Appendix A: Membrane/Amine Hybrid Grissik Gas Plant, Sumatra, Indonesia: Case Study
Appendix A: Membrane/Amine Hybrid Grissik Gas Plant, Sumatra, Indonesia: Case Study
Process overview
CO2 removal process uses a membrane/adsorption hybrid process Utilizes both Membrane separation and Amine adsorption Simplified process flow diagram is shown in Figure A-2. Thermal swing adsorption (TSA) unit Removes heavy hydrocarbons Serves three functions Membrane pretreatment Feed gas dehydration Sales gas hydrocarbon dew pointing.
Background
General Considerations
Plant built and commissioned in 1998 without TSA membrane pretreatment Initial well tests indicated minimal amounts of heavy hydrocarbons Subsequently, found not to be the case
DOI: 10.1016/B978-1-85617-982-9.00008-9
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Raw feed
300 MMSCFD 1140 PSIG 83 F 30% CO2 120F
Membrane Dehydration
Retentate 230 MMSCFD 1100 PSIG 99 F 15% CO2 Note: Approximate flows and compositions shown.
Sales gas
Amine absorption column 200 MMSCFD 1087 PSIG 2% CO2
First Commissioning
Membrane initially installed with pretreatment consisting of Coalescing filter and Nonregenerable absorption guard bed. At startup in 1998 Actual levels of heavy hydrocarbons (CO10, aromatics, and napthenes) were higher than anticipated.
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Designed to reduce C6 components (including aromatics and napthenes) so that membrane performance can be maintained for an extended period of time Designed with two separate trains, each with four adsorption vessels (refer to Figure A-3)
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Since water is more strongly held onto the Sorbead adsorbent than any of the hydrocarbons, the TSA system also dehydrates the feed upstream of the membrane unit.
Wellhead Pressure drop valve Liquid TSA 2 towers adsorbing Heavy liquids removed To membrane skids
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Heating and cooling towers are in a series arrangement which also conserves the amount of regeneration gas required. Additional benefit of having towers in parallel on adsorption is an equalized composition of the treated gas. In a single tower system There is a difference in the gas composition between beginning and end cycle, caused by the breakout of the individual components. In a four tower system with two towers on adsorption There is an offset time of half an adsorption cycle. Gas composition of the combined outlet gas is more constant than from a single tower system.
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Hot gas leaving the tower being cooled flows through the heater in order to get additional heat in. At the beginning of the cycle, gas exiting the tower on cooling is almost at the required heating temperature. Results in nearly no make-up heat being required Due to the entire tower being cooled the gas is at the hot regeneration temperature of 540 F During the cooling cycle, the temperature of the gas exiting the cooling tower Drops so the heater has to provide the required heating gas temperature. Gas-to-gas heat exchanger It is used to capture the heat exiting the tower which is being heated. Hot gas is cross-exchanged with the gas upstream of the regeneration gas heater (Refer to Figure A-4). Exchanger is bypassed during the time when the gas exiting the tower on cooling is at a higher temperature than the gas leaving the tower in the heating step. Regeneration heater Direct-fired heaters Size of the heater depends on the regeneration gas flow required to heat the
adsorption bed and desorb the water and hydrocarbons within the design cycle time. TSA performance After recommissioning the plant in October 2000 Good TSA performance removing the heavy hydrocarbons led to excellent membrane performance. TSA performance regarding hydrocarbon dew point was impressive, see Table A-2. Corresponding phase envelopes are shown in Figure A-5. Figure A-6 shows the results of gas sampling done with a mass spectrometer where both the feed and exit streams of the TSA were analyzed dynamically. Ratio of hydrocarbon concentration in the outlet versus inlet is shown. Note the strong cutoff that occurs between C6 and C8. Heavier hydrocarbons are essentially completely removed.
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200
150
50
100
150
TSA outlet/inlet
C4
C5
C6
C7
C8
C9
C10
C11
Each skid contains multiple horizontal tubes. Each tube contains multiple membrane elements (refer to Figure A-9). Multiple elements are installed in a single tube. Membrane elements are actually functioning in parallel. More than 100 membrane elements are used in this plant.
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Permeate
Residue
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Permeate pressure is about 10 psig which flows to the steam generator burners. Hydrocarbon losses versus time One of the major advantages of the polyimide membrane is its ability to maintain integrity indefinitely, even aging in the presence of heavy hydrocarbons. As shown in Figure A-10, membrane integrity is solid and the hydrocarbon losses have decreased somewhat since startup. This trend of decreasing hydrocarbon losses indicates no loss of membrane integrity and actually shows a slight increase in apparent intrinsic membrane selectivity. Such a selectivity increase would be consistent with the change in permeability (see below). Membrane capacity versus time After TSA was commissioned in October 2000
Membrane Performance
Typical operating conditions Membrane skids are fed directly from the output of the TSA. Feed temperatures vary between 90 and 120 F. Feed pressure is 1100 psig. Feed gas contained 30% CO2.
1.2
1.0
Hydrocarbon losses (normalized)
Design losses
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0.0 Aug-00
Mar-01
Sep-01
Apr-02
Nov-02
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1.5
1.0
Design capacity
0.5
0.0 0 5000 10,000 15,000 20,000 Hours from start-up 25,000 30,000 35,000
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Amine System
Amine system further reduces CO2 and H2S to meet sales gas specification. Residue gas from the membrane unit, containing 15% CO2, Flows into the amine contactors and Contacted with lean amine (50%wt-activated MDEA). CO2 absorption by activated MDEA is limited to a maximum loading of 0.5 mol acid gas/mol MDEA. CO2 content in the treated gas varies between 2% and 5% by volume (3%-vol average). Rich amine is then flashed at 75 psig, heated through a lean/rich amine exchanger, and regenerated by the steam heated reboiler. The 150 psig steam used for regenerating amine is produced in the waste heat boiler that burns permeate gas. Several common problems of an amine system include Reduced strength and ability to absorb acid gas Degradation Foaming and CO2 corrosion attack during acid gas breakout inside the reboiler. Most problems found in an amine system are due to the presence of contaminant in the amine solvent, including Heat stable salts Degradation products Injected chemicals Hydrocarbons and Particulates. Heat stable salts and degradation products are formed by amine
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solvents that decompose and/or react with other contaminants. TSA/membrane installed upstream of the amine system has mitigated the above problems to an acceptable level. TSA unit removes heavy hydrocarbons from the feed gas and nearly eliminated the foaming risk of amine solvent. An antifoam injection system is provided to anticipate worst case conditions. CO2 content reduction by the membrane unit Breakout in the regeneration process Lessons CO2 breakout in the regeneration process Reduces contaminants that may trigger salt formation or amine degradation Though contaminants could also be introduced by makeup water or even makeup amine
References
1. Anderson, C.L. and Siahaan, A. Case study: Membrane CO2 removal from natural gas, Grissik gas plant, Sumatra, Indonesia, Regional Symposium on Membrane Science and Technology, 2004, Johor Bahru, Malaysia. 2. Malcolm, J. The Grissik gas plant, Hydrocarbon Asia, 2001. 3. Anderson, C.L. Case study: Membrane CO2 removal from natural gas, Regional Symposium on Membrane Science and Technology, 2004, Johor Bahru, Malaysia.