Knowledge (XXG)

Nitrogen rejection unit

Source 📝

74:). This means nitrogen is able to diffuse through the adsorbent, filling adsorption sites, whilst methane is not. This results in a purified natural gas stream that fits pipeline specifications. The adsorbent can then be regenerated, leaving a highly pure nitrogen stream. PSA is a flexible method for nitrogen rejection, being applied to both small and large flow rates. 63:(boiling point of −195.69 °C) to achieve separation. In this process, a system of compression and distillation columns drastically reduces the temperature of the gas mixture to a point where methane is liquified and the nitrogen is not. For smaller applications, a series of heat exchangers may be used as an alternative to distillation columns. 77:
The operating conditions of various PSA units are quite variable. Depending on the vendor, high degrees of pretreatment of the gas stream (removal of water vapor and heavy hydrocarbons) may be necessary for the system to operate optimally and without damage to the adsorbent material. Moreover, the
81:
An estimated 25% of the US natural gas reserves contain unacceptably large quantities of nitrogen. Nitrogen is inert and lowers the energy value per volume of natural gas. It also takes up capacity in pipelines that could be used for valuable methane.
70:(PSA) is a more typical method of separation. In PSA, methane and nitrogen can be separated by using an adsorbent with an aperture size very close to the molecular diameter of the larger species, in this case methane (3.8 78:
degree of hydrocarbon recoveries (75% vs 95%) and purities can vary considerably. The economic viability of any PSA unit will be highly dependent on such factors.
167: 148: 40: 186: 126: 85:
Pipeline specifications for nitrogen are extremely variable, though no more than 4% nitrogen is a typical specification.
191: 67: 101: 163: 144: 180: 56: 158:
Valdes, A. R. (1993). "Expanders". In John J. McKetta, William A. Cunningham (ed.).
48: 32: 25: 116: 36: 121: 24:
from a gas. The name can be applied to any system that removes nitrogen from
71: 44: 60: 21: 52: 31:
For high flow-rate applications, typically above 420 thousand
117:
G.I. Dynamics Cryogenic Nitrogen Rejection Technology
51:
process which utilizes the different volatilities of
66:For smaller volumes of gas, a system utilizing 160:Encyclopedia of Chemical Processing and Design 8: 139:Kidnay, A. J.; Parrish, William (2006). 94: 141:Fundamentals of Natural Gas Processing 122:California Energy Commission Glossary 7: 127:Molecular Gate Adsorption Technology 47:processing is the norm. This is a 14: 1: 143:. CRC Press. p. 200 ff. 162:. Vol. 21. CRC Press. 208: 20:(NRU) selectively removes 68:pressure swing adsorption 59:of −161.6 °C) and 18:nitrogen rejection unit 187:Natural gas technology 102:Nitrogen Rejection 41:standard pressure 35:(15 million 199: 192:Industrial gases 173: 154: 104: 99: 207: 206: 202: 201: 200: 198: 197: 196: 177: 176: 170: 157: 151: 138: 135: 133:Further reading 113: 108: 107: 100: 96: 91: 12: 11: 5: 205: 203: 195: 194: 189: 179: 178: 175: 174: 168: 155: 149: 134: 131: 130: 129: 124: 119: 112: 111:External links 109: 106: 105: 93: 92: 90: 87: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 204: 193: 190: 188: 185: 184: 182: 171: 169:0-8247-2451-8 165: 161: 156: 152: 150:0-8493-3406-3 146: 142: 137: 136: 132: 128: 125: 123: 120: 118: 115: 114: 110: 103: 98: 95: 88: 86: 83: 79: 75: 73: 69: 64: 62: 58: 57:boiling point 54: 50: 46: 42: 39:) per day at 38: 34: 29: 27: 23: 19: 159: 140: 97: 84: 80: 76: 65: 49:distillation 33:cubic metres 30: 17: 15: 26:natural gas 181:Categories 89:References 37:cubic feet 72:angstroms 45:cryogenic 61:nitrogen 22:nitrogen 53:methane 166:  147:  164:ISBN 145:ISBN 183:: 43:, 28:. 16:A 172:. 153:. 55:(

Index

nitrogen
natural gas
cubic metres
cubic feet
standard pressure
cryogenic
distillation
methane
boiling point
nitrogen
pressure swing adsorption
angstroms
Nitrogen Rejection
G.I. Dynamics Cryogenic Nitrogen Rejection Technology
California Energy Commission Glossary
Molecular Gate Adsorption Technology
ISBN
0-8493-3406-3
ISBN
0-8247-2451-8
Categories
Natural gas technology
Industrial gases

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.