Claims
- 1. A storage system for storing a compressible gas in the dense phase under pressure, the storage system comprising:
one or more pipes of a material which will withstand a predetermined range of temperatures and meet required design factors for the pipe material; a chilling member cooling the gas to a temperature within said temperature range; a pressurizing member pressurizing the gas within a predetermined range of pressures at a lower temperature of said temperature range where the compressibility factor of the gas is at a minimum; and said chilling member and pressurizing member setting the temperature and pressure of the gas to maximize the compression ratio.
- 2. The storage system of claim 1 wherein said pipes material is either X-80 or X-60 premium high strength steel and said temperature range is between −20° F. and 0° F.
- 3. The storage system of claim 2 wherein said lower temperature is substantially −20° F.
- 4. The storage system of claim 3 wherein the gas has a specific gravity of about 0.6 and said pressure range is between 1800 and 1900 pounds per square inch.
- 5. The storage system of claim 3 wherein the gas has a specific gravity of about 0.7 and said pressure range is between 1300 and 1400 pounds per square inch.
- 6. The storage system of claim 1 wherein said pipe is made of X-100 premium high strength steel and said temperature range is between −40° F. and 0° F.
- 7. The storage system of claim 4 wherein said lower temperature is substantially −40° F.
- 8. The storage system of claim 1 wherein said pressure range is that range of pressures at said lower temperature where the compressibility factor varies no more than 2% of the minimum compressibility factor.
- 9. The storage system of claim 1 wherein there are a plurality of pipes connected by one or more manifolds.
- 10. The storage system of claim 1 wherein the pipe material is steel and one required design factor is 0.5 of the yield strength of steel pipe.
- 11. The storage system of claim 1 wherein said pipe is made of steel and further including maximizing the ratio of the mass of the stored gas to the mass of said steel pipe.
- 12. The storage system of claim 11 wherein the pipe diameter and pipe wall thickness are chosen to maximize the ratio of masses.
- 13. The storage system of claim 12 wherein the gas has a specific gravity of substantially 0.6 and wherein one required design factor is 0.5 of the yield strength of the steel pipe, the steel pipe has a yield strength of 80,000 psi, the pipe diameter is 20 inches, and the pipe wall thickness is between 0.43 and 0.44 inches.
- 14. The storage system of claim 12 wherein the gas has a specific gravity of substantially 0.6 and wherein one required design factor is 0.5 of the yield strength of the steel pipe, the steel pipe has a yield strength of 80,000 psi, the pipe diameter is 36 inches and the pipe wall thickness is between 0.78 and 0.79 inches.
- 15. The storage system of claim 12 wherein the gas has a specific gravity of substantially 0.7 and wherein one required design factor is 0.5 of the yield strength of the steel pipe, the steel pipe has a yield strength of 80,000 psi, the pipe diameter is 24 inches and the pipe wall thickness is between 0.38 and 0.39 inches.
- 16. The storage system of claim 12 wherein the gas has a specific gravity of substantially 0.7 and wherein one required design factor is 0.5 of the yield strength of the steel pipe, the steel pipe has a yield strength of 80,000 psi, the pipe diameter is 36 inches and the pipe wall thickness is between 0.58 and 0.59 inches.
- 17. A method for storing a compressible gas in the dense phase in a storage container under pressure, the method comprising:
selecting a predetermined range of temperatures which meet the required design factors for the storage container; selecting a predetermined range of pressures at a lower temperature of said temperature range which minimizes the compressibility factor of the gas; and maximizing the compression ratio.
- 18. The method of claim 17 wherein said storage container is made of X-80 or X-60 premium high strength steel and said temperature range is between −20° F. and 0° F.
- 19. The method of claim 18 wherein said lower temperature is substantially −20° F.
- 20. The method of claim 19 wherein the gas has a specific gravity of about 0.6 and said pressure range is between 1800 and 1900 pounds per square inch.
- 21. The method of claim 19 wherein the gas has a specific gravity of about 0.7 and said pressure range is between 1300 and 1400 pounds per square inch.
- 22. The method of claim 17 wherein said storage container is made of X-100 premium high strength steel and said temperature range is between −40° F. and 0° F.
- 23. The method of claim 22 wherein said lower temperature is substantially −40° F.
- 24. The method of claim 17 wherein said pressure range is that range of pressures at said lower temperature where the compressibility factor varies no more than 2% of the minimum compressibility factor.
- 25. The method of claim 17 wherein said storage container is made of steel pipe.
- 26. The method of claim 25 wherein one required design factor is 0.5 of the yield strength of the steel pipe.
- 27. The method of claim 25 further including maximizing the ratio of the mass of the stored gas to the mass of the steel pipe.
- 28. The method of claim 27 further including selecting a pipe diameter and determining the optimum pipe wall thickness from the ratio of masses.
- 29. The method of claim 28 wherein the gas has a specific gravity of substantially 0.6 and wherein one required design factor is 0.5 of the yield strength of the steel pipe, the steel pipe has a yield strength of 80,000 psi, the pipe diameter is 20 inches and the pipe wall thickness is between 0.43 and 0.44 inches.
- 30. The method of claim 28 wherein the gas has a specific gravity of substantially 0.6 and wherein one required design factor is 0.5 of the yield strength of the steel pipe, the steel pipe has a yield strength of 80,000 psi, the pipe diameter is 36 inches and the pipe wall thickness is between 0.78 and 0.79 inches.
- 31. The method of claim 28 wherein the gas has a specific gravity of substantially 0.7 and wherein one required design factor is 0.5 of the yield strength of the steel pipe, the steel pipe has a yield strength of 80,000 psi, the pipe diameter is 24 inches and the pipe wall thickness is between 0.38 and 0.39 inches.
- 32. The method of claim 28 wherein the gas has a specific gravity of substantially 0.7 and wherein one required design factor is 0.5 of the yield strength of the steel pipe, the steel pipe has a yield strength of 80,000 psi, the pipe diameter is 36 inches and the pipe wall thickness is between 0.58 and 0.59 inches.
- 33. A method for optimizing gas payload in a gas storage pipe, the method comprising:
selecting the minimum temperature which will allow the pipe material to meet a predetermined design consideration; determining the pressure, as controlled by a design factor, that at the minimum temperature, maximizes the compression of the gas in the pipe; selecting a high yield strength pipe and a pipe diameter; maximizing the ratio of the mass of the stored gas to the mass of the steel pipe; and determining the optimum pipe wall thickness from the ratio of masses and selected pipe diameter.
- 34. The method of claim 33 wherein the steel pipe is a high strength steel pipe 36 inches in diameter and made of material having a yield strength between 60,000 and 100,000 pounds per square inch.
- 35. The method of claim 33 wherein the design factor is the lower of 0.5 of the yield strength of the pipe and 0.33 of the ultimate tensile strength of the pipe.
- 36. The method of claim 33 wherein the minimum temperature is −20° F.
- 37. The method of claim 36 wherein the optimum pressure is between 1,200 and 1,500 pounds per square inch.
- 38. The method of claim 37 wherein the steel pipe has a 36 inch diameter.
- 39. The method of claim 38 wherein the gas has a specific gravity of 0.6 and the pipe has a wall thickness of 0.66 inches.
- 40. The method of claim 38 wherein the gas has a specific gravity of 0.7 and the pipe has a wall thickness of 0.49 inches.
- 41. The method of claim 33 wherein the ratio of the mass of stored gas to the mass of storage components is at least 0.3.
- 42. A system for storing gas, the system comprising:
a plurality of pipes; a manifold connecting said plurality of pipes; and said pipes being made of a material which will withstand a reduced temperature and elevated pressure that maintains the gas at a minimum compressibility factor and in a dense phase.
- 43. The system of claim 42 wherein the gas is stored at a temperature in the range of −20° F. to 0° F. and at a pressure above 1200 pounds per square inch.
- 44. A gas storage system designed for a gas having a particular specific gravity comprising:
a reservoir of hydrocarbons having a first specific gravity; a plurality of pipes to store natural gas having a second specific gravity; and a conduit communicating said reservoir with the natural gas to be stored in said pipes for adding hydrocarbons to said natural gas in such an amount such that the resultant gas to be stored in the pipes has a specific gravity substantially the same as the particular specific gravity for which the gas storage system was designed.
- 45. A method of storing natural gas in a gas storage system designed for a gas having a particular specific gravity, the method comprising:
producing a natural gas having a first specific gravity to be stored in the gas storage system; and adding or removing a hydrocarbon gas of a second specific gravity to the produced natural gas until the resultant natural gas has the same specific gravity as the particular specific gravity for which the gas storage system was designed.
- 46. The method of claim 45 wherein the gas storage system is disposed in a marine vessel and storage facilities are disposed in the marine vessel for the hydrocarbon gas to be added or removed.
- 47. The method of claim 45 wherein natural gas is added or removed such that the specific gravity of the produced gas is the same as the specific gravity of the particular gas composition.
- 48. The method of claim 45 wherein any added gas is dropped out of the produced gas and is removed as the produced gas expands and cools upon being off-loaded.
- 49. The method of claim 48 wherein the removed gas is returned to a reservoir on the marine vessel.
- 50. The method of claim 45 wherein the hydrocarbon gas of a second specific gravity is a heavier hydrocarbon than the produced gas.
- 51. A system for storing and transporting gas comprising
a vessel; and a gas storage system designed to minimize the compressibility factor of the gas and maximize the ratio of the mass of the gas to the mass of the storage system.
- 52. The system of claim 51 wherein said gas storage system is designed for a single specific gravity and further comprising a reservoir of hydrocarbons available to adjust the specific gravity of the transported gas to the desired value.
- 53. The system of claim 51 wherein said vessel is specially constructed for use in transporting gas and the gas storage system is constructed integral to the vessel as the vessel is being constructed.
- 54. The system of claim 51 where said vessel is a vessel retrofit for use in transporting gas and said gas storage system is a modular system separately constructed for use on the vessel.
- 55. The system of claim 51 wherein said gas storage system comprises:
a plurality of pipes arranged in tiers; insulation for insulating said pipes to maintain a reduced temperature; a system for loading and unloading gas from said pipes; a manifold system connecting said pipes to said loading and unloading system; and a structural frame to support said pipes.
- 56. The system of claim 55 wherein said pipes are 36 inches in diameter and 500 feet long.
- 57. The system of claim 55 wherein said insulation comprises a nitrogen atmosphere surrounding said pipes.
- 58. The system of claim 55 wherein said structural frame is constructed from I-beams fixably attached to the hull of said vessel and provides structural support to the vessel.
- 59. The system of claim 58 wherein said I-beams are placed between each tier of pipe and welded together to act as a bulkhead.
- 60. The system of claim 55 wherein said insulation comprises a polyurethane foam at least 12 inches thick.
- 61. The system of claim 55 wherein said structural frame is constructed from thin straps formed from steel plate to conform to the outside diameter of said pipes, wherein said straps are placed between tiers of pipe and fastened to straps on adjacent tiers.
- 62. The system of claim 61 wherein said pipes are not fastened to said straps.
- 63. The system of claim 55 wherein said manifold system comprises:
a valve and a pressure gauge attached to the manifold; and a piping system at each end of said pipes to divide said pipes into groups to facilitate the loading and unloading of gas.
- 64. The system of claim 63 wherein said piping system comprises a manifold for each horizontal tier of pipes, each horizontal manifold being connected to a master vertical manifold.
- 65. A marine vessel for transporting compressed natural gas comprising:
a hull having a support structure a plurality of pipes forming a portion of said support structure; and said pipes forming a storage container for the compressed natural gas.
- 66. The marine vessel of claim 65 further including a bow, a stern and structured members extending across the beam of the hull and supporting said pipes extending from bow to stern.
- 67. The marine vessel of claim 66 wherein said structural members include saddles receiving upper and lower sides of said pipes.
- 68. The marine vessel of claim 65 further including bulkheads attached to the pipe dividing the hull into a plurality of compartments.
- 69. The marine vessel of claim 68 wherein each compartment includes a nitrogen atmosphere.
- 70. The marine vessel of claim 69 further including a chemical monitoring system to monitor the nitrogen atmosphere in each compartment to detect leaks of the stored gas.
- 71. The marine vessel of claim 69 further including a system to monitor the temperature of the stored gas.
- 72. The marine vessel of claim 68 further including a flare system to bleed off any stored gas leaking in one of the compartments.
- 73. The marine vessel of claim 65 wherein said pipes are stacked within said hull forming a cross-section with a trapezoidal shape.
- 74. The marine vessel of claim 73 wherein the trapezoidal shape forms a horizontal surface across said pipes with a deck extending over said surface.
- 75. The marine vessel of claim 65 further including manifolds and valving connected to the ends of said pipe.
- 76. The marine vessel of claim 65 wherein said hull and said pipes serve as dual bulkheads to the stored gas.
- 77. The marine vessel of claim 65 further including insulation around said plurality of pipes.
- 78. The marine vessel of claim 77 wherein said insulation allows no more than ½° raise in temperature of the stored gas for each 1000 miles of travel of the marine vessel.
- 79. The marine vessel of claim 77 wherein said plurality of pipes forms a pipe bundle with said insulation extending around the sides of said pipe bundle.
- 80. The marine vessel of claim 77 wherein said insulation is polyurethane foam.
- 81. The marine vessel of claim 65 further including an engine using a small portion of the stored gas as fuel.
- 82. The marine vessel of claim 81 wherein the pressure increase of the gas stored in said pipes due to a rise in temperature is less than the pressure decrease caused by the amount of gas used as fuel.
- 83. The marine vessel of claim 65 wherein said pipes with stored gas provide buoyancy for the marine vessel.
- 84. The marine vessel of claim 65 further including a smart pig disposed in said pipes for testing said pipes.
- 85. The marine vessel of claim 65 further including means for pressurizing said pipes to test the integrity of said pipes.
- 86. The marine vessel of claim 85 wherein said pipes are pressurized while filled with a displacing fluid.
- 87. A method of constructing a marine gas storage vessel, the method comprising:
constructing a hull for the vessel; installing a tier of pipe supports along the bottom of the hull and extending across the beam of the hull; attaching the ends of the pipe supports to the hull; installing a tier of pipe transversely of the tier of pipe supports; and repeating the installation of pipe support tiers and pipe tiers and securing the pipe tiers between adjacent pipe support tiers until the hull is filled with pipe.
- 88. The method of claim 87 wherein the pipe is installed at a temperature of 30° F.
- 89. The method of claim 87 further including passing a coolant through the pipe until the pipe reaches installation temperature.
- 90. The method of claim 89 wherein the coolant is nitrogen.
- 91. The method of claim 87 wherein the pipe is installed in the hull at a temperature so that expansion and contraction of the pipe is limited to 1 inch per 500 feet of pipe length.
- 92. The method of claim 87 further including constructing a deck over the pipe after the pipe has been installed.
- 93. The method of claim 87 further including surrounding the pipe with insulation.
- 94. The method of claim 87 further including affixing said pipe tiers to adjacent pipe support tiers.
- 95. The method of claim 87 wherein the temperature of the pipes remains within a predetermined range of temperature during loading of the gas, transportation of the gas and off-loading of the gas thereby preventing thermal shock to the pipe.
- 96. The method of claim 87 wherein the pipes will hold a volume at least equal to one half of the volume of the gas at ambient temperatures.
- 97. A marine storage vessel for storing gas, the system comprising:
a hull section constructed from concrete; gas storage pipes built into said hull section; a bow section connected to one end of said hull section; and a stern section connected to another end of said hull section.
- 98. The vessel of claim 97 wherein said hull section has a circular cross-section.
- 99. The vessel of claim 97 wherein said hull section is made using slip-forming concrete construction techniques.
- 100. The vessel of claim 97 further including ballast sections allowing ballast to be pumped into the vessel to control the trim and draft of the vessel.
- 101. The vessel of claim 97 wherein said bow and said stern sections are the salvaged bow and stern of another vessel.
- 102. A marine storage system for storing gas in the dense phase, the system comprising:
a vessel having a first hull; a plurality of pipes for storing the gas; and said pipes providing a second hull for the gas.
- 103. The system of claim 102 further including ballast disposed around said plurality of pipes.
- 104. A modular system for storing gas comprising:
a plurality of pipes arranged in tiers; a means for insulating said pipes to maintain a reduced temperature; a system for loading and unloading gas from said pipes; a manifold system connecting said pipes to said loading and unloading system; a structural frame to support said pipes; and an outer enclosure.
- 105. The modular system of claim 104 wherein said pipes are arranged vertically.
- 106. A storage system for gas comprising:
a plurality of pipes in parallel relationship forming a plurality of tiers of pipes; a plurality of support members extending between adjacent tiers of pipe and having opposing accurate recesses for housing individual pipes; said pipes and support members forming a pipe bundle; manifolds and valves connecting the ends of said pipe; and insulation surrounding said pipe bundle.
- 107. The system of claim 106 wherein said support members are I-beams.
- 108. The system of claim 106 further including liners between said support members and said pipes.
- 109. The system of claim 106 further including seals between said support member and said pipe.
- 110. The system of claim 107 wherein said seals are a gasketing material.
- 111. The system of claim 106 wherein said pipe is welded to said structural members.
- 112. The system of claim 111 wherein said pipe is welded to said structural members at warmer temperatures than the gas storage temperature whereby the resulting strain is taken in said pipe.
- 113. The system of claim 106 wherein said pipes are clamped between said structural members.
- 114. The system of claim 113 wherein said pipes may expand and contract longitudinally between said structural members.
- 115. The system of claim 113 further including a coating or sleeve between said pipes and structural members to relieve friction.
- 116. The system of claim 106 wherein said support members are straps of steel plate bent to conform to the outside curvature of adjacent tiers of pipe.
- 117. The system of claim 116 wherein said straps have a sinusoidal cross-section with a radius of curvature conforming to the outside curvature of said pipes.
- 118. The system of claim 116 wherein adjacent straps contact.
- 119. The system of claim 118 wherein said adjacent straps are welded at said contacts.
- 120. The system of claim 119 wherein an interlocked structure is formed such that Poisson's ratio of the pipe bundle approaches one.
- 121. The system of claim 116 wherein said straps are made of the same material as said pipes.
- 122. The system of claim 116 wherein the numbers of straps per tier decreases with the height of the pipe bundle.
- 123. The system of claim 116 further including a low-friction or anti-erosion material between said pipes and said straps.
- 124. The system of claim 106 further including spacers between adjacent tiers of pipe.
- 125. The system of claim 106 wherein said structural members include continuous sheets of material extending between adjacent tiers of pipes.
- 126. The system of claim 125 wherein said sheets serve as barriers between adjacent tiers of pipe.
- 127. The system of claim 106 wherein the ends of said straps are connected to an enclosure for said pipe bundle.
- 128. The system of claim 116 wherein said pipes are not affixed to said straps allowing said pipes to expand, contrast and bend with respect to said straps.
- 129. The system of claim 128 wherein said individual pipes are allowed to move independently in response to the movement of said enclosure.
- 130. The system of claim 106 wherein said manifolding closes each end of said pipe and includes tier manifolds communicating the interior of said pipes with master manifolds for loading and unloading the gas stored in said pipes.
- 131. The system of claim 130 wherein said tier manifold include loading and unloading tier manifolds and said master manifolds include loading and unloading master manifolds.
- 132. The system of claim 131 wherein one of the loading or unloading manifolds extends to one end of the enclosure and the other of the loading or unloading manifolds extends to an opposite end of the enclosure.
- 133. The system of claim 131 further including a flare system communicating with said tier and master manifolds to bleed off stored gas.
- 134. The system of claim 130 wherein said valving includes flow control members between said pipe ends and said tier manifolds and between said tier manifold and said master manifolds.
- 135. The system of claim 106 further including a frame forming an enclosure around said pipe bundle.
- 136. The system of claim 135 further including filling the enclosure with a nitrogen atmosphere.
- 137. The system of claim 136 further including means for circulating the nitrogen around the pipes within the enclosure.
- 138. The system of claim 135 wherein said enclosure is formed by a flexible, insulating skin of panels or a semi-rigid, multi-layered membrane.
- 139. The system of claim 138 wherein said enclosure may be inflated with nitrogen.
- 140. The system of claim 106 wherein said pipes may be either vertical or horizontal with the ground.
- 141. The system of claim 106 wherein said insulation is perlite or other material having a thermal conductivity of less than 0.02 Btu/hour/foot/° F.
- 142. A marine storage system for the storage of compressed natural gas, the system comprising:
a vessel with a hold and a deck; a plurality of pipes in parallel relationship; a support structure including support members extending between rows of pipe and a frame forming an enclosure around said pipes; said pipes and support structure forming a modular unit; and said modular unit being disposed on said deck.
- 143. The system of claim 142 wherein said pipes are perpendicular to said deck.
- 144. The system of claim 142 wherein said modular unit is disposed below said deck.
- 145. The system of claim 142 wherein said modular unit has a tilted orientation to said deck for off-loading the stored gas.
- 146. The system of claim 142 wherein said modular unit may be loaded and unloaded from said vessel.
- 147. A method of loading gas into a gas storage system comprising;
compressing the gas to a predetermined low pressure; cooling the gas to a predetermined reduced temperature; and pumping the compressed, cooled gas into the storage system.
- 148. The method of claim 147 wherein the pressure of the gas is increased as the injection pressure is raised to the predetermined gas storage pressure.
- 149. The method of claim 148 further comprising cooling the storage system before gas is pumped in.
- 150. The method of claim 149 wherein natural gas is passed through a chiller, then through the storage system, and recycled through the chiller to cool the storage system.
- 151. The method of claim 147 further including enclosing the storage system in a nitrogen blanket to cool the storage system.
- 152. The method of claim 147 wherein the gas is compressed to 1800 pounds per square inch and cooled to −20° F.
- 153. A method of unloading gas from a gas storage system comprising:
pumping a displacement fluid into one end of the storage system; opening the other end of the storage system to enable the removal of gas.
- 154. The method of claim 153 wherein the displacement fluid has minimal absorption by the gas.
- 155. The method of claim 153 further including tilting one end of the storage system.
- 156. The method of claim 155 wherein the storage system is disposed on a marine vessel and one end of the vessel is made higher than the other end of the vessel to tilt the storage system.
- 157. The method of claim 155 wherein one end of the storage system is lower than the other end and the displacement fluid is injected through the lower end.
- 158. The method of claim 155 wherein tilting the storage system minimizes contact between the displacement fluid and the gas.
- 159. The method of claim 155 wherein the vessel is tilted 1 to 3 degrees.
- 160. The method of claim 155 wherein the storage system is inclined at an angle on another structure.
- 161. The method of claim 155 wherein the storage system is tilted at a sufficient angle to overcome any natural sag in pipes making up the system where displacement liquid may be caught in the sagging pipe.
- 162. The method of claim 155 wherein an underwater hoist lifts one end of the vessel.
- 163. The method of claim 153 wherein the one end is at a low point on the storage system and the other end is at a high point on the storage system to minimize the interface between the displacement fluid and the stored gas.
- 164. The method of claim 153 further including a separator disposed in the storage system to separate the displacement fluid from the gas.
- 165. The method of claim 164 wherein the separator is a sphere or a pig.
- 166. The method of claim 164 wherein the separator is located at the one end of the storage system and moves through the storage system as the displacement fluid is pumped into the one end.
- 167. The method of claim 166 wherein low pressure is applied to the separator to return the separator to the one end.
- 168. The method of claim 153 further including recapturing any off-loaded gas which has absorbed displacement fluid.
- 169. The method of claim 153 wherein the storage system includes a plurality of pipes in tiers, the method further including unloading one tier at a time.
- 170. The method of claim 169 wherein the displacement fluid used to off-load gas in a first tier is then used to off-load gas stored in another tier.
- 171. The method of claim 169 wherein the displacement fluid used to unload the tier is pumped to a storage tank and other displacement fluid is used to unload the next tier.
- 172. The method of claim 153 wherein the gas is natural gas and further including removing higher molecular weight components from the natural gas by passing the natural gas through an expansion valve allowing the higher molecular weight components to liquefy.
- 173. The method of claim 172 wherein the expansion valve drops the pressure from 1000 to 400 psig.
- 174. The method of claim 172 wherein the remaining natural gas is passed to a pipeline.
- 175. The method of claim 153 wherein the volume of displacement fluid required to off-load the gas is less than the volume of gas to be off-loaded.
- 176. The method of claim 171 wherein only enough displacement fluid required to displace two tiers of pipes is used.
- 177. The method of claim 153 wherein the temperature of the displacement fluid is substantially the same as that of the stored gas.
- 178. The method of claim 153 wherein the storage system is displaced on a marine vessel and the method further comprises leaving sufficient gas in the storage system after off-loading to power the vessel to a location to on-load more gas.
- 179. The method of claim 153 wherein the gas is not expanded until the gas has left the gas storage system.
- 180. The method of claim 153 wherein the gas storage system includes a plurality of pipes communicating with a manifold system, and further including completely filling the manifold system with gas before off-loading the gas from the gas storage system.
- 181. The method of claim 180 wherein a pressure drop occurs across a valve which off-loads the gas from the gas storage system.
- 182. The method of claim 181 further including opening the valve after the manifold system reaches marine vessel pressure.
- 183. The method of claim 181 further including removing heavier hydrocarbons from the natural gas after the pressure drop at the valve.
- 184. The method of claim 153 wherein the displacement fluid is methanol or ethanol.
- 185. A system for unloading gas comprising:
a plurality of pipes, each pipe having a first end and a second end, containing gas at an elevated pressure and reduced temperature; a first manifold system attached to said pipes on the first end of said pipe; a second manifold system attached to said pipes on the second end of said pipe; a supply of displacement liquid in fluid communication with said first manifold system; and a pipeline or other storage medium for the gas in fluid communication with said second manifold system; said supply of displacement liquid being pumped through said first manifold system into said pipes so that when said second manifold is opened, the gas flows into said pipeline or other storage medium.
- 186. The system of claim 185 wherein said supply includes an insulated tank.
- 187. The system of claim 185 wherein said supply has at least sufficient displacement fluid for one tier of said pipes.
- 188. The system of claim 185 wherein the gas storage system is inclined at an angle with the second ends of said pipe higher than said first end of said pipes.
- 189. The system of claim 185 further comprising a pig disposed within each pipe to act as a barrier between the displacement fluid and the gas.
- 190. The system of claim 185 further including an insulated tank for storing the displacement fluid and a pump for pumping the displacement fluid into said first end of said pipe.
- 191. The system of claim 185 further including a sump pump for pumping the displacement fluid to a storage tank.
- 192. The system of claim 185 wherein the displacement fluid has a freezing point below the temperature of the stored gas.
- 193. The system of claim 185 wherein said displacement fluid has a negligible solubility in the stored gas.
- 194. The system of claim 186 wherein said supply further includes a chiller for chilling the displacement fluid.
- 195. A method of unloading natural gas from a gas storage system in a marine vessel comprising:
storing the gas at an elevated pressure and reduced temperature maintaining the gas in the dense phase; and off-loading the gas by heating the gas and allowing it to expand.
- 196. The method of claim 195 wherein the gas is heated by heating a nitrogen blanket around the gas storage system.
- 197. The method of claim 195 wherein the gas is heated using an electrical tracing system.
- 198. The method of claim 195 further including scavenging the gas remaining in the gas storage system using a low suction pressure compressor.
- 199. A system for transporting natural gas comprising:
a source of natural gas; a loading station capable of compressing and chilling the gas; a vessel for transporting the gas in a gas storage system at a pressure and temperature that minimizes the compressibility factor of the gas and maximizes the compression ratio of the gas; and a receiving station.
- 200. The system of claim 199 wherein the loading station is sized to load compressed natural gas at a rate greater than or equal to approximately 1.0 times the rate at which the compressed natural gas will be consumed by consumers.
- 201. The system of claim 199 further including a second vessel transporting an empty gas storage system from the receiving station to the loading station while the other vessel transports the gas from the loading station to the receiving station.
- 202. The system of claim 199 further including a distribution system for transporting the gas to consumers.
- 203. The system of claim 202 wherein the distribution system is a pipeline.
- 204. The system of claim 199 wherein said receiving station comprises a surge storage system to receive the gas.
- 205. The system of claim 204 wherein the surge storage system has sufficient capacity to fill the demand of customers until gas from another vessel is off-loaded.
- 206. The system of claim 199 wherein the vessel is powered using a portion of the stored natural gas.
- 207. The system of claim 206 wherein the removal of said portion allows the remaining stored gas to expand thus cooling the remaining stored gas.
- 208. The system of claim 206 wherein sufficient stored gas is left on board the vessel to power the vessel back to the source of natural gas.
- 209. The system of claim 199 wherein said receiving station comprises a supply of displacement fluid to off-load the gas.
- 210. The system of claim 199 wherein said receiving station comprises a means for storing gas in periods of low usage to be used in periods of high usage.
- 211. The system of claim 199 wherein the loading station is offshore.
- 212. The system of claim 199 wherein the source of gas is between 300 and 4000 miles from the receiving station.
- 213. A storage system for liquid propane comprising:
a plurality of pipes forming a storage container for liquid propane; designing the pipes for a pressure twice as great as the vapor pressure of the liquid propane; and maintaining the liquid propane at ambient temperatures.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application claims benefit of 35 U.S.C. 119(e) of provisional application Ser. No. 60/230,099, filed Sep. 5, 2000 and entitled “Methods and Apparatus for Transporting CNG,” hereby incorporated herein by reference, and is related to U.S. patent application entitled “Methods and Apparatus for Compressible Gas”, filed concurrently herewith and hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60230099 |
Sep 2000 |
US |