2 Gas Behavior and Separation
2 Gas Behavior and Separation
Process
1
Origin of hydrocarbon
The most widely accepted theory says that fossil fuels
are formed when organic matter (such as the remains of
a plant or animal) is compressed under the earth, at
high temperatures, for a very long time.
How hydrocarbon Formed
In most areas, a thick liquid called oil formed
first, but in deeper, hot regions underground, the
natural gas was formed. Over time, some of
this oil and natural gas began working its way
upward through the earth’s crust until they ran
into rock formations called “cap rocks” that are
dense enough to prevent them from seeping to
the surface. It is from under these cap rocks
that most oil and natural gas is produced today.
1. Natural gas
6
Chemical Composition
of Natural Gas
Component Sample Analysis Range
(mole %) (mole %)
Methane 94.9 85.0 - 98.0
Ethane 2.5 1.0 - 5.1
Propane 0.2 0.1 - 1.5
iso - Butane 0.03 0.01 - 0.3
normal - Butane 0.03 0.01 - 0.3
iso - Pentane 0.01 trace - 0.14
normal - Pentane 0.01 trace - 0.04
Hexanes plus 0.01 trace - 0.06
Nitrogen 1.6 1.3 - 5.6
Carbon Dioxide 0.7 0.1 - 1.0
Oxygen 0.02 0.01 - 0.1
Hydrogen trace trace - 0.02
Specific Gravity 0.585 0.57 - 0.62
Methane Sales gas Local consumption
NATURAL GAS
&gas export
Ethane/Propane Petrochemicals Polyethylene &
polypropylene
Propane Commercial
propane Export
Propane/Butane
LPG
Local consumption
Pentane (+)
Condensate Middle
distillates
Tc,
Ra
9
FUNDAMENTALS
OF ROCK
PROPERTIES
POROSITY
Natural gas
components
17
17
:Typical Composition of Natural Gas
Water
Impurities CO2,H2S, Hg
Nitrogen
LNG
Methane
Ethane
NGL’s Propane
Butane LPG
C5 +
18
18
Natural Gas Properties
19
Natural Gas Phase Behavior
The natural gas phase behavior diagram is a plot of pressure vs temperature that
determines whether the natural gas stream at a given pressure and temperature
consists of a single gas phase or two phases: gas and liquid.
The phase behavior for natural gas with a given composition is typically displayed
on a phase diagram, an example of which is shown in Figure 1-1.
The left-hand side of the curve is the bubble point line and divides the single phase
liquid region from the two-phase gas–liquid region.
The right-hand side of the curve is the dew point line and divides the two-phase gas–
liquid region and the single-phase gas region.
20
uid
Retrograde region
liq
X
Y
A
it
Vap
or
=
p
o
w
i
zy
n
/t
zW
:y
z
w y
21
Definitions
1-Phase Diagram
A record of the effects of temperature, pressure and composition on the kinds and
numbers of phases that can exist in equilibrium with each other.
2-Bubble Point
The point at which the first infinitesimally small vapour bubble appears in a liquid
system. The bubble point curve on a phase diagram represents 0% vapour.
3-Dew Point
The point at which the first infinitesimally small droplet of condensation forms in a
gaseous system. The dew point curve on a phase diagram represents 0%
liquid.
4-Phase Envelope
The area on a pressure-temperature phase diagram for a mixture enclosed by the
bubble and dew point curves. This area represents the set of conditions for the
mixture were vapour and liquid phases co-exist in equilibrium.
5-Cricondenbar (Pmax)
The maximum pressure at which vapour and liquid can co-exist in equilibrium.
22
Definitions
6-Cricondentherm (Tmax)
The maximum temperature at which vapour and liquid can co-exist in equilibrium.
7-Critical Pressure
The vapour pressure at critical temp.
8-Critical Temperature
The temp. above which all the mixture cannot be liquid
9-Quality Lines
Lines through the two-phase region showing a constant percentage of liquid and
vapour.
10-Retrograde
The name given to phase behaviour above the critical temperature and pressure
were vapour and liquid phases coexist and the amount of vaporisation or
condensation changes with pressure and temperature in the opposite
direction to normal behaviour. (e.g:condensation of liquids by occur by
lowering pressure or increasing temperature)
23
Separation Process
• Measurement devices for gases or liquids are highly inaccurate when another
phase is present.
Factors affecting separation
Separator size
Operating pressure
Operating temperature
Fluid Composition
Residence Time
Separator Internals
Surface Area of Gas-Oil Interface
presence of impurities (paraffin, sand, scale,
etc.)
gas and liquid flow rates (average and peak) 27
CLASSIFICATION OF OIL AND
GAS SEPARATORS
SEPARATOR
SEPARATORS
2. SPHERICAL
SEPARATORS
Common Components
Primary Separation Section
A vortex breaker
located over the
liquid outlet nozzle
(s) to avoid gas
outlet with liquid
stream
Inlet weir
To Assure there is
no contamination
happened between
the two liquid
Three Phase Separator (Spillover Weir)
Advantage of Horizontal Gas Separators
1. Liquid quantity with feed stream is high
2. Installations where vertical height limitations indicate the
use of a horizontal vessel.
3. Separating foaming crude oil where the larger
liquid/gas contact area of the horizontal vessel .
Disadvantage of horizontal separator
1.Area limitation
2.High expensive
(depending on
internals)
3.Solid particles
removing problems
Advantage of vertical Gas Separators
Two-phase , (vapor-liquid) .
Three-phase (gas-oil-water) .
Classification by Operating Pressure
Production Separator
A production separator is used to separate the produced well fluid from a
well, group of wells
Low-Temperature Separator.
The temperature reduction is obtained by the Joule-Thompson effect of
expanding well fluid as it flows through the pressure-reducing choke or valve
into the separator.