GPAC Gas Sweetening Presentation
GPAC Gas Sweetening Presentation
GPAC Gas Sweetening Presentation
Sweetening
Michael Sheilan, P.Eng.
Senior Staff Engineer Webinar Part One
Amine Experts Inc.
Introduction
o GPAC is a non-profit organization formed to promote the interaction and exchange of
ideas and technology to those involved in the hydrocarbon processing industry.
o GPAC has many exciting things planned for 2021 including 12 technical webinars
o GPAC has operated in Alberta since 1959 because of the support of our membership and generous sponsors.
A big thank you to:
2
Mike Sheilan
Mike was the co-founder of Amine Experts in 1999 and is currently Senior Principal
Engineer for Amine Experts and Dehydration Experts. For 40 years Mike has
provided expert advice, training and consulting services in the area of hydrate
control, gas dehydration, gas and liquid sweetening, hydrocarbon recovery and
sulphur plant operations.
Mike is an authority on gas processing and has been published in the Oil and Gas
Journal, Hydrocarbon Processing Magazine, LNG Industry Magazine, Petroleum
Technology Quarterly, Sulphur Magazine and Chemical Engineering Magazine and
has presented at various conferences, including the LRGCC, GPAC, GPA-Midstream,
NACE, SOGAT and AFPM. He is also a Senior advisor to the Laurance Reid Gas
Conditioning Conference in Norman, Oklahoma.
Mike Sheilan
He previously worked for Brenntag Chemicals (Travis Chemicals) as Technical Service
Engineer and then Technical Service Manager from 1981 to 1999, where he
provided technical support for the gas processing industry in North America.
Designer Regulator
Builder Supplier
Primary Areas of Assistance
• gas, liquid sampling and
analysis
• training seminars
• on-site technical assistance
• engineering studies
Types of Sweetening Processes
• Absorption
• Physical, Chemical and Hybrid
• (Amines, Potassium Carbonate, Caustic, etc.)
• Adsorption
• Physical and Chemical
• (Molecular Sieves, Iron Sponge, Zinc Oxide, etc.)
• Changes in P & T
• Membranes, Fractionation/Distillation
CONTACTOR CHEMISTRY
● acid gases react with weak liquid bases to form thermally
regenerable salts
H2S
+ lean amine rich amine + heat
CO2
REGENERATOR CHEMISTRY
● adding energy (heat) to the salts reverses the reaction to form
the original bases and acids
H2S
+ lean amine rich amine + heat
CO2
Molecular Structures
of Amines
• AMMONIA
• building block for amines
e
e
• all amines react
instantaneously with H2S
- all amines
(fast)
“carbamate reaction”
Reaction Mechanisms
H+ + R1R2NH R1R2NH2+
________________________________________________________
CO2 reactions
● Tertiary Amines
CO2 + H2O H2CO3
(slow)
●Lean Loading
• driven by regeneration conditions (higher energy or solvent choice)
●Rich Loading
• limited by corrosion, temperature bulge, partial pressure, equilibrium
GENERAL DESIGN CRITERIA – Column Design
• Number and Type of Trays / Height and Type of Packing
• normally around 20 trays (or equivalent height of packing)
• more trays if extended sulphur species removal required (weaker acid
sulphur species are not touched until almost all the H2S and CO2 have
already been removed)
• less trays for tail gas units (need to minimize contact stages for
improved CO2 slip); also design with multiple feed tray locations for
optimal slip
GENERAL DESIGN CRITERIA
• Energy Consumption Reduction
• lower circulation rates
• move to solvent that requires less reboiler duty
• additional hot flash
●Hydrocarbon Co-absorption
• reduced circulation rates; higher rich loadings; higher absorber
temperatures
• amine dependent (MEA<DEA<DGA<MDEA<DIPA)
OPERATING ISSUES
• Meeting Specification
• Heat Stable Amine Salts
• Degradation
• Corrosion
• Feed Preparation Next
• Foaming Webinar
• Filtration
MEETING SPECIFICATION
• quality of the treated gas (specification) is set by the quality of the
lean amine (lean loading and temperature)
• regenerate the solvent well (as required for application)
• keep lean amine temperatures as cool as possible but still warmer
than the feed gas temperature
• reduce foaming and fouling in the absorber
• have sufficient contact stages in the absorber
• maintain sufficient circulation rate to control absorber bulge
temperature
HEAT STABLE AMINE SALTS
• formed by the reaction of amines with acids stronger than H2S or
CO2;; build up in systems because they do not regenerate at normal
regeneration conditions
• tend to increase solution corrosivity (especially in the reboiler and
lower regenerator)
• can affect both acid gas absorption (reduces) and regeneration of the
amine (improves)
• controlled by ion exchange; vacuum distillation; electrodialysis or
‘bleed and feed’
DEGRADATION
• primarily caused by CO2, COS and oxygen
• thermal degradation also a possibility (watch reboiler temps and heat
flux)
• breaks down amine molecule into components that may not have the
same acid gas carrying capacity; are corrosive and also promote
foaming
• in TGTU service, with MDEA, can be catastrophic for CO2 slip, as
primary / secondary amines are formed by the breakdown of the
MDEA molecule.
• removed via vacuum distillation or atmospheric distillation if the
solvent allows for it
CORROSION!
CORROSION CONTROL
Recommendations:
• make sure the lean solution is well regenerated; do regeneration in the
column and not the reboiler
• don’t exceed recommended maximum strengths
• max total rich loading: 0.45 to 0.55 mol acid gas / mol amine (depending
on the type of amine; CO2 content)
• minimize heat stable amine salts (maximum 2-3 wt%)
• maximum amine pipe velocity: 2 m/s (6 ft/s); 1 m/s in exchanger tubes
• control temperatures in absorber and regenerator
• post-weld heat-treat all amine plant replacement work; proper metallurgy
FEED PREPARATION, FOAMING and FILTRATION
WEBINAR PART
TWO
WHY AMINE
SYSTEMS FAIL?