Acid Gas Injection and Carbon Dioxide Sequestration
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About this ebook
This book provides the most comprehensive and up-to-date coverage of two techniques that are rapidly increasing in importance and usage in the natural gas and petroleum industry — acid gas injection and carbon dioxide sequestration. The author, a well-known and respected authority on both processes, presents the theory of the technology, then discusses practical applications the engineer working in the field can implement.
Both hot-button issues in the industry, these processes will help companies in the energy industry "go green," by creating a safer, cleaner environment. These techniques also create a more efficient and profitable process in the plant, cutting waste and making operations more streamlined.
This outstanding new reference includes:
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Uses of acid gas injection, the method of choice for disposing of small quantities of acid gas
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Coverage of technologies for working towards a zero-emission process in natural gas production
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A practical discussion of carbon dioxide sequestration, an emerging new topic, often described as one of the possible solutions for reversing global warming
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Problems and solutions for students at the graduate level and industry course participants
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Acid Gas Injection and Carbon Dioxide Sequestration - John J. Carroll
1
Introduction
Although many gases are natural (air, for example), the term natural gas
refers to the hydrocarbon-rich gas that is found in underground formations. These gases are organic in origin, and thus along with oil, coal, and peat are called fossil fuels.
Time and the effects of pressure and temperature have converted the originally living matter into hydrocarbon gases that we call natural gas.
Natural gas is largely made up of methane but also contains other light hydrocarbons, typically ethane through hexane. In addition, natural gas contains inorganic contaminants – notably hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide, but also nitrogen and trace amounts of helium and hydrogen.
The formations and the gas contained therein are almost always associated with water, and thus the gas is usually water-saturated. The water concentration depends on the temperature and pressure of the reservoir and to some extent on the composition of the gas.
Natural gas that contains hydrogen sulfide is referred to as sour.
Gas that does not contain hydrogen sulfide, or at least contains hydrogen sulfide but in very small amounts, is called sweet.
Contaminants in natural gas, like hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide, are usually removed from the gas in order to produce a sales gas. Hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide are called acid gases
because when dissolved in water they form weak acids.
Hydrogen sulfide must be removed because of its high toxicity and strong, offensive odor. Carbon dioxide is removed because it has no heating value. Another reason these gases must be removed is because they are corrosive. In Alberta, sales gas must typically contain less than 16 ppm¹ hydrogen sulfide and less than 2% carbon dioxide. However, different jurisdictions have different standards.
Once removed from the raw gas, the question arises as to what should be done with the acid gas. If there is a large amount of acid gas, it may be economical to build a Claus-type sulfur plant to convert the hydrogen sulfide into the more benign elemental sulfur. Once the H2S has been converted to sulfur, the leftover carbon dioxide is emitted to the atmosphere. Claus plants can be quite efficient, but even so, they also emit significant amounts of sulfur compounds. For example, a Claus plant processing 10 MMSCFD of H2S and converting 99.9% of the H2S into elemental sulfur (which is only possible with the addition of a tail gas clean up unit) emits the equivalent of 0.01 MMSCFD or approximately 0.4 ton/day of sulfur into the atmosphere. Note that there is more discussion of standard volumes and sulfur equivalents later in this chapter.
For small acid gas streams, Claus-type sulfur plants are not feasible. In the past, it was permissible to flare small amounts of acid gas. However, with growing environmental concerns, such practices are being legislated out of existence.
In the natural gas business, acid gas injection has quickly become the method of choice for the disposal of such gases. Larger producers are also considering injection because of the volatility of the sulfur markets.
1.1 Acid Gas
As noted earlier, hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide are called acid gases. When dissolved in water they react to form weak acids.
The formation of acid in water is another reason that acid gases are often removed from natural gas. The acidic solutions are very corrosive and require special materials to handle them.
On the other hand, the acidity of the acid gases is used to our advantage in processes for their removal.
1.1.1 Hydrogen Sulfide
Hydrogen sulfide is a weak, diprotic acid (i.e., it undergoes two acid reactions). The ionization reactions are as follows:
The subscript (aq) indicates that the reaction takes place in the aqueous (water-rich) phase.
It is the H+ ion that makes the solution acidic. Hydrogen sulfide is diprotic because it has two reactions that both form the hydrogen ion. Furthermore, when hydrogen sulfide is dissolved in water it exists as three species – the molecular form (H2S) and the two ionic forms: the bisulfide ion (HS−) and the sulfide ion (S²−).
The measure of how far these reactions proceed is the equilibrium ratios. For our purposes, these ratios are as follows:
where the square brackets indicate the concentration of each species. These relations are valid only if the concentration is small. The fact that these ratios are so small indicates that these reactions do not proceed very far, and thus, in an otherwise neutral solution, most of the hydrogen sulfide is found in the solution in the molecular form. The concentration of the ionic species is greatly affected by the presence of an alkaline and to some extend the presence of an acid. And since hydrogen sulfide is an acid, the effect of an alkaline is very significant.
At 25°C and 101.325 kPa (1 atm) the distribution of the various species in the aqueous solution can be calculated from the solubility and the equilibrium ratios. The distribution is:
The units of concentration used here are molality or moles of species per kg of solvent (water).
1.1.2 Carbon Dioxide
Carbon dioxide is also a weak diprotic acid, but the reactions for CO2 are slightly different. The first reaction is a hydrolysis (a reaction with water):
The second is a simple acid formation reaction:
Again, these reactions take place in the aqueous phase. The carbon dioxide exists in three species in the aqueous phase – the molecular form CO2, and two ionic forms: the bicarbonate ion, also call the hydrogen carbonate ion (HCO3−), and the carbonate ion (CO3²−).
The equilibrium ratios for these reactions are:
Again, the square brackets are used to indicate the concentration of the various species. As with hydrogen sulfide, these ratios are very small, and thus in an otherwise neutral solution most of the carbon dioxide exist in the molecular form. At 25°C and 101.325 kPa (1 atm) the distribution of the various species in the aqueous solution is:
The pH of the CO2 solution is slightly less than that for H2S even though the solubility of CO2 is significantly less. This is because more of the carbon dioxide ionizes, which in turn produces more of the H+ ion – the acid ion.
1.2 Anthropogenic CO2
The disposal of man-made carbon dioxide into the atmosphere is becoming an undesirable practice. Whether or not one believes that CO2 is harmful to the environment has almost become a moot point. The general consensus is that CO2 is contributing to global climate change. Furthermore, it is clear that legislators all around the world believe that it is a problem. In some countries there is a carbon tax applied to such disposal. Engineers will increasingly be faced with the problem of disposing of CO2.
Some of the technologies for dealing with this CO2 are the same as acid gas injection, and thus they will be discussed here as well.
1.3 Flue Gas
Flue gas, as used here, is the byproduct of the combustion of fuels. Typically the fuels of concern here are natural gas, oil (and distillates from oil such as gasoline), coal, wood, etc.
Combustion is a process involving oxygen. However, air is composed of only 21% oxygen, which is required for combustion, and 79% inerts, mostly nitrogen. Thus for every mole of oxygen consumed in the combustion of a paraffin hydrocarbon, more than 9.5 moles of air must be supplied.
The combustion of a carbon-based fuel (coal, natural gas, or oil) produces a gaseous byproduct called flue gas. First consider the combustion of a paraffin hydrocarbon.
For example, the reaction for the combustion of methane is:
So the combustion of a hydrocarbon releases carbon dioxide and water. In addition, the combustion of one mole of methane consumes 2 moles of oxygen.
Table 1.1 summarizes the amount of oxygen and air required for the combustion of several light paraffin hydrocarbons. It is interesting to note that as the hydrocarbon becomes larger, the amount of carbon dioxide produced by the combustion process also increases.
Table 1.1 Air requirements for the combustion of one mole of various paraffin fuels.
Table 1.2 Approximate flue gas composition from the combustion of various paraffin hydrocarbon fuels (water-free basis).
From table 1.2 we can see that the flues gas is more than three quarters nitrogen and only about 20% carbon dioxide. In addition, when 15% excess air is used in the combustion process, then the flue gas also includes slightly more than 2.5% oxygen. As noted below, the flue gas will also include small amounts of oxides of nitrogen and oxides of sulfur.
It is probably undesirable to attempt to inject the entire flue gas stream. As we shall see, the cost of a disposal stream is directly related to the volume of gas injected.
In some cases, there is insufficient oxygen and one gets incomplete combustion to form carbon monoxide:
Carbon monoxide is a very dangerous chemical. It is gaseous at room conditions, and it is colorless, odorless, and highly toxic. It is often referred to as the silent killer.
1.3.1 Sulfur Oxides
Most of the fuels we use contain some sulfur compounds. Even sweet
natural gas has some sulfur in it. These sulfur compounds burn to form the so-called sulfur oxides – SOx: sulfur dioxide (SO2) and sulfur trioxide (SO3). At room conditions, pure SO2 is a gas but pure SO3 is a liquid (boiling pt 45°C). Like carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulfide, these compounds form acids when dissolved in water.
More properties of the sulfur oxides are provided in the appendix.
1.3.2 Nitrogen Oxides
There are two sources of nitrogen in the combustion process. Some fuels, notably coal and heavier oil, contain nitrogen compounds. When these fuels are burned they release oxides of nitrogen. The other source of nitrogen is the high temperature reaction of atmospheric oxygen and nitrogen.
More properties of the oxides of nitrogen are given in the appendix.
1.4 Standard Volumes
In the petroleum business it is common to report flow rates in standard volumes per unit time.
1.4.1 Gas Volumes
The common units for the flow rate of a gas stream are MMSCFD, Sm³/d or Nm³/d. These are equivalent to the following number of moles of gas:
The use of the prefix symbol M is a cause of much confusion in the natural gas business. In standard SI Units, M means mega and has the multiplier 10⁶. Therefore, in SI Units, 1 MJ is one mega-joule or one million Joules. In American Engineering Units, the M is taken from Roman numerals, where M means one thousand. Thus 1 MSCF is one thousand standard cubic feet and not one million standard cubic feet. To indicate one million, two M’s are used (1,000 × 1,000 = 1,000,000), so one million standard cubic feet is denoted 1 MMSCF. In spite of the confusion, this notation will be used in this work.
1.4.2 Liquid Volumes
In the oil business, a barrel is a volume exactly 42 USgal, which is equivalent to 5.61458 ft³ or 158.99 L. The density of a liquid is affected by the temperature, not as significantly as a gas, but it changes nonetheless. Therefore, a standard barrel is the volume occupied at 60°F (15.56°C).
By definition (GFA, 1996) we have:
So one standard barrel (usually referred to as a barrel) of liquefied acid gas has a mass of about 2801b or 127 kg. It will weigh slightly less due to the presence of light hydrocarbon in the mixture. The conversion from standard barrels to standard meters is 1 bbl = 0.158 987 Sm³ or 6.2898 bbl = 1 Sm³.
Furthermore, as was given earlier, 1 MMSCF is 1.195 × 10⁶ mol, so 1 MMSCFD of compressed H2S is equal to 40 728 kg/d, which equals 320 bpd. Similarly for CO2 1 MMSFD is 405 bpd. Although 1 barrel of H2S has approximately the same mass as 1 bbl of CO2, there is a significant difference when converting from standard cubic feet. This is because the molecular mass of CO2 is significantly larger than that of H2S. So as an approximation, 1 MMSCFD of acid gas is equal to approximately 350 bbl of liquefied acid gas.
1.5 Sulfur Equivalent
It is common to express the sulfur content of a stream in terms of sulfur equivalent. This assumes that all of the hydrogen sulfide in a gas stream is converted to elemental sulfur via the reaction:
According to this reaction, 1 mole of hydrogen sulfide is converted to one mole of S.
First you must determine the number of moles of hydrogen sulfide in the gas stream, as discussed earlier. Therefore to obtain the molar flow rate of H2S in the gas stream, multiply the flow rate by the molar equivalent given above and then multiply by the mole fraction H2S in the stream.
From the chemical reaction, one mole of H2S produces one mole of S. Therefore:
Finally, use the molar mass of sulfur, 32.066 g/mol, to convert to a molar flow rate in g/day. This is converted to tonne/day using the conversion factor 10⁶ g = 1t.
The more common form of sulfur is actually S8. Therefore the chemically more correct version of the reaction is:
However, when we express the flow rate on a mass basis it is independent of the form of the elemental sulfur. Other species of elemental sulfur also exist, but if the sulfur rate is expressed on a mass basis, it does not matter which species you assume for the elemental sulfur.
Examples
1.1 An acid gas stream of 1 MMCSFD is 75% H2S. What is the sulfur equivalent for this stream?
Answer: Using equation (1.11) yields:
This is equivalent to 31.6 ton/day⁴.
1.2 An acid gas stream of 20 × 10³ Sm³/day is 5% H2S. What is the sulfur equivalent for this stream?
Answer: Again using equation (1.11) yields:
1.6 Sweetening Natural Gas
Although many processes are available to sweeten natural gas – that is to remove the acid gases – those based on alkanolamines are the most common.
Alkanolamines are ammonia-like organic compounds. When dissolved in water they form weak bases. The bases react with the acids formed when H2S and CO2 dissolve in water. This acid-base reaction greatly enhances the solubility of the acid gases. Because the alkanolamines are weak bases, the process can be reversed. When the solutions are heated, the acid gases are liberated and the solvent regenerated.
The process for absorbing acid gas takes place in two stages: (1) absorption and (2) regeneration. The absorption takes place in a column where the sour gas is contacted with the lean solvent. The rich solvent is sent to a second column where the solvent is regenerated. Heat is applied to the system via a reboiler and the overheads are condensed, typically in an aerial cooler. The solvent regeneration is done not only at higher temperature, but also at lower pressure. Figure 1.1 is a schematic of the process.
Other processes are available for sweetening natural gas, but the alkanolamine systems are by far the most common. More discussion about processes for sweetening natural gas can be found in Kohl and Nielsen (1997).
1.6.1 Combustion Process Gas
In the carbon capture world there are two approaches to capturing the carbon dioxide: 1. post-combustion and 2. pre-combustion. The post-combustion approach is to take the CO2 from the combustion process, purify it, and then inject it. In the pre-combustion approach, the carbon is removed from the fuel before combustion. These two approaches are discussed in the following sections.
Figure 1.1 A simplified schematic diagram of the process for removing acid gas from natural gas.
1.6.1.1 Post-Combustion
As was mentioned earlier, it is probably wise to separate the carbon dioxide from the flue gas and inject only a CO2-rich stream. This is the so-call capture
part of the carbon capture and storage.
At first look, we should be able to achieve this using a process similar to those used for sweetening natural gas. However, there are several factors that complicate this.
High Temperature – Since the source of the stream is a combustion process, this stream will be at high temperature. It may be necessary to cool the flue gas stream before sending it to the treating process.
Low Pressure – The flue gas stream is produced at near atmospheric pressure. At a minimum, blower will probably have to be used to raise the pressure of the gas to a sufficient level such that it can flow through the process equipment.
In addition, and perhaps more importantly, the absorption process is favored by higher pressure.
The low pressure also means that there is a very high actual flow rate. This means that larger diameter towers are required for