The present invention relates generally to the technology of natural gas liquefaction, and more particularly to a system and method for natural gas liquefaction employing a plurality of turboexpanders configured into a series arrangement.
To transport the natural gas in a more efficient way, it is important to liquefy it into liquefied natural gas (LNG) for transportation, which enables to shrink the volume of the natural gas by 600 times so it can be shipped to customers in other parts of the world. Many LNG liquefaction plants utilize a refrigeration cycle with mixed refrigerants where cooling is generally achieved by heat exchange using refrigerant with one or more compositions including propane, propylene, ethane, ethylene, methane and nitrogen or mixtures thereof, in a closed loop or open loop configuration. Mixed refrigerant cycles are efficient as they can closely approach the cooling curve of the natural gas and multi-component refrigerants at different stages of the liquefaction process utilizing the latent heat of refrigerant vaporization.
For the offshore natural gas liquefaction, nitrogen expander cycles are recommended, because it is safer and much less risk of environmental concern for the refrigerant leakage, comparing to mixed refrigerant based LNG processes. Furthermore, hydrocarbon refrigerants storage is not required for nitrogen cycles.
It is well known that Reversed Brayton Cycle is used for the liquefaction of natural gas. However, the performance of LNG process is limited by several factors, such as the maximum temperature approach limitation of the main cryogenic heat exchanger, and the limited expansion ratio achieved by a single expander. Normally the more expansion ratio the expander can achieve, the more efficient for the LNG liquefaction process, and the less refrigerant flow rate is required for the refrigeration cycles.
Prior arts have disclosed natural gas liquefaction processes based on Nitrogen Expander cycles utilizing dual/three turboexpanders in a closed-loop nitrogen refrigeration cycle. The nitrogen stream is split into two/three streams before expanded by two/three expanders in parallel to reach different cooling temperature for the liquefaction of natural gas. The flow rate adjusting of the split nitrogen streams makes the cooling curves a close fit, which thus improves the process efficiency. As shown in
Therefore, there is a need in the art to develop a natural gas liquefaction system and method with improved efficiency and reduced refrigerant flow rate.
One objective of this invention is to provide an LNG production system with improved refrigeration efficiency.
One aspect of the present invention provides a liquefied natural gas (LNG) production system. In one embodiment, the LNG production system comprises a main cryogenic heat exchanger, a natural gas liquefaction subsystem, and a refrigeration subsystem comprising a plurality of refrigerant compressors configured into a series arrangement to perform multi-stage compressions of a refrigerant, a plurality of aftercoolers each of which being coupled to each of the plurality of refrigerant compressors to cool the compressed refrigerant, a plurality of turboexpanders coupled to the last aftercooler and configured into a series configuration to perform multi-stage expansions of the compressed refrigerant, and a plurality of refrigerant heat exchange means coupled to both the first of the plurality of refrigerant compressors and the last of the plurality of turboexpanders, so that all components form a close refrigeration cycle; wherein the main cryogenic heat exchanger facilitates heat exchange between a pressurized natural gas passing through the natural gas liquefaction subsystem and a refrigerant passing through the refrigeration subsystem so that the pressurized natural gas in the natural gas liquefaction subsystem is liquefied by the refrigerant in the refrigeration subsystem.
In another embodiment of the LNG production system, the main cryogenic heat exchanger is a multi-stream heat exchanger.
In another embodiment of the LNG production system, the natural gas liquefaction subsystem comprises a gas treatment module for treating the pressurized natural gas so as to make it suitable for being liquefied, a natural gas heat exchange means fluidly/gaseously coupled with the gas treatment module and disposed within the main cryogenic heat exchanger for enabling the passing-through pressurized natural gas to exchange heat with countercurrent refrigerant flows, and a natural gas pressure reduction means fluidly/liquidusly coupled with the natural gas heat exchange means for controlling the reduction of the pressures of the pressurized liquefied natural gas from the natural gas heat exchange means so as to further reduce the temperature of the pressurized liquefied natural gas, yielding LNG and flash gas.
In another embodiment of the LNG production system, the natural gas pressure reduction means is Joule-Thomson (J-T) valve, two-phase expander or liquid expander.
In another embodiment of the LNG production system, the refrigeration subsystem comprises a first refrigerant compressor, a first refrigerant aftercooler coupled to the first refrigerant compressor, a second refrigerant compressor coupled to the first refrigerant aftercooler, a second refrigerant aftercooler coupled to the second refrigerant compressor, a first refrigerant recompressor coupled to the second refrigerant aftercooler, a third refrigerant aftercooler coupled to the first refrigerant recompressor, a second refrigerant recompressor coupled to the third refrigerant aftercooler, a fourth refrigerant aftercooler coupled to the second refrigerant recompressor, a first refrigerant heat exchange means disposed within the main cryogenic heat exchanger and coupled to the fourth refrigerant aftercooler to intermediate cool the compressed refrigerant, a first turboexpander coupled to first refrigerant heat exchange means to first expand the compressed refrigerant, a second turboexpander coupled to the first turboexpander to second expand the first expanded refrigerant, and a second refrigerant heat exchange means disposed within the main cryogenic heat exchanger and coupled to the second turboexpander and the first refrigerant compressor. In further embodiment of the LNG production system, the refrigeration subsystem further comprises a third refrigerant heat exchange means disposed within the main cryogenic heat exchanger, wherein the upstream inlet of the third refrigerant heat exchange means is coupled to one downstream outlet of the first turboexpander while the downstream outlet of the third refrigerant heat exchange means is coupled to one upstream inlet of the second refrigerant compressor; and wherein during operation, the refrigerant after the expansion by the first turboexpander is split into two streams with a ratio of 30/70 to 60/40, one stream (30-60% of full stream) being introduced into the third refrigerant heat exchange means to serve as a cold stream in the main cryogenic heat exchanger, and the other stream (40-70% of full stream) being further expanded by the second turboexpander and then being introduced into the second refrigerant heat exchange means to serve as the coldest stream for the sub-cooling of the liquefied natural gas. In another further embodiment of the LNG production system, the refrigeration subsystem further comprises an inter-cooler disposed within the main cryogenic heat exchanger between the first and second turboexpanders. In another embodiment of the LNG production system, the refrigeration subsystem further comprises an inter-cooler disposed between one stream from the first turboexpander and the second turboexpander. In a further embodiment of the LNG production system, the refrigerant subsystem further comprises a third expansion device and a second intercooler, both being disposed between the second turboexpander and second refrigerant heat exchange means. The first turboexpander has the option to provide two split refrigerant streams, one feeding back to a fourth refrigerant heat exchange means disposed within the main cryogenic heat exchanger and the other to the second expansion device via the first intercooler. The second turboexpander has the option to provide two split refrigerant streams, one feeding back to a fifth refrigerant heat exchange means disposed within the main cryogenic heat exchanger and the other to the third expansion device via the second intercooler.
Another aspect of the present invention provides a method for producing liquefied natural gas by means of a single phase gaseous refrigerant in a close loop. In one embodiment, the method comprises providing a main cryogenic heat exchanger in which heat exchange occurs, providing a pressurized natural gas stream that flows through the main cryogenic heat exchanger to get liquefied, and providing cold energy to the main cryogenic heat exchanger by a refrigeration device; wherein the refrigeration device comprises a plurality of refrigerant compressors configured into a series arrangement to perform multi-stage compressions of a refrigerant, a plurality of aftercoolers each of which being coupled to each of the plurality of refrigerant compressors to cool the compressed refrigerant, a plurality of turboexpanders coupled to the last aftercooler and configured into a series configuration to perform multi-stage expansions of the compressed refrigerant, and a plurality of refrigerant heat exchange means coupled to both the first of the plurality of refrigerant compressors and the last of the plurality of turboexpanders, so that all components form a close refrigeration cycle.
The objectives and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of preferred embodiments thereof in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Preferred embodiments according to the present invention will now be described with reference to the Figures, in which like reference numerals denote like elements.
The present invention may be understood more readily by reference to the following detailed description of certain embodiments of the invention.
Throughout this application, where publications are referenced, the disclosures of these publications are hereby incorporated by reference, in their entireties, into this application in order to more fully describe the state of art to which this invention pertains.
The present invention provides a system and method to liquefy the natural gas using expander based refrigeration cycle in a simple and efficient way. The system and method uses turboexpanders in series arrangement, resulting in the advantages of simplicity and flexibility, low refrigerant flow rate requirement, low expansion ratio requirement for each expander, and competitive efficiency and power consumption, when compared with the existing prior art processes.
Referring now to
The main cryogenic heat exchanger 3 is a multi-stream heat exchanger, which integrates the heat transfer of cold and warm streams and optimizes the integrated cooling curve.
As shown in
The feed gas 1 from an external source is usually with a certain pressure (normally 20-60 barg), and is treated in the gas treatment module 2 for CO2 removal, dehydration and mercury removal. At the cryogenic temperature of LNG, the existence of CO2 and water could cause freezing in the main cryogenic heat exchanger. An outlet stream concentration of <50 ppm CO2, and <1 ppm H2O after gas treatment is required. The H2S and Hg could cause corrosion in the aluminum brazed plate fin heat exchanger, i.e. the main cryogenic heat exchanger 3, hence it is also necessary to remove the Hg to <10 ng/Sm3, and H2S<2 ppm in the gas treatment module 2 prior to the liquefaction process.
During operation of the natural gas liquefaction system, the high pressure natural gas after gas treatment goes through the natural gas heat exchange means 31 disposed within the main cryogenic heat exchanger 3 where it is been liquefied. The high pressure liquid which exits from main cryogenic heat exchanger 3 passes to the J-T valve 4 to reduce the pressure to ˜1.2 bara. The pressure reduction of the high pressure stream results in the temperature drop to around −161° C. and formation of a two-phase stream, which is further separated the vapor and liquid in the flash drum 5. The liquid is the LNG product, and transferred to a LNG storage tank. The flash gas is recovered the cold energy in the main cryogenic heat exchanger 3. The cold flash gas serves as part of the refrigerant to recover the cold energy in the main cryogenic heat exchanger 3 before further compressed and used for fuel gas.
In principle, the refrigeration subsystem comprises a plurality of refrigerant compressors performing multi-stage compressions, a plurality of aftercoolers, a plurality of turboexpanders performing multi-stage expansions, and a plurality of refrigerant heat exchange means, where all components are coupled in a series configuration to form a close refrigeration cycle. The “plurality” means two or more in the present application. As shown in
During the operation of the refrigeration subsystem, the refrigerant discharged from the downstream outlet of the second refrigerant heat exchange means 34 has low pressure (typically 6 bara); the low pressure refrigerant is first compressed to ˜50 bara by the first and second refrigerant compressors 11, 13, and then further compressed to 90-100 bara by the first and second recompressors 15, 17. Each of the downstreams of the refrigerant compressors and recompressors is cooled by one of the four aftercoolers 12, 14, 16, 18, respectively to a temperature depending on the ambient condition. The high pressure refrigerant stream from the downstream outlet of the fourth aftercooler 18 enters into the first refrigerant heat exchange means 33 disposed in the main cryogenic heat exchanger 3 to be cooled down to an intermediate temperature, typically ˜−27° C., then into the first turboexpander 19 to expand to a pressure of ˜24 bara, and then into the second turboexpander 20 to reduce the pressure to ˜7 bara and reach a temperature of ˜−153° C. The refrigerant stream from the downstream outlet of the second turboexpander 20 at cryogenic temperature passes into the second refrigerant heat exchange means 34 disposed within the main cryogenic heat exchanger 3 and provides the main cold energy to liquefy the natural gas. After the cold is recovered in the main cryogenic heat exchanger 3, the refrigerant stream flows into the first refrigerant compressor 11 again, and re-circulates in the close refrigerant loop.
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
The above new processes have the following advantages:
Two nitrogen expanders in series allow a much closer temperature approach than a single expander, with a correspondingly large improvement in efficiency in terms of specific power consumption.
The configuration of the two expanders in series minimized the expansion ratio of each expander compared with a single expander process. For example in an effort to achieve an LNG production rate with a 9% of flash gas generation, the expansion ratio for each expander process is <4 in dual N2 expander cycle in series arrangement, while it requires an expander ratio of 9.4 in the single expander process. In addition, it might make the end users easy and comfortable to source expanders available in market, especially for the expanders in small capacity and power duty.
The dual expanders in series configuration possesses the flexibility to accommodate the scenario where no flash gas is produced in the LNG production while still maintaining the temperature approach in the main cryogenic heat exchanger not to exceed 30° C. which is required by widely used ALPEMA standard.
It is flexible to control the required cold N2 temperature by adjusting the low pressure (2nd) expander flow rate and expansion ratio for LNG subcooling, in order to produce LNG with different amount of flash gas if required.
For example, in
Applying the present invention, e.g. as shown in
While the present invention has been described with reference to particular embodiments, it will be understood that the embodiments are illustrative and that the invention scope is not so limited. Alternative embodiments of the present invention will become apparent to those having ordinary skill in the art to which the present invention pertains. Such alternate embodiments are considered to be encompassed within the scope of the present invention. Accordingly, the scope of the present invention is defined by the appended claims and is supported by the foregoing description.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/SG2012/000327 | 9/7/2012 | WO | 00 | 1/28/2015 |