LAPSE:2023.33054
Published Article
LAPSE:2023.33054
Prospective of Upfront Nitrogen (N2) Removal in LNG Plants: Technical Communication
Fares Almomani, Asmaa Othman, Ajinkya Pal, Easa I. Al-Musleh, Iftekhar A. Karimi
April 20, 2023
Conventional natural gas (NG) liquefaction processes remove N2 near the tail of the plant, which limits production capacity and decreases energy efficiency and profit. Engineering calculations suggest that upfront N2 removal could have substantial economic benefits on large-scale liquefied natural gas (LNG) processes. This article provides an overview of the most promising technologies that can be employed for upfront N2 removal in the LNG process, focusing on the process selection and design considerations of all currently available upfront N2 removal technologies. The literature review revealed that although adsorption has proven to be a huge success in gas separation processes (efficiency ≥ 90%), most of the available adsorbents are CH4-selective at typical NG conditions. It would be more encouraging to find N2-selective adsorbents to apply in upfront N2 removal technology. Membrane gas separation has shown growing performance due to its flexible operation, small footprint, and reduced investment cost and energy consumption. However, the use of such technology as upfront N2 removal requires multi-stage membranes to reduce the nitrogen content and satisfy LNG specifications. The efficiency of such technology should be correlated with the cost of gas re-compression, product quality, and pressure. A hybrid system of adsorption/membrane processes was proposed to eliminate the disadvantages of both technologies and enhance productivity that required further investigation. Upfront N2 removal technology based on sequential high and low-pressure distillation was presented and showed interesting results. The distillation process, operated with at least 17.6% upfront N2 removal, reduced specific power requirements by 5% and increased the plant capacity by 16% in a 530 MMSCFD LNG plant. Lithium-cycle showed promising results as an upfront N2 chemical removal technology. Recent studies showed that this process could reduce the NG N2 content at ambient temperature and 80 bar from 10% to 0.5% N2, achieving the required LNG specifications. Gas hydrate could have the potential as upfront N2 removal technology if the is process modified to guarantee significant removals of low N2 concentration from a mixture of hydrocarbons. Retrofitting the proposed technologies into LNG plants, design alterations, removal limits, and cost analysis are challenges that are open for further exploration in the near future. The present review offers directions for different researchers to explore different alternatives for upfront N2 removal from NG.
Keywords
energy recovery, Natural Gas, nitrogen removal, process optimization
Suggested Citation
Almomani F, Othman A, Pal A, Al-Musleh EI, Karimi IA. Prospective of Upfront Nitrogen (N2) Removal in LNG Plants: Technical Communication. (2023). LAPSE:2023.33054
Author Affiliations
Almomani F: Department of Chemical Engineering, College of Engineering, Qatar University, Doha P.O. Box 2713, Qatar [ORCID]
Othman A: Department of Chemical Engineering, College of Engineering, Qatar University, Doha P.O. Box 2713, Qatar [ORCID]
Pal A: Department of Chemical Engineering, College of Engineering, Qatar University, Doha P.O. Box 2713, Qatar; Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, National University of Singapore, 21 Lower Kent Ridge Rd, Singapore 119077, Singapore
Al-Musleh EI: Department of Chemical Engineering, College of Engineering, Qatar University, Doha P.O. Box 2713, Qatar
Karimi IA: Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, National University of Singapore, 21 Lower Kent Ridge Rd, Singapore 119077, Singapore
Journal Name
Energies
Volume
14
Issue
12
First Page
3616
Year
2021
Publication Date
2021-06-17
Published Version
ISSN
1996-1073
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PII: en14123616, Publication Type: Review
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LAPSE:2023.33054
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doi:10.3390/en14123616
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