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    PROPER PRETREATMENT SYSTEMS REDUCE MEMBRANE REPLACEMENT

    ELEMENT COSTS AND IMPROVE RELIABILITY

    David R. Koch and William R. BuchanUOP LLC

    Des Plaines, Illinois, USA

    Tom Cnop

    UOP NV

    Antwerp, Netherlands

    ABSTRACT

    Membrane-based CO2 removal systems have become an established technology in the Oil and

    Natural Gas Industry. Membrane systems continue to win economic evaluations against traditionalsolvent based CO2 removal systems for their simplicity and ease of operation. The size and quantity of

    large scale membrane-based CO2 removal systems have increased over the last 15 years, with largemembrane plants currently treating 500-700 MMSCFD of natural gas to pipeline quality specifications.

    New large scale designs are approaching flow rates of one BCFD.

    The critical component for winning economic evaluations against time-proven solvent-basedtechnologies has been the increased reliability of membrane elements in membrane processing

    facilities. In early membrane systems, suppliers quickly learned the need for adequate pretreatment

    systems when processing natural gas; Natural gas can, depending on the source and initial treatment,

    contain a variety of contaminants that may reduce membrane performance. Advanced pretreatmentsystems have been designed to protect membrane elements and further increase longevity.

    Using standard non-regenerable pretreatment, feed gases containing light hydrocarbons known

    as dry gas applications can result in a membrane element life exceeding 4-6 years, however, this canchange dramatically with heavier hydrocarbon feed gases. Upgrading to a regenerable adsorbent

    pretreatment system for heavy gas streams can now provide similar time of operation before membrane

    element replacement may be required.The improvement to membrane element life has positively impacted the economics of

    membrane systems, enabling competitive advantages in even the largest of natural gas processing

    applications.

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    Introduction

    Carbon dioxide falls into the category of acid gases, along with others such as hydrogen sulfide.

    It is commonly found in natural gas streams at levels ranging from a few percent to as high as 80%. In

    combination with water it is highly corrosive and will rapidly affect pipelines and equipment unless itis partially removed upstream or exotic and expensive materials of construction are utilized. CO2 also

    reduces the heating value of natural gas streams and wastes pipeline and compression capacity. In

    NGL extraction plants and LNG plants, CO2 must be removed to low levels to prevent freezing in lowtemperature operations.

    A wide variety of CO2 / acid gas removal technologies are available. They include reactive

    absorption processes such as hot potassium carbonate and amine solutions, cryogenic processes,adsorption processes such as pressure swing adsorption (PSA), thermal swing adsorption (TSA) and

    the subject of this paper, membranes.

    Each process has its own advantages and disadvantages, but membranes are increasingly beingselected for new projects, especially for large flow, medium to high CO2 concentration and

    remote-location applications. The reasons for this trend are described later in the paper. Membraneshave been widely used in two main CO2 removal applications:

    1. Natural gas treating to pipeline specification2. Enhanced oil recovery (EOR), where CO2 is removed from an associated natural gas stream and

    reinjected into the oil field to improve oil recovery

    Less common applications such as landfill gas purification exist, but these are fewer in number.

    Membrane Performance

    Membranes are made by casting a thin layer onto membrane support material or as self

    supported hollow fiber tubes of membrane material. Gases are separated in membrane elements bydifferences in permeability. Permeable gases are separated in the membrane by first dissolving into the

    surface of the membrane, diffusing through the membrane layer and desorbing on the opposite side as

    the permeate gas. Non permeable gases remain at high pressure as the residual or residue gas.Separation of gases in natural gas applications depends on how well the CO2 dissolves into the surface

    of the membrane and how well it diffuses through the membrane relative to methane.

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    Ficks law, shown below, is widely used to approximate the solution-diffusion process:

    l

    iiii

    pDkJ

    =

    Where,

    Ji is the membrane flux of component i,

    e.g., the molar flow of species ithrough the membrane per unit area of

    membrane,

    ki is the solubility of component in the

    membrane

    Di is the diffusion coefficient of

    component i through the membrane

    pi is the partial pressure difference of

    component i between the feed (highpressure) and permeate (low pressure)

    side of the membrane

    l is the membrane skin layer thickness

    Transport through solution-diffusion membranes is dependent upon the product of diffusivity

    and solubility called permeability. Pi = ki x Di. The diffusivity coefficient of a membrane for a gasmolecule is defined by the size and frequency of the gas molecule traveling through the membrane

    material. The solubility coefficient is a measure of the amount of gas sorbed by the membrane

    material.For ideal dense films, solubility in glassy polymers can be described as a combination of

    Henrys Law and a Langmuir sorption. Henrys Law predicts the solubility is linear as the

    concentration and pressure is increased. Langmuir sorption graphs show that the solubility will reach amaximum as concentration is increased regardless of additional pressure increases. Glassy polymers

    used in CO2 removal can be described with the dual sorption theory that predicts these two sorptionmechanisms occur simultaneously.

    Figure 1. Dual Sorption Theory Mechanisms

    Henrys Law

    Pressure

    kd

    Pressure

    LangmuirSorption

    Ch

    Ch

    B-1

    Cd

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    To simplify matters further, the solubility and diffusion coefficients are usually combined into a

    new variable called permeability, P. Pi = ki x Di. This splits Ficks law into two portions: a

    membrane-dependent portion, P/l and a process-dependent portion, p. To achieve a high flux a

    favorable membrane material is needed as well as favorable processing conditions. Note that P/l , the

    parameter describing membrane material and thickness, is also sensitive to a variety of operating

    conditions, such as temperature and pressure.

    The selectivity of a membrane is defined as the ratio of the permeability of CO2 to that of theother components in the stream and is thus a measure of how much better the membrane permeates

    CO2 compared to other components. High membrane performance is defined as having highselectivity. Most high performing membranes in natural gas service have selectivity between 15 and

    25 indicating that CO2 will permeate the membrane 15-25 times faster than methane.

    Membrane Elements

    Gas separation membranes are currently manufactured in one of two forms: flat sheet or hollow

    fiber. The flat sheets are typically combined into a spiral wound element, while the hollow fibers arecombined into a bundle, similar to a shell and tube heat exchanger. Figures 2 and 3 illustrate these

    element types.

    Figure 2. Spiral Wound Membrane Element

    In the spiral wound arrangement, two flat sheets of membrane with a permeate spacer inbetween are glued along three of their sides to form an envelope which is open at one end. Many of

    these envelopes are separated by feed spacers and wrapped around a permeate tube, with their open

    ends facing the permeate tube.Feed gas enters along the side of the membrane, and passes through the feed spacers separating

    the envelopes. These feed spacers also provide mechanical strength. As the gas travels between the

    envelopes, CO2, H2S, H2O and other highly permeable compounds permeate into the envelope. These

    permeated components have only one outlet, which is to travel within the envelope to the permeatetube. The driving force for transport is the differential pressure between the high-pressure feed gas and

    the low-pressure permeate. Once the permeate gas reaches the permeate tube it enters it through the

    perforated tube. From there it travels down the tube joining permeate from other membrane elements.

    Feed Spacer

    Membrane

    Permeate SpacerMembrane

    Feed Spacer

    PPPPPPeeeeeerrrrrrmmmmmmeeeeeeaaaaaattttttiiiiiioooooonnnnnn

    PPPPPPaaaaaatttttthhhhhh

    Feed

    Permeate

    Residual

    Residual

    Feed

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    Any gas on the feed side that does not get a chance to permeate, leaves through the side of the element

    opposite the feed position.

    To construct hollow fiber elements, very fine hollow fibers are wrapped around a central tube

    in a highly dense pattern. The natural gas feed flows over and between the fibers and the solublecomponents permeate into the hollow fiber. The wrapping pattern used to make the element is such

    that both open ends of the fiber terminate at a permeate pot out the bottom of the element. The

    permeate gas travels within the fibers until it reaches the permeate pot, where it mixes with permeategas from other fibers. A permeate pipe allows the collected gases to exit the element. An illustration

    is shown in Figure 3.

    As the feed gas passes over the fibers, the components that do not permeate eventually reachthe center tube in the element, which is perforated like the spiral-wound permeate tube. In this case,

    however, the central tube is for residual gas collection, not permeate collection.

    Figure 3. Hollow Fiber Membrane Element

    Residue(Low CO2)

    Feed(High CO2)

    Permeate(Very High CO2)

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    Membrane Modules and Skids

    Once they have been manufactured into elements, membranes are connected by a clamp

    mechanism and inserted into a steel tube. This is illustrated in Figure 4 using spiral wound membranesas an example,. Multiple tubes are then mounted in skids, in a horizontal orientation. Figure 5shows

    a horizontal arrangement of tubes with the structural steel supports and a horizontal particle filter in

    front of the tubes. Skid-edge isolation valves are installed allowing the module to be taken off line asneeded. A small unit shown in Figure 5 can process approximately 5-30 MMSCFD depending upon

    the CO2 content.

    For large systems, pretreatment vessels are mounted on their own skids or are installed on theirown foundation next to the membrane tube skid. Smaller systems can have pretreatment vessels and

    membrane element tubes mounted on the same skid. Due to the modular construction of the skids, a

    membrane system can be installed on site and connected to the rest of the gas plant very quickly.

    Figure 4. Membrane module with spiral wound membrane elements

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    Figure 5. Membrane Skid

    Differences between Spiral Wound and Hollow Fiber Elements

    Both spiral wound and hollow fiber elements are used in bulk CO2 removal processes however

    major operational differences exist between the two types of elements in this service. Spiral woundelements are proven to perform at pressures up to 1600 psia. The mechanical integrity of the spiral

    wound element can withstand a high pressure environment and the subsequent operational

    depressurizations. Hollow fiber elements must decrease their fiber diameter and/or increase their fiberwall thickness to sustain the fiber mechanical integrity in a high pressure environment. The drawbackof the first is a decrease in performance due to increased permeate pressure drop when decreasing the

    internal fiber diameter. Increasing the wall thickness of the hollow fiber decreases the permeance

    through hollow fiber and requires more hollow fiber elements for the same application. As a result,hollow fiber membrane elements for CO2 removal are typically only utilized in lower pressure

    applications whereas spiral wound elements can perform in both low and high pressure applications.

    Pretreatment

    Harmful contaminants, when condensed on the surface of the membrane, can cause permanent

    damage and downturn in performance resulting in early membrane replacement. Proper pretreatmentdesign is therefore critical to the performance of all membrane systems. Systems installed with

    inadequate pretreatment generally lead to performance decline rather than complete non-performance.

    Therefore a complete feed gas definition is essential during the design phase of a membrane treatmentsystem to ensure the membrane elements achieve the expected life.

    Substances commonly found in natural gas streams that will lower the performance of CO2

    removal membranes include:

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    Liquids: Liquids can cause swelling of the membranes, a decrease in the permeance and possibledestruction of membrane integrity.

    Heavy hydrocarbons, approximately > C15: Significant levels of heavy hydrocarbons slowly coatthe membrane surface, thus decreasing permeation capacity.

    Particulate Material: This is not as much of an issue with spiral-wound membrane as it is with

    hollow fiber membranes, which have lower flow area. However, long term flow of particles intoany membrane could eventually block them and/or tear them.

    Certain Corrosion Inhibitors and Well Additives: Some corrosion inhibitors and well additivesare destructive to the membrane material.

    Some membrane vendors have observed membrane damage due to aromatic and poly-nuclearcompounds in the liquid phase. On the other hand, UOP designed a number of landfill gas applications

    where a wide variety of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), including halogenated VOCs and

    aromatics, are encountered in the vapor phase and no membrane damage has been reported in these

    applications. The pretreatment system must provide adequate protection to ensure that componentsstay in the vapor phase or are completely removed.

    Two effects may cause condensation within the membrane. First, the permeate gas cools downas it passes through the membrane as a result of the Joule-Thomson effect. Second, since CO2 and thelighter hydrocarbons permeate faster than the heavy hydrocarbons, the residue gas hydrocarbon dew

    point increases through the membrane. Condensation within the membrane is prevented by providing

    a margin of superheat.The pretreatment system must have a predetermined safety margin, and must be highly flexible

    to cope with unexpected circumstances. Experience has shown that the heavy hydrocarbon content of

    a feed gas can vary widely from initial estimates, and also from month to month during the plants life.

    Large variations are seen even between different wells in the same area. A reliable pretreatmentsystem must take this variation into account and must be able to protect the membranes against a wide

    range of (possibly unknown) contaminants.

    Traditional Pretreatment

    The traditional CO2 removal membrane pretreatment scheme, illustrated in Figure 6, consists of the

    following items of equipment:

    Coalescing filter for liquid and mist elimination

    Non-regenerable adsorbent bed for trace contaminant removal

    Particle filter for dust removal after the adsorbent bed

    Heater for providing sufficient superheat to the gas

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    Figure 6. Traditional Membrane Pretreatment

    Traditional pretreatment is adequate for light, stable composition gases, but has the limitation

    that the adsorbent bed is the only item removing heavy hydrocarbons. If there is a sudden upward

    surge in heavy hydrocarbon content, or the feed gas is heavier than initially estimated, it can becomesaturated within a very short period. Since these beds are typically non-regenerable, they can only

    become functional again after the adsorbent has been replaced.

    Regenerative Pretreatment

    Regenerative pretreatment is called for in cases where the operator might expect:

    Wide variation in the feed gas content

    Significant heavy hydrocarbon or other contaminant content

    Heavier feed gas than analyzed based on the known information from nearby wells or adjacentreservoirs.

    UOPs regenerative pretreatment scheme is illustrated in Figure 7. The feed gas is routed to afilter-coalescer to remove liquids or entrained particles. The liquid-free gas is then treated in a thermal

    swing regenerable adsorbent-based system where water, heavy hydrocarbons and other harmful

    components are completely removed. The contaminant-free gas passes through a particle filter torecover any adsorbent fines. Membrane feed gas temperature control is provided by a preheater. The

    regeneration system for this enhanced pretreatment scheme is very similar to thermal swing molecular

    sieve units.

    Membrane

    Preheater

    Sales Gas

    Filter

    Coalescer

    ParticleFilter

    Condensate

    Guard Bed

    Permeate Gas

    Feed Gas

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    Figure 7. Regenerative Pretreatment Scheme

    The regenerative system has a major advantage in that water and other contaminants such asmercury are removed along with the heavy hydrocarbons, so no additional dehydration is required.

    With regenerative pretreatment, it is also possible to remove mercury and mercaptans in the same bed

    without the need for extra vessels.

    Reference Plants

    To illustrate the benefits of effective pretreatment, several installations are presented that have

    been in service for a long time. UOP spiral wound membrane systems using standard pretreatment andregenerative pretreatment are described. Standard pretreatment examples in Michigan and Pakistanexplain the limitations of standard pretreatment. Regenerative pretreatment systems in Pakistan and

    Mexico document the benefits of installing regenerative pretreatment systems.

    Michigan, USA

    This plant has been operated since August of 1994. The facility processes 40 MMSCFD of gas,

    removing CO2 from 11% to the pipeline specification of less than 2%. The gas is simultaneously

    dehydrated to 4 lbs H2O/MMSCF.

    A two-stage configuration is used to minimize methane losses. In a two stage membranesystem, the permeate stream from the first membrane stage is recompressed and is sent to a second

    stage membrane where it is separated into a CO2 depleted residue stream and a CO2 enriched permeatestream. The CO2 enriched permeate stream is sent to the vent whereas the hydrocarbon rich residue

    stream is recycled to the inlet of the first stage membrane for additional hydrocarbon recovery.The feed gas to the facility contains only light hydrocarbons and the plant has operated

    successfully using a traditional pretreatment system. The plant has experienced very high on-stream

    Coalescer

    AdsorbtionBed

    ParticleFilter

    RegenerationBed

    Regen Gas

    Heater

    Regen GasAir Cooler

    Regen GasSeparator

    Regen Gas Blower

    FEED

    Clean Gas

    Liquids

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    efficiency and operates most of the time without operators on site. An article on this plant appeared in

    the April 1995 issue of Hydrocarbon Processing (Ref. 8).

    As of June of 2004 the plant is operating with 11% inlet CO2 and is still meeting pipeline

    specifications of less then 2% CO2 and water less then 1 lb/MMSCFD after ~11 years of continuousoperation.

    During the initial technology selection process the customer wanted a system that did not

    require a large operating staff. After 11 years of operation the plant still operates with one operatorworking an 8-hour shift, 5 days per week. A relief operator is available 2-3 days per week. This low

    manpower requirement allows operators to work at multiple plants and keeps manpower costs low.

    In the 1995 article, an operating cost comparison was made between an amine plant and amembrane plant. The operating cost table compared Labor, Transportation, Utilities, Fuel Gas and

    Expendables (membrane elements, activated carbon and filter coalescer elements). After 11 years of

    operation the actual replacement element costs were only 20% of the estimate used in the 1995 paper.

    This is a major operational savings realized each year. Many of the original membrane elementsinstalled in 1994 are still in service after 11 years of service.

    During membrane element replacement it may not be necessary to replace all the membrane

    elements. A major advantage of using a spiral wound element is the fact that a high number of

    membrane elements are installed in series in each tube. Since plant performance is usually restored byreplacing the first few elements in each tube, spiral wound elements allow partial replacement of

    membrane area that performs the greatest portion of the separation.The Michigan customer has been satisfied with the technology selection of a membrane plant in

    lieu of an amine system. Since this installation this customer has installed a separate membrane plant

    at another facility adjacent to an aging amine facility. The online factor is consistently above 98% forboth membrane plants. The membrane installation has met or exceeds the customer expectations on

    performance and operating costs.

    Mexico Enhanced Oil Recovery

    UOP installed a membrane system in an enhanced oil recovery (EOR) facility in Mexico. The

    system processes 120 MMSCFD of inlet gas containing 70% CO2. The purified CO2 gas stream

    contains 93% CO2 and is reinjected. The hydrocarbon product contains 5% CO2 and is transported to anearby gas plant for further processing. Figure 8 shows the membrane system with the regenerative

    pretreatment vessels in the foreground and membrane skids behind them.

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    Figure 8. Enhanced Oil Recovery System in Mexico

    The feed gas to this facility is saturated with heavy hydrocarbons from enhanced oil recovery

    and the membrane system requires a regenerative pretreatment system to achieve long membrane life.The unit was started up in July 1997 and has maintained product specifications. The unit has sustained

    high reliability and longevity of the membrane elements and regenerative adsorbent.

    Recent gas analysis has shown that the pretreatment system continues to exceed expectations.

    Figure 9 illustrates recent gas analyses before and after the pretreatment system. The feed gascontained 934 ppm C7+ compounds, which were reduced to 55 ppm after the pretreatment. The C9+

    content was completely removed.

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    Figure 9. Pretreatment Performance

    Enhanced oil recovery is a much harsher environment for membrane systems than typical CO2 removal

    applications. In enhanced oil recovery the CO2 must be purified for reinjection and the sales gas must

    meet pipeline specifications. After three years 34% of the total elements installed in 1997 werereplaced as part of routine maintenance to the plant. After four years, another 32% of the elements

    installed in 1997 were replaced. The remainder of the original elements will be replaced next year and

    will have been in service for 8 years. The regenerative pretreatment system installed in Mexico isdirectly responsible for the long membrane life achieved in the harsh environment of an enhanced oil

    recovery operation.

    Pakistan

    Two of the largest land based CO2 removal membrane systems in the world are the UOP

    membrane units installed in Pakistan. Both of these plants specified membranes as the CO2 removaltechnology after a rigorous comparison against solvent technologies, because of their simplicity, ease

    of use, and high reliability, essential attributes for remotely located plants. These criteria have all beenmet, and significant lessons have been learned. For example, a major impetus in the development of

    UOP advanced pretreatment systems came from experience with the Pakistan 1 unit.

    0

    100

    200

    300

    400

    500

    600

    700

    800

    900

    1,000

    C5 C7 C9 C11 C13 C15

    Hydrocarbon Type

    HydrocarbonContent,p

    pm

    Pretreatment Feed

    Pretreatment Discharge

    +

    Feed Content

    C10+ 110 ppm

    C15+ 16 ppm

    C20+ 2 ppm

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    Pakistan 1

    When this facility started up in 1995, it was the largest membrane-based natural gas processing plant in

    the world. It has now been in operation for more than 9 years using UOP cellulose acetate membranes.

    The Pakistan 1 system is a two-stage unit designed to treat 210 MMSCFD of feed gas at 1,305 psia.The CO2 content is reduced from 12% to less than 3%.

    The system was originally designed for a light feed gas with standard pretreatment. After start

    up, the feed gas deviated significantly from the original design specification. Figure 10 shows thedifference in phase envelopes between the design basis and the actual feed composition. The designedpretreatment system did not have enough flexibility to compensate for this large deviation from the

    design basis for two reasons; the non-regenerative adsorbent beds were saturated within a short amount

    of time and the preheaters were not large enough to achieve proper operating temperatures required forthe new feed composition.

    The standard way to operate with a heavier then expected feed gas is to operate at higher

    temperatures and this was the initial solution to this unexpected situation. The higher temperatureincreases the margin between the gas dew point and the operating temperature. This margin prevents

    condensation on the membrane elements. Due to a lower production requirement, the customer was

    able to sufficiently elevate the feed temperature with the existing preheaters. After 7 years of operation

    using standard pretreatment, the membrane system was retrofitted with a regenerative pretreatmentsystem to shift the phase envelope and allow operational temperatures at or below the initial design.

    Along with the regenerative pretreatment system, new elements were installed and since 2002 the plant

    production exceeds the design production capacity of 210 MMSCFD feed gas.

    Figure 10. Pakistan 1 Design and Actual Phase Envelope

    Pakistan 2

    The UOP membrane system, Pakistan 2, is now the largest land based membrane natural gasplant in the world. It was originally designed to produce 235 MMSCFD of natural gas at 855 psia. The

    E x p e c t e d a n d A c t u a l P h a s e E n v e l o p e s

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    CO2 content is reduced from 6.5 to less than 2%. The unit was designed to also provide gas

    dehydration to pipeline specifications.

    The original Pakistan 2 membrane system was designed in two 50% membrane trains. Eachmembrane train consists of a conventional pretreatment section and a membrane section. The

    pretreatment section has filter coalescers, guard beds, and particle filters. Membrane feed heaters are

    included in this design to maintain stable membrane process conditions.This plant started up in 1995 and has been in operation continuously for 9 years, with the

    majority of the original membrane elements still in operation at the 2003 upgrade. UOP provided on

    site assistance from the loading of the membrane elements through start-up and remained until thecustomer was fully comfortable with the equipment. The plant continues to operate routinely,

    processing all gas available unless limited by pipeline demand.

    The Pakistan 2 system is proof of the ruggedness of UOP membrane systems and cellulose

    acetate membranes. The feed gas contained a significant heavy hydrocarbon content as well aspolynuclear aromatics, which are known to damage other membranes. In spite of these contaminants,

    the unit has been operating at design capacity.

    An upgrade of the Pakistan 2 plant was successfully started up in 2003. The plant capacity was

    increased from 235 MMSCFD to 500 MMSCFD. The Pakistan 2 membrane plant was retrofitted witha chiller system and a regenerative pretreatment system to allow colder operation. The compression

    system was revamped and high performance membrane elements installed in the existing membraneskids. The result was an expansion of the plant that more than doubled the capacity of the plant

    without the requirement of additional recycle compressors and only 30% additional membrane area.

    Based on the success of these existing installations, UOP has continued to win new larger scalemembrane units. Recently UOP was awarded two major membrane installations that treat 650-700

    MMSCFD of natural gas each. Both of these plants will use a regenerative pretreatment system to

    protect the membrane elements. The new customers agreed that the regenerative pretreatment systemdesigned by UOP will provide the best possible protection for the membrane system.

    Membrane Life

    Depending upon operating conditions and composition of the feed gas, actual plant operations show amembrane element life and membrane replacement rates that are exceeding past expectations and

    customer OPEX forecasts. Several units have shown membrane element life to exceed 4-6 years with

    some elements still in continuous operation after 11 years. Experience confirms that there is asignificant difference in replacement element rate between plants treating a light feed gas and plants

    treating a heavy feed gas. In systems treating a heavy gas, the installation of a regenerative

    pretreatment system decreases the yearly membrane element replacement costs.

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    Figure 11. Pretreatment Impact on Element Replacement Rate

    The graph in Figure 11 plots the relative rate of membrane element replacements versus the

    quality of the feed gas. The data points on the graph represent the relative membrane replacementrates for some of the units represented in this paper. Light feed gas quality is defined as feed gas

    containing trace components larger then C4 and/or CO2 concentrations of approximately 6-10%.

    Heavy feed gas quality is defined as feed gas containing ppm levels of C15+ components and/or CO2concentrations of 40-80%. The graph shows an increasing economic benefit for installing regenerative

    pretreatment as the feed gas quality increases in CO2 and heavy hydrocarbon concentration. Systems

    with very light feed gas compositions may realize little economic gain from installing regenerativepretreatment and typically regenerative pretreatment would not be proposed. On the other hand,typical enhanced oil recovery systems with heavy hydrocarbons and high CO2 concentrations realize

    tremendous economic benefit from regenerative pretreatment.

    The Michigan plant has been successfully operating continuously for 11 years. The feed gas tothe plant is a coal seam gas which contains very little heavy hydrocarbons. Little or no liquid

    hydrocarbons are produced from this plant. The activated carbon traditional pretreatment system has

    provided adequate protection against contaminants and the membrane life has exceeded the forecastedreplacement schedule.

    The Mexico plant has been successfully operating for 7 years. The feed gas originates from an

    enhanced oil recovery operation and the feed is saturated with heavy hydrocarbons. The system is

    installed with regenerable pretreatment to protect the membrane elements. A portion of the elementswere replaced over a four year period and the plant still continues to meet expected performance with

    part of the original membrane elements still in operation. The heavy feed gas composition in enhanced

    oil recovery requires a regenerable pretreatment system to ensure membrane element longevity.The Pakistan 1 plant has been operating for 9 years. During the first 7 years the plant operated

    with a heavy feed composition using standard pretreatment with a yearly membrane replacement

    higher than average because the feed gas was significantly heavier then the initial design. After 7

    0.0

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    Light Heavy

    Feed Gas Quality

    RelativeMe

    mbrane

    Replaceme

    ntRate

    Traditional Pretreatment

    Regenerative Pretreatment

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    years, the plant was retrofitted with regenerable pretreatment and membrane element replacement for

    this plant is now similar to that expected in a light feed gas plant with traditional pretreatment.

    The Pakistan 2 plant has also been operating for 9 years with a heavy feed composition.

    During the first 8 years the plant operated successfully with a heavy feed composition using standardpretreatment and experienced a low membrane replacement rate. After 8 years, the plant was

    revamped with regenerable pretreatment to increase the plant capacity from 235 MMSCFD to 500

    MMSCFD. Since the startup of the revamp in 2003, no membrane elements have been replaced.

    Conclusions

    UOP has presented an example of operating plants that performed well using traditional

    pretreatment and this performance is measured by the low quantity of replacement elements for the

    plant. Also presented is an example of an enhanced oil recovery (EOR) operation using regenerativepretreatment. The EOR operation contained high CO2 concentrations and heavy hydrocarbons. This

    plant has been successfully operating for 7 years and the performance is measured by the reasonable

    quantity of replacement element used in this severe service.

    The Pakistan 1 example confirmed the improvement of replacement element rates wheninstalling a regenerative pretreatment system. This plant encountered a heavier than expected feed

    composition when using traditional pretreatment and experienced a moderately high membraneelement replacement rate. During the first 7 years the plant met performance by changing elements at

    a replacement rate consistent with being challenged by a heavy feed gas. After the installation of a

    regenerative pretreatment system the replacement element rate improved to levels typical of a light fedgas plant.

    The Pakistan 2 example presented a creative example of using regenerative pretreatment to

    revamp an existing plant. At the Pakistan 2 plant, the regenerative pretreatment benefits includedincreased capacity without additional compression horsepower and improved replacement element

    rates. Although this plant operated with heavy hydrocarbons and polynuclear aromatics using standard

    pretreatment for 8 years the customer found the benefits of a regenerative pretreatment systemwarranted the additional capital investment. The revamped plant has been operating since 2003 and is

    expected to achieve element replacement rates typical of a light feed gas plant.

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