The invention relates to a method of heating a fluid, in particular a cryogenic fluid such as liquefied natural gas (LNG). The invention relates more particularly to a method of vaporizing LNG, wherein previously dehumidified ambient air is used as a direct heat exchange fluid in a first air heat exchanger for heating said LNG to a certain temperature.
The invention applies more particularly to a method designed to be implemented in terminals for vaporizing or for re-gasifying LNG, in which terminals the LNG arrives via methane tanker ships in liquid form at a temperature of about −160 degrees Celsius (° C.) and at a pressure of about 1 bar.
At a vaporization terminal, the LNG is pumped in order to increase its pressure to about 90 bars so that the LNG is in a liquid supercritical form at about −160° C. and 90 bars. The LNG is then heated in a vaporization heat exchanger up to a temperature of about +2° C. so as to vaporize it, i.e. so as to transform it into natural gas (NG). The natural gas is then transported via gas pipelines to its place of use.
A very widespread method of vaporizing LNG is the method of Submerged Combustion Vaporizer (SCV) systems that use a fraction of the natural gas as a source of combustion for heating and vaporizing the LNG. For example, Patent Document US 2005/0092263 discloses a vaporization method that consists in causing the LNG to flow through a tube heat exchanger immersed in a pool filled with water and in burning a fraction of the natural gas (up to 1.5% of the production in the most extreme situations) in order to heat the water of the pool so as to heat the LNG and so as to vaporize it. The drawback with that method is that natural gas combustion discharges harmful and polluting products constituted by nitrogen oxides (NOx), carbon monoxide (CO), and carbon dioxide (CO2), and that the cost of using it is high.
Another method of vaporizing LNG that does not suffer from that drawback is known, in particular from U.S. Pat. No. 7,155,917. In that method, the LNG is heated in a first heat exchanger so as to vaporize it by using an intermediate fluid in liquid form that is conveyed by means of a pump in a closed-loop circuit. The intermediate fluid that is cooled in that step is then heated again in a second heat exchanger by ambient air. The drawback with that method is that the air is cooled to such an extent in the second heat exchanger that the water contained in the air condenses on the heat exchanger in the form of frost or ice that is undesirable, in particular because of its thermally insulating nature.
In order to avoid complete interruption of the vaporization, it is known, e.g. from U.S. Pat. No. 5,390,500, that it is possible to use a plurality of vaporization heat exchangers operating in alternation, so that, while one heat exchanger is active (i.e. is serving to vaporize natural gas), one or more other heat exchangers are being defrosted. Unfortunately, that type of vaporizer system is redundant and costly because it uses ambient air of humidity that is not controlled and because a large amount of frost is formed.
Patent Document JP-2005344790 discloses a method of vaporizing LNG in a heat exchanger using ambient air as a heat exchange fluid for heating the natural gas. That method consists in dehumidifying the air upstream from the heat exchanger in an electric dehumidifier, thereby making it possible to reduce the formation of frost on the walls of the heat exchanger. Unfortunately, compared with a method without dehumidification, the electrical power necessary for implementing such a method is multiplied by about 5. That method also considerably increases the head loss on the air side, thereby requiring a substantial increase in the motor drive of the fan system.
Patent Document FR 2 524 623 also discloses a method for cooling ambient air to a very low temperature by using liquid nitrogen. During that method, the liquid nitrogen is heated by the ambient air that has previously been dehumidified.
Patent Document DE 10052856 also discloses a storage container for cryogenic fluid, in particular liquid hydrogen, in which container dehumidified ambient air is used to heat cryogenic fluid.
An object of the invention is to propose a method of heating a fluid, in which previously dehumidified ambient air is used as a direct heat exchange fluid for heating the fluid in a heat exchanger, and in which frost or ice formation on the walls of the heat exchanger is prevented or limited, in a manner that is simple and inexpensive.
Another object of the invention is to propose a method and a system for vaporizing a liquefied cryogenic fluid, in particular LNG, in which previously dehumidified ambient air is used as a direct heat exchange fluid for heating the liquefied cryogenic fluid and for vaporizing it, and in which frost or ice formation on the walls of the heat exchanger serving to vaporize the cryogenic fluid is prevented or limited, in a manner that is simple and inexpensive.
To this end, the invention provides a method of vaporizing LNG, in which previously dehumidified ambient air is used as a direct heat exchange fluid in a first air heat exchanger for heating said LNG to a certain temperature, said method being characterized in that the dehumidification of the ambient air consists in reducing the temperature of the air in a second air heat exchanger by direct heat exchange with said LNG previously heated in said first heat exchanger at least to said certain temperature, said certain temperature lying approximately in the range −10° C. to −25° C.
With this method, a fraction of the water contained in the ambient air is thus condensed on the second heat exchanger by a natural process that is very effective, that is inexpensive, and that is simple to implement. With the method of the invention, it is possible to heat a cryogenic fluid, in particular LNG from a temperature of about −160° C. to about +2° C., without any harmful or polluting discharge into the atmosphere.
The invention also provides a system specially designed to implement such a method of vaporizing a cryogenic fluid, and comprising a first air heat exchanger for heating said LNG to a certain temperature by direct heat exchange with previously dehumidified ambient air, said system being characterized in that it further comprises a second air heat exchanger connected to the first air heat exchanger in series firstly through a circuit of said LNG that conveys said LNG as heated to said certain temperature from an outlet of the first heat exchanger to an inlet of the second heat exchanger, and secondly through an air duct that conveys the dehumidified air exiting from the second heat exchanger to an air inlet of the first heat exchanger, a first fan being disposed above the first air heat exchanger so as to draw air upwards through the first air heat exchanger and a second fan being disposed above the second air heat exchanger so as to blow air downwards through the second air heat exchanger.
The system of the invention may have the following features:
Other characteristics and advantages of the method of the invention for vaporizing a cryogenic fluid appear on reading the following description of an embodiment shown in the accompanying drawings, in which:
The system comprises a closed circuit 1 for natural gas in the form of cryogenic liquid at the inlet 1A and in the form of gas at the outlet 1B, both of which forms of natural gas are under high pressure (circuit 1 shown in continuous lines), an open circuit 2 for air channeled in the form of a flow of humid ambient air at the inlet 2A and in the form of dry air at the outlet 2B (circuit 2 shown in dashed lines), and an open circuit 3 for water in liquid form coming from the dehumidification of the air and/or from defrosting the air heat exchangers (circuit 3 shown in dashed lines).
In the method of the invention, ambient air, which is used as a direct heat exchange fluid for heating and vaporizing the LNG that arrives at 1A at a temperature T0 of about −160° C. and at a pressure of about 90 bars is previously dehumidified through an air heat exchanger 4 that is connected in series, via the gas closed circuit 1, to two other air heat exchangers 5 and 6, in each of which vaporization of the LNG takes place.
The flow of ambient air that arrives from the outside at the inlet 2A of the air open circuit 2 is blown downwards by a fan 14 through the heat exchanger 4 and is cooled to a temperature of +5° C. by the effect of heat exchange with the vaporized natural gas that enters the heat exchanger 4 at a temperature T1 of about −15° C. This cooling of the ambient air causes it to be dehumidified and thus the air that exits via the bottom of the heat exchanger 4 has relative humidity of about 100%. Such dehumidification makes it possible to extract from the ambient air an absolute quantity of water that is large if it is considered that the ambient air arrives at 2A at a temperature of 10° C. and with humidity that varies depending on the climate and on the season of the place in which the vaporizer system is installed. At the same time, the vaporized natural gas is heated to a temperature T2 of about +2° C. by heat exchange with ambient air in the heat exchanger 4. The temperatures (between T1 and T2) of the natural gas in the heat exchanger 4 are chosen to be sufficiently high to maintain a positive temperature on the outside surface of the heat exchanger 4, and thus not to generate frost on the outside surface of the heat exchanger 4. It is possible to provide a heat exchanger 4 disposed horizontally with tubes 4B having external fins arranged to drain the condensed water coming from the cooled air. The drops of water from condensation of the cooled air are collected in a retention tray 4C connected to the water open circuit 3.
This portion of the vaporizer system thus serves to dehumidify the ambient air by natural cooling with the advantage that this cooling also serves the main function of vaporizing LNG without excessive consumption of energy.
The air circuit 2 includes an appropriate duct represented by 2C, 2D, 2E for feeding the heat exchangers 5 and 6 with dehumidified air exiting from the heat exchanger 4. In each of the heat exchangers 5 and 6, the supercritical natural gas is heated by direct heat exchange, from a temperature T0 of −160° C. to a temperature T1 lying in the range −10° C. to −25° C., preferably to about −15° C., by the dehumidified air that arrives at about 5° C. in the heat exchanger 5, 6. This heat exchange cools the air passing through the heat exchangers 5 and 6 to a considerable extent, this air going from 5° C. and 100% humidity at the inlets of the heat exchangers to about −25° C. and 0% humidity at the outlets of the heat exchangers 5, 6 and therefore at the outlets 2B of the air circuit 2.
In order to improve the effectiveness of the heat exchange in the heat exchangers 5 and 6, the circulation of the flow of air by the fans 15, 16 is forced, said fans increasing the flow of air drawn (towards the top of the heat exchanger) through the heat exchangers and countering the overall static head loss of the air circuit 2. In this portion of the system shown in
If ambient air is available at a sufficient temperature and/or with sufficient humidity at the inlet 2A, the vaporizer system of the invention can operate continuously with a single vaporization heat exchanger such as 5 and the dehumidification heat exchanger 4 without the presence of frost on the walls. In order to facilitate heat exchange in the heat exchanger 5, the heat exchanger tubes 5B through which the LNG flows are provided with external fins, but in order to prevent the presence of frost, it is possible to make provision for such external fins to be omitted from the tubes at the bottom of the heat exchanger.
If frost still appears on the surfaces of the tubes 5B, 6B of the heat exchangers 5 and 6, provision is made to have the two heat exchangers operate respectively and alternately in “vaporizing” mode and in “deicing” or “defrosting” mode. As shown in
It can thus be understood that the air circuit (shown more clearly in
As can be seen in
In order to adjust the vaporizing and defrosting cycle times better in the heat exchangers 5 and 6, it is important to have an identical and constant quantity of water in the dehumidified air arriving at the heat exchangers 5 and 6. For this purpose, it is possible to set the temperature of the ambient air arriving at the inlet of the heat exchanger 4, for example, to a constant temperature of about 10° C., by mixing it in controlled manner with the cooled air exiting from the heat exchangers 5 and 6. For this purpose, as shown in
In order to optimize the defrosting of the heat exchanger 5 or 6, the ambient air serving for the defrosting can be blown by reversing the direction of rotation of the fans 15, 16, making it possible for the air to flow downwards, or by natural convection. As shown in
The heat exchangers 5 and 6 being caused to operate in alternation makes it possible not to interrupt operation of the vaporizer system even in the presence of frost. As a function of the cycle time related to the defrosting (which time is related to the temperature of the outside ambient air), the vaporizer system of the invention can include two heat exchangers such as 4 for dehumidification that serve three vaporization heat exchangers such as 5 and 6, two exchangers out of the three for vaporizing the gas always operating at the same time in vaporizing mode, while the third one is operating in defrosting mode. The vaporizer system can also include three dehumidification heat exchangers that serve four heat exchangers for vaporizing the gas, three out of the four vaporization heat exchangers always operating at the same time in vaporizing mode, while the fourth one is operating in defrosting mode. It is thus possible to have a vaporizer system operating with a heat exchanger such as 4 delivering dehumidified air to a plurality of heat exchangers in parallel such as 5 and 6.
In this heat exchanger 5, the tubes 5B at the top of the heat exchanger are provided with circular external fins 5D that are made of aluminum and that serve to increase the heat exchange surface area and thus to improve the heat exchanges between the air and the natural gas. It is possible, on the contrary, for the tubes 5B that are situated at the bottom of the heat exchanger relative to the direction of the flow of air not to be provided with external fins, thereby limiting formation of frost. All of the tubes 5B can be provided with inside surfaces in relief (not shown) having internal fins or internal structures (and referred to as “structured surfaces”) in order to improve the heat exchange between the natural gas and the walls of the tubes. The tubes 5B can thus be double-walled tubes (not shown), each having an annular portion around an inner tube, the natural gas in liquid form flowing through the inner tube and the vaporized natural gas (in gaseous form) flowing through the annular portion. This makes it possible to limit appearance of highly negative temperatures at the surfaces of the external fins 5D, thereby limiting propagation of the frost and limiting the thermal stresses between the tube 5B and the external fins 5D.
The vaporizer system of the invention can be coupled to a vaporizer system of a type different from the above-described SCV, in order to reduce the operating cost. For example, it is possible to cause a vaporizer system of the SCV type to operate during the coldest 8 months of the year (when the temperature of the ambient air is less than 10° C.) and to cause a vaporizer system of the invention to operate for the remaining 4 months of the year. It is thus possible to reduce the annual operating costs by more than 25% compared with a system of the SCV type operating for all 12 months of the year.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0856887 | Oct 2008 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR2009/051892 | 10/5/2009 | WO | 00 | 4/8/2011 |