The invention relates to a method for removing contaminant gas such as oxygen and nitrogen from natural gas. More particularly the invention provides for a method for the multi-stage removal of contaminant gases such as carbon dioxide, oxygen and nitrogen from natural gas.
Natural gas is known to be extracted from underground reservoirs. The natural gas will often contain nitrogen and oxygen and other gas considered impurities. These unwanted gases could be naturally occurring or the result of a process like nitrogen injection into the reservoir as part of an enhanced oil recovery.
Earlier processes have attempted the removal of these contaminant gases from natural gas. For example, a pressure swing adsorption (PSA) process separates hydrogen from natural gas by two separate PSA stages, the first stage for nitrogen and the second stage for hydrogen. Alternatively a PSA process is employed which utilizes two separate PSA stages. The first stage removes hydrocarbons from the natural gas and the second stage removes nitrogen. In a different approach, methane is recovered from crude natural gas and solid waste landfill exhaust gas by a sequential operation of a PSA step to remove volatile organic compounds. This stream is fed to a membrane system whereby carbon dioxide is removed from the natural gas stream.
These processes, however, do not provide bulk removal of oxygen and nitrogen from natural gas streams, nor do they also remove carbon dioxide, all in amounts necessary to enable the natural gas to be used as a fuel source.
The invention provides for a method for removing contaminant gases from a natural gas stream comprising feeding a natural gas stream containing contaminants to a dryer, a membrane module and a vacuum swing adsorption (VSA) system.
More particularly, the invention provides for the removal of contaminants from a natural gas stream comprising the steps:
a) feeding the natural gas stream containing contaminants to a dryer which can be either a pressure swing adsorption (PSA) or temperature swing adsorption (TSA) process;
b) feeding the dry natural gas stream to a membrane module where carbon dioxide and oxygen are removed from the natural gas stream; and
c) feeding natural gas stream to a multibed, multilayer vacuum swing adsorption system wherein carbon dioxide, nitrogen and oxygen are removed from the natural gas stream.
The contaminants that are present in the natural gas are oxygen, nitrogen and carbon dioxide. These gases are primarily present in amounts ranging from 0 to 5 mole % oxygen; 5 to 15 mole % nitrogen and 30 to 45 mole carbon dioxide in the natural gas.
The PSA or TSA process of step a) will remove water from the natural gas stream. Typically an adsorbent material such as activated alumina will be present in the beds of either the PSA or TSA system.
The membrane module of step b) will remove carbon dioxide in bulk. In one embodiment, a single set of membranes is employed and in a different embodiment a second set of membranes is added following the first. This second set of membranes will polish further the amount of carbon dioxide present in the natural gas stream. Certain membranes can be employed such as modified hollow fiber polyamide nitrogen membranes to remove up to half of the oxygen present in the natural gas stream as well. This will reduce the amount of oxygen removal needed in following steps.
In step c), the multibed, multilayer VSA system will typically contain four beds. However, more or less beds can be employed depending upon the amount of contaminants in the natural gas stream and power cost concerns. Each bed is layered for removal of carbon dioxide, nitrogen and oxygen. For the removal of carbon dioxide, a 13× molecular sieve material is used. For the nitrogen removal, a titanosilicate sieve material is employed. A carbon molecular sieve or other material which has a high affinity for oxygen is used as the third layer, and can be determined by how much oxygen is removed by the membrane modules of step b).
In a further embodiment of the invention, when carbon dioxide concentrations are low in the natural gas, the natural gas stream containing contaminants is fed to a temperature swing adsorption system to remove moisture, and then is fed to a multibed, multilayer vacuum swing adsorption system wherein nitrogen and oxygen are removed from the natural gas stream.
In this embodiment similar materials as described for the three step process may be used in the temperature swing adsorption step and the vacuum swing adsorption step.
In a further embodiment of the invention, an oxygen rejection system is disclosed. A natural gas stream containing contaminants is first fed to a membrane module where carbon dioxide is removed; the natural gas stream is then fed to a multibed, multilayer vacuum swing adsorption system where carbon dioxide and nitrogen are removed. The natural gas stream is then directed to a liquefier and then to an oxygen stripper column where the remainder of oxygen present in the natural gas stream is removed from the natural gas, which can be sent to an oxygen storage system for later use.
In this embodiment the natural gas stream is first treated for trace contaminants before being fed to membrane modules. The membrane modules may be a single membrane or two or more membranes in series. The membrane modules will remove carbon dioxide from the natural gas stream and may, depending upon the type of membrane material used, remove oxygen from the natural gas stream as well. The natural gas stream is directed to a multibed VSA system where each bed is multilayered. This multibed, multilayer VSA system will typically contain four beds. However, more or less beds can be employed depending upon the amount of contaminants in the natural gas stream and power cost concerns. Each bed is layered for removal of carbon dioxide, nitrogen and oxygen. For the removal of carbon dioxide, a 13× molecular sieve material is used. For the nitrogen removal, a titanosilicate sieve material is employed. A carbon molecular sieve or other material which has a high affinity for oxygen is used as the third layer, and can be determined by how much oxygen is removed by the membrane modules.
The natural gas stream is then directed to a liquefier before being fed to an oxygen stripper column which can be of the packed or tray type. The remainder of oxygen present in the natural gas is removed here and the natural gas recovered and removed to storage.
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The natural gas stream will exit the membrane carbon dioxide removal unit C through line 5 and be fed to the VSA system D. Each of the four beds present in the VSA system has three layers, D1, D2 and D3. The four bed VSA system operates in a typical cycle with either one or two equalizations.
The following chart shows a four cycle VSA process with one equalization step.
The next chart shows a four cycle VSA process with two equalization steps.
The bottom layer D1 is for carbon dioxide polishing and can contain an adsorbent material such as 13× zeolite. The second layer, D2 is for bulk nitrogen removal and can comprise a titanosilicate/molecular gate sieve, such as ETS-4. The top layer D3 is for oxygen removal and employs a sieve material such as carbon molecular sieve. The natural gas stream now free of carbon dioxide, nitrogen and oxygen leaves the first VSA bed through line 9.
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The natural gas stream will exit the VSA system N through line 27 and enter a liquefier where the natural gas becomes liquefied. This liquefied natural gas stream which is primarily natural gas with some oxygen leaves the liquefier through line 20 and enters an oxygen stripper column P. The stripper column P may be a packed or tray type of distillation column. Line 20 passes through heat exchanger Q and valve 20A. The oxygen that is rejected leaves the stripper column P through line 32 and the natural gas will exit in one instance through line 31 and through heat exchanger Q where it will be chilled further before reentry into the stripper column P through line 29. The liquefied natural gas is recovered through line 30 and valve 30A.
While this invention has been described with respect to particular embodiments thereof, it is apparent that numerous other forms and modifications of the invention will be obvious to those skilled in the art. The appending claims in this invention generally should be construed to cover all such obvious forms and modifications which are within the true spirit and scope of the present invention.
This application claims priority from U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 61/331,970 filed May 6, 2010.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61331970 | May 2010 | US |