The present disclosure relates to vessels useful for the dehydration of natural gas, and to methods for the design and the use thereof.
During the processing of natural gas, it is frequently necessary to subject the natural gas to a dehydration step in order to remove water vapor. This is conventionally done by passing a natural gas feed through a vessel containing a bed of molecular sieve material known to be effective at adsorbing water molecules.
As plant capacities have increased, such dehydration vessels have been sized to handle increased volumes of gas at very high pressures. For instance, vessel walls have become thicker and overall vessel dimensions have become larger. Operational difficulties related to inefficient heat transfer between the interior of the vessel and the vessel walls have resulted from the increasing vessel dimensions. The heat transfer is primarily conduction type heat transfer through the regeneration gas since the flow of the hot regeneration gas is laminar in the molecular sieve bed. Laminar, conductive heat transfer is highly inefficient in gas since the thermal conductivity and the specific heat of gas are very low.
It would be desirable to have a natural gas dehydration vessel which would avoid the aforementioned difficulties.
In one aspect, an apparatus for dehydrating a natural gas is provided. The apparatus includes vessel walls defining a vessel volume enclosed therein, a first opening in the vessel, a second opening in the vessel, and a plurality of thermally conductive plates attached to the vessel walls partially projecting into the vessel volume.
In another aspect, a method for dehydrating natural gas utilizing the apparatus is provided. The method includes feeding natural gas into a first opening in a vessel comprising vessel walls defining a vessel volume enclosed therein and having a plurality of thermally conductive plates attached to the vessel walls partially projecting into the vessel volume, wherein the vessel is at least partially filled with a plurality of molecular sieve pellets, such that the natural gas flows over the molecular sieve pellets and water vapor is adsorbed by the molecular sieve pellets and removing dehydrated natural gas from a second opening in the vessel. When the molecular sieve pellets adsorb a predetermined amount of water, the feeding of the natural gas is discontinued. At this point, hot regeneration gas having a temperature between about 150° C. and about 500° C. is fed into the second opening in the vessel such that the regeneration gas flows over the molecular sieve pellets and water is removed from the molecular sieve pellets and carried by the regeneration gas through the first opening of the vessel whereby the molecular sieve pellets are dried. When the molecular sieve pellets are dried, the feeding of the hot regeneration gas is discontinued. Cool regeneration gas having a temperature between about 10° C. and about 100° C. is then fed into the second opening in the vessel such that the regeneration gas flows over the molecular sieve pellets and through the first opening of the vessel and the molecular sieve pellets are cooled to a temperature between about 10 and about 100 degrees C.
In another aspect, a method for designing an apparatus for dehydrating natural gas is provided. The method for designing the apparatus includes an initial step of performing a computational fluid dynamics analysis of a system for dehydrating natural gas in a vessel comprising vessel walls defining a vessel volume enclosed therein to determine a wall thermal boundary layer thickness, wherein the computational fluid dynamics analysis includes inputting at least one predetermined value selected from the group consisting of vessel diameter, vessel length, vessel wall thickness, regeneration gas temperature and regeneration gas flow rate to be utilized in the system. Thermally conductive plates to be attached to the vessel walls are then designed such that the thermally conductive plates have a minimum radial penetration of from one to four times the thermal boundary layer thickness.
These and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with reference to the following description, appended claims and accompanying drawings where:
During normal operation mode, a feed stream of natural gas 1 is provided at ambient temperature to the top opening 3 and flows downwardly through the bed of molecular sieve pellets 9. Water vapor in the feed stream is adsorbed by the pellets 9, and dehydrated natural gas 5 flows from the lower opening 4. Over time, the molecular sieve pellets 9 become increasingly saturated with water and ineffective at adsorbing moisture, and the natural gas leaving the vessel 5 from the lower opening 4 contains an increasing amount of water vapor. The amount of moisture in the natural gas 5 leaving the vessel is monitored by a sensor 11. When a predetermined maximum desired amount of moisture in the natural gas 5 leaving the vessel is reached and detected by the sensor 11, normal operation is discontinued, meaning the flow of feed gas 1 is discontinued. At this point, operation is shifted to regeneration mode.
During regeneration mode, a feed stream of hot regeneration gas 12 is provided to the lower opening 4 and flows upwardly through the molecular sieve pellets 9. Moisture from the pellets 9 is carried by the regeneration gas 12 up and out of the vessel 10 through the top opening 3 as gas stream 13. Operation continues in regeneration mode until a predetermined desired amount of moisture in the regeneration gas 13 leaving the vessel is reached, indicating that the molecular sieve pellets 9 have become dry to the point that the pellets 9 are effective at adsorbing moisture from the natural gas. At this point, operation switches to cooling mode in which cool gas is introduced to the vessel through lower opening 4 until the temperature within the vessel is sufficiently cooled to resume normal operation.
While various shapes and sizes are possible, one embodiment of a vessel according to the present disclosure is shown in
In one embodiment, the vessel wall 2 can have a thickness from about 50 to about 500 mm. In one embodiment, the vessel 100 has a height between about 1 and about 10 m and a diameter between about 1 and about 8 m, and each of the thermally conductive plates 17 has a width W between about 1 and about 50 mm, a radial penetration R between about 1 and about 1000 mm, and a length L between about 1 and about 4000 mm. In one embodiment, the thermally conductive plates 17 are spaced between about 100 and about 3000 mm apart circumferentially around the vessel.
The thermally conductive plates 17 can have a variety of suitable individual shapes and sizes.
The thermally conductive plates 17 can be attached on the vessel wall 2 in a regular, orderly pattern. In one embodiment, the vertical and/or horizontal spacing between the plates 17 is uniform. In another embodiment, the placement of the plates 17 can be determined by analytical tools such as finite element analysis and computational fluid dynamics.
In one embodiment, a method for operating the vessel 100 is provided. During normal operation mode, also referred to as dehydration mode, a feed stream of natural gas 1 is provided at ambient temperature to the top opening 3 and flows downwardly through the bed of molecular sieve pellets 9. During dehydration mode, the temperature can range from about 10 to about 100 degrees C. and a pressure can range from about 20 to about 100 bar(g).
Water vapor in the feed stream is adsorbed by the pellets 9, and dehydrated natural gas 5 flows from the lower opening 4. Over time, the molecular sieve pellets 9 become increasingly saturated with water, and the natural gas leaving the vessel 5 from the lower opening 4 contains an increasing amount of water vapor. The amount of moisture in the natural gas 5 leaving the vessel is monitored by a sensor 11. When a predetermined maximum desired amount of moisture in the natural gas 5 leaving the vessel is reached and detected by the sensor 11, normal operation is discontinued, meaning the flow of feed gas 1 is discontinued. At this point, operation is shifted to regeneration mode.
During regeneration mode, a feed stream of hot regeneration gas 12 is provided to the lower opening 4 and flows upwardly through the plurality of molecular sieve pellets 9. Moisture from the pellets 9 is carried by the regeneration gas 12 up and out of the vessel 10 through the top opening 3 as gas stream 13. During regeneration mode, the temperature in the vessel 100 can range from about 10 to about 500 degrees C. The regeneration gas 12 has a temperature between about 150 and about 500 degrees C. The regeneration gas 12 flows at a flow rate between about 10,000 and about 200,000 normal cubic meters per hour. Operation continues in regeneration mode until a predetermined desired amount of moisture in the regeneration gas 13 leaving the vessel is reached, indicating that the molecular sieve pellets 9 have become dry to the point that the pellets 9 are effective at adsorbing moisture from the natural gas. At this point, operation switches to cooling mode in which cool gas at a temperature between about 10 and about 100 degrees C. is introduced to the vessel through lower opening 4 until the temperature within the vessel is sufficiently cooled to resume normal operation, i.e. cooled to a temperature between about 10 and about 100 degrees C.
In one embodiment, operation in dehydration mode is conducted for from about 1 to about 100 hours, and operation in regeneration mode is conducted for from about 1 to about 20 hours.
In one embodiment, operation in dehydration mode is conducted for a duration from about 1 and about 10 times a combined duration of regeneration mode and cooling mode.
In one embodiment, a method for designing a vessel 100 for dehydrating natural gas is provided. Engineering analysis is conducted to determine the thickness of a wall thermal boundary layer, also referred to as a wall thermal boundary layer thickness. In one embodiment, a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis of a system for dehydrating natural gas in a vessel comprising vessel walls defining a vessel volume enclosed therein is conducted to determine the wall thermal boundary layer thickness. Commercially available CFD software such as ANSYS Fluent (ANSYS, Inc., Canonsburg, Pa.) can be used to generate an analysis of the condition of the molecular sieve bed after regeneration.
An example of an image generated by the software is shown in
As evidence of the presence of a thermal boundary layer along the vessel wall 2 in
The actual state of the molecular sieve bed will depend on the duration (amount of time in hours) of regeneration and on the flow rate and temperature used during regeneration mode, as well as the thickness of the vessel wall, the thermal properties of the molecular sieve bed and the vessel, and the shape and size of the molecular sieve material. The CFD analysis includes inputting at least one predetermined value selected from the group consisting of vessel diameter, vessel length, vessel wall thickness, regeneration gas temperature and regeneration gas flow rate to be utilized in the system into the software. The analysis of boundary layer conditions thereby generated includes the thickness of the wall thermal boundary layer. In one embodiment, the thickness of the wall thermal boundary layer 21 is used to determine the minimum radial penetration R of the thermally conductive plates 17 as described herein (as shown in
In one embodiment, the thermally conductive plates 17 have a radial penetration R of from one to four times the boundary layer thickness 21 and a length L of from one to four times the radial penetration R (as shown in
It should be noted that only the components relevant to the disclosure are shown in the figures, and that many other components normally part of a gas dehydration system are not shown for simplicity.
Unless otherwise specified, the recitation of a genus of elements, materials or other components, from which an individual component or mixture of components can be selected, is intended to include all possible sub-generic combinations of the listed components and mixtures thereof. Also, “comprise,” “include” and its variants, are intended to be non-limiting, such that recitation of items in a list is not to the exclusion of other like items that may also be useful in the materials, compositions, methods and systems of this invention.
From the above description, those skilled in the art will perceive improvements, changes and modifications, which are intended to be covered by the appended claims.