The present invention comprises a mixed single refrigerant process for separating a nitrogen gas stream from a natural gas stream containing nitrogen to produce a nitrogen gas stream and a liquefied natural gas stream wherein the separated nitrogen gas stream is used as a refrigerant for the natural gas stream and wherein the mixed refrigerant provides cooling for the process.
Natural gas is desirable for use as a fuel for use to heat buildings, to supply heat for industrial processes, for the production of electricity, for use as a raw material for various synthesis processes to produce olefins, polymers and the like.
Natural gas is found in many areas which are remote from users of the natural gas. Since the natural gas is not readily transported as a gas, it is frequently liquefied for transportation in this more compact form.
A frequently occurring material in natural gas, which is also produced as a liquid when the natural gas is liquefied, is nitrogen. The nitrogen is also produced as a liquid but since it has a somewhat lower boiling point than liquefied natural gas (LNG), it frequently boils off after the liquefied gas is produced and stored. This can be a problem in that it takes a substantial period of time to remove a substantial amount of liquefied nitrogen from the bulk of the liquid comprising liquid natural gas and liquid nitrogen. Further the presence of the liquid nitrogen in the natural gas may result in difficulty in meeting specifications for the LNG. Accordingly, considerable effort has been devoted to the development of means for removing liquefied nitrogen present in LNG.
Various processes for the liquefaction of natural gas are known. Some such processes include U.S. Pat. No. 4,033,735 issued Jul. 5, 1977 to Leonard K. Swenson (Swenson) which is hereby incorporated in its entirety by reference. In such processes, a single mixed refrigerant is used. These processes typically use a mixture of gases to produce a single mixed refrigerant which can be compressed and liquefied to produce a refrigerant at a very low temperature, i.e., minus −230° F. to −275° F. or lower. The mixed refrigerant is passed into a heat exchanger and passed from a heat exchanger inlet, through the heat exchanger to an expansion valve at an outlet end of the heat exchanger and then directed back into the heat exchanger as vaporized and at the lower temperature. This stream is typically a continuously vaporizing stream as it passes back through the heat exchanger to the inlet end. The natural gas stream to be cooled is passed through the heat exchanger from its inlet end to its outlet in heat exchange with the vaporizing single mixed refrigerant. The spent refrigerant is then recovered, recompressed and re-expanded in the heat exchanger.
Another single mixed refrigerant process is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,657,643 issued Aug. 19, 1997 to Brian C. Price (Price) which is hereby incorporated in its entirety by reference.
Typically where the natural gas has contained substantial amounts of nitrogen; for instance, up to as high as 50 volume percent or more, then the liquid nitrogen is typically recovered with the liquid natural gas and allowed to boil off to the atmosphere or recovered for use. The LNG then, freed of a substantial portion of the nitrogen, is adjusted as necessary to have the desired properties for marketing as a fuel or other use.
A second type of process which has been used is illustrated by U.S. Pat. No. 3,855,810 issued Dec. 24, 1974 to Simon, et al (Simon) which is hereby incorporated in its entirety by reference. This patent shows a cascade type process. In such processes, a plurality of refrigeration zones in which refrigerants of decreasing boiling points are vaporized to produce a coolant, are used. In such systems, the highest boiling refrigerant, alone or with other refrigerants, is typically compressed, condensed and separated for cooling in a first refrigeration zone. The compressed, cooled highest boiling point refrigerant is then flashed to provide a cold refrigerant stream used to cool the compressed highest boiling point refrigerant in the first refrigeration zone. In the first refrigeration zone, some of the lower boiling refrigerants may also be cooled and subsequently condensed and passed to vaporization to function as a coolant for a second subsequent refrigeration zone and the like.
With either process, the produced LNG typically contains nitrogen in the LNG. The nitrogen is typically “flashed” off with methane from the LNG. The gas flashed off (flash gas) contains methane and nitrogen in widely varying proportions; however, methane is inevitably lost from the LNG. The flash gas may be used as a low BTU heating gas, passed to methane or nitrogen recovery, or both, or vented to the atmosphere. It would be desirable to produce the LNG with a no or very low nitrogen content.
A continuing effort to discover such a process has been directed toward this goal.
The present invention comprises, a single mixed refrigerant process for separating a nitrogen gas stream from a natural gas stream containing nitrogen to produce the nitrogen gas stream and a liquefied natural gas stream in a single process, the process consisting essentially of: cooling the natural gas stream in a single mixed refrigerant heat exchanger to produce a cooled stream; passing the cooled natural gas stream into a separator and recovering a concentrated methane rich liquid stream and a concentrated nitrogen rich vapor stream from the separator; further cooling at least a portion of the concentrated methane rich liquid in the heat exchanger and recovering a first liquefied natural gas stream from the heat exchanger; passing the first liquefied natural gas stream to a nitrogen stripping column; passing the concentrated nitrogen vapor stream to the nitrogen stripping column; recovering a product liquefied natural gas from a lower portion of the nitrogen stripping column; and, recovering an overhead nitrogen stream from near the top of the nitrogen stripping column and passing the overhead nitrogen stream to the heat exchanger as a refrigerant.
The separator used in the process may be either a flash vessel or a high pressure distillation column.
In the discussion of the Figures, the same numbers will be used throughout to refer to the same or similar components.
In
A heat exchange passageway 16 is used to cool a mixed refrigerant, which as shown in Price may contain materials selected from a group consisting of nitrogen and hydrocarbons containing from about 1 to about 5 carbon atoms. This stream is cooled and passed from heat exchanger 12 through an expansion valve 18 where the cooled mixed refrigerant is at least partially vaporized and passed back into heat exchanger 12 through a heat exchange passageway 20 through which it is passed to recompression and recycle to line 16. A nitrogen stream at a temperature from about −295 to about −310° F. is passed to heat exchanger 12 via a line 36 and passes through heat exchange passageway 22 as a refrigerant in heat exchanger 12. This stream of nitrogen, which may contain small quantities of methane (<10 volume percent) may be discharged at near ambient temperature to the atmosphere, with or without further treatment as may be required. This stream as discharged may be used as a source of nitrogen and is typically at ambient temperature at about 15 psia.
The stream withdrawn from heat exchanger 14 through line 26 is passed to flash vessel 28 at a temperature sufficiently low that a separation can be accomplished to produce a concentrated methane rich liquid stream via a line 30 and a concentrated nitrogen rich vapor stream via a line 40 (about −180 to about −210° F. and about 350 to about 500 psia. The concentrated nitrogen rich vapor stream in line 40 is passed through an expansion valve 42 to produce a stream having a temperature from about −230° F. to about −250° F. This stream is passed through a reboiler 44 for a distillation column 64 where it is passed through a heat exchange passageway 50 in heat exchange with a bottom steam 46 from a nitrogen stripping column 64. Stream 46 is passed from near a bottom of column 64 to a heat exchange passageway 52 in reboiler 44 and then back into column 64 via a line 48. The concentrated nitrogen rich vapor stream in line 54 from line 40 is passed to heat exchange through a reflux heat exchanger 56 and then via a line 60 which includes a control valve 61 to control the flow through line 60 to the upper portion of column 64.
Reflux heat exchanger 56 includes a heat exchange passageway 54a for the concentrated nitrogen rich vapor stream and a heat exchange passageway 56a for passage of the nitrogen stream recovered via a line 62 from column 64. A control valve 58 in line 62 controls the pressure from column 64. This nitrogen stream 62 is passed through a reflux exchanger 56 and then to heat exchanger 12 where it is introduced and passed through the nitrogen heat exchange passageway 22 to discharge at approximately ambient temperature. This allows the use of the recovered nitrogen, which is recovered at a low temperature, to be used as a source of cooling refrigerant rather than simply exhausted to the atmosphere or used for heat exchange applications which recover less of the cooling value of the nitrogen stream.
The bottom stream from flash vessel 28 is returned to heat exchanger 12 through a line 30 and further cooled in a heat exchange path 32 in heat exchanger 12. This stream 34 then passes through the control valve 38 and is passed to a middle portion of column 64 and distilled to produce LNG containing reduced quantities of nitrogen (less than ten percent).
A significant separation has occurred in flash vessel 28 and further separation occurs in the upper portion 65 and lower portion 76 of column 64. The produced LNG is recovered via a line 70 which includes a control valve 68.
Typically the column operates at a pressure from about 20 to about 50 psia and produces an overhead stream of nitrogen with less than 10 volume percent methane, and desirably less than about 5 volume percent methane. The bottom stream composition is controlled by stripping column reboiler 44 and will usually contain from 1 to 3 volume percent nitrogen. This product is sent to LNG storage.
According to one embodiment of this invention, the nitrogen is separated from the methane as part of the liquefaction unit to produce LNG and a separated nitrogen stream from a single mixed refrigerant production process. No methane vapor is produced unless desired for fuel. This type of unit is much more efficient as the nitrogen is removed in the LNG production unit so that a nitrogen rejection unit is not required and the compression required for a nitrogen rejection unit is not necessary. Further by the use of this process, the cooling values in the nitrogen stream as separated are recovered in a heat exchanger thereby improving the efficiency of the heat exchange portion of the process.
When the feed stream contains lower amounts of nitrogen, i.e., lower than 15 volume percent, the process variation shown in
In
The bottom stream from distillation vessel 74 is passed through a line 30 to a heat exchange passageway 32 in heat exchanger 12 to produce a concentrated methane stream in line 34. The methane stream in line 34 is passed to nitrogen distillation vessel 64 and is eventually recovered through line 70 with the flow being regulated through a valve 68.
By the use of the process of
The variations in
As well known to the art, if the feed gas contains significant heavy hydrocarbons that would solidify in the LNG process, additional chilling and separation steps are undertaken to remove these heavy hydrocarbons before chilling to the flash vessel temperature.
Contrast prior art LNG processes which produce most of the nitrogen in the feed natural gas in the LNG for recovery in subsequent flashing or other downstream processes. Such recovery requires either more energy to operate the recovery process or valuable product loss (methane) by flashing. The flashed gases will typically contain nitrogen and methane which are expensive to separate or otherwise recovery separately.
The present process produces the LNG at a low nitrogen content initially. There is no need to flash or otherwise treat the LNG product to reduce the nitrogen content and no gaseous methane is intentionally produced by this process. All the cooling values for the process are initially supplied by the single mixed refrigerant. A portion of the cooling values initially supplied are recovered from the separated nitrogen returned to the single mixed refrigerant heat exchanger as a refrigerant. The process refrigeration values are supplied by the single mixed refrigerant. The nitrogen is recovered by separation at a suitable temperature from an existing process stream and separated by distillation from a distillation column 64 wherein the cooling values required are supplied by the LNG. The process produces low nitrogen LNG without an additional energy requirement and without the loss of valuable product (LNG) after production.
While the present invention has been described by reference to certain of its preferred embodiments, it is pointed out that the embodiments described are illustrative rather than limiting in nature and that many variations and modifications are possible within the scope of the present invention. Many such variations and modifications may be considered obvious and desirable by those skilled in the art based upon a review of the foregoing description of preferred embodiments.
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