is intended to be as broad as defined in the claims below. Those skilled in the art may be able to study the preferred embodiments and identify other ways to practice the invention that are not exactly as described herein. It is the intent of the inventors that variations and equivalents of the invention are within the scope of the claims below and the description, abstract and drawings are not to be used to limit the scope of the invention.
This application is a non-provisional application which claims benefit under 35 USC §119(e) to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/243,879 filed Sep. 18, 2009, entitled “MERCURY REMOVAL FROM WATER,” which is incorporated herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61243879 | Sep 2009 | US |