ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES Natural Gas Sweeting Rev1.1web
ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES Natural Gas Sweeting Rev1.1web
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KLM Technology
Group Rev: 01
Co Author:
KLM Technology Group Kolmetz Handbook
P. O. Box 281
Bandar Johor Bahru,
Of Process Equipment Design Rev 01 Aprilia Jaya
80000 Johor Bahru,
Johor, West Malaysia
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems Editor / Author :
Selection, Sizing and
Karl Kolmetz
Troubleshooting
TABLE OF CONTENT
INTRODUCTION 4
Scope 4
DEFINITION 17
NOMENCLATURE 22
Absorber Design 24
Regenerator Design 31
Reclaimer Design 44
Filter Design 48
Corrosion Control 52
APPLICATION
Application 1: Calculated Heat Duty, Area, and Power Requirements for MEA 55
Application 2: Calculated Heat Duty, Area, and Power Requirements for DEA 57
Application 3: Calculated Acid Gas Absorbed, Rich/Lean Load, and Bulge Temperature 59
REFEREENCE 63
CALCULATION SPREADSHEET 64
LIST OF TABLE
Table 1: the relation number actual trays with H2S partial pressure 25
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 3 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
LIST OF FIGURE
Figure 7: Reclaimer 47
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 4 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
INTRODUCTION
Scope
This guideline provides how to design a gas sweetening system especially when utilizing
alkanolamines. This design guideline can assist engineers in understanding the basic
design of a gas sweetening system including suitable sizing of equipment, material
selection and suitable amine selection. This guideline also includes the engineering
calculations for sizing of the gas sweetening systems.
The choice of amine and equipment design is crucial to give the best performance of a
gas sweetening system. The performance of gas sweetening system is influenced by the
choice amine used to treat the acid gas and all the equipment used in the system, such
as absorber, regenerator, and reboiler. This guideline will assist in calculating the size,
heat duty, area, and power requirements of the various pieces of equipment. Additionally
acid gas absorbed, circulation and bulge temperature will be calculated.
The design of gas sweetening system may be influenced by factors, including process
requirements, economics and safety. There are tables that assist in making these
factored calculations from the various referenced sources. All the important parameters
use in the guideline are explained in the definition section which help the reader more
understand the meanings of the parameters or the terms utilized.
The theory section explains the correct selection of equipment which is used in gas
sweetening systems, how to calculate equipment sizing, and selection of the best amine
solution for each application. The application of the gas sweetening system theory with
the examples will assist the engineer to understand the concepts of gas sweetening and
then be prepared to perform the actual design of the gas sweetening.
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 5 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
In some hydrocarbon processing plants acid gas such as Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) and
carbon dioxide (CO2) are present in the gas streams. They can also be organic sulfur in
the form of carbonyl sulfide (COS). The streams can be natural and associated gases
such as propane and butane, and products from upgrading of heavy oils, bitumen or coal.
1. Monoethanolamine (MEA)
2. Diethanolamine (DEA)
3. DIglycolamine (DGA)
4. Di-isopropanolamine (DIPA)
5. Methyl diethanolamine (MDEA)
6. Triethanolamine (TEA)
7. Glycol plus amine solution.
MEA and DGA react with H2S, CO2 and COS directly. DEA and DIPA react with H2S, CO2
and some COS directly. While MDEA and TEA are reacted with H2S directly, CO2
indirectly and a little COS. The following factors should be considered for evaluation and
decision making as a general approach to all sour gas sweetening treatment installations:
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 6 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
4. Temperature and pressure at which the sour gas is available and at which the
sweetened gas should be delivered;
5. Volume of the gas to be treated;
6. Hydrocarbon composition of sour gas;
7. Selectivity required for acid gas removal;
8. Capital cost and operating cost;
9. Liquid product specifications (where application).
A. Monoethanolamine (MEA)
MEA is the strongest base of alkanolamines and reacts most rapidly with acid gasses,
and this is why MEA is the first choice in gas sweetening system. MEA have 1.7 times
more capacity for acid gases on a weight basis than DEA or DGA. Therefore a lower
amine solution circulating rate can be used when amine treating with MEA compared to
treating with DEA or DGA. MEA has a good thermal stability, can easily be reclaimed
from contaminated solutions, good COS removal and less expensive than DEA and DGA.
There some things that should be considered when using MEA:
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 7 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
6. The heat of reaction for CO2 in MEA is about 1930 kJ/kg of CO2 (460 kcal/kg of
CO2).
B. Diethanolamine (DEA)
DEA is a secondary alkanolamine, it has a reduced affinity for H2S and CO2. DEA has
very low vaporization losses and good stability in the presence of CO2, COS and CS2.
Degradation reaction with CO2, COS, and CS2 proceed at a much slower rate and the
products are non corrosive, thus reclaiming is not need to control the level of DEA
degradation products.
DEA is not selected when the absorber feed stream contains high levels of strong acid
(chlorides, SO2, SO3, thiocyanic acids), organic acids (formic, acetic, nepthanic acids),
CO, oxygen and cyanides. Because they are react with DEA to form heat stable salts
(HSS) which are stable at regenerator conditions. HSS can cause loss of DEA, solution
foaming and localized corrosion. DEA is seldom chosen for application where reclaiming
will be needed to control the buildup of HSS due to DEA’s low volatility need a high
vacuum reclaimer to avoid excessive reclaiming temperature. There some things that
should be considered when using DEA:
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 8 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
9. The heat of reaction for DEA and CO2 is 151 kJ/kg of CO2 (360 kcal/kg of CO2)
which is about 22% less than for MEA.
C. Diglycolamine (DGA)
DGA is a primer alkanolamine, it has much high molar concentration that can be used in
solution without excessive DGA losses due to degradation and without excessive
corrosion rates. This allows more acid gases to be absorbed per gallon solution in lower
solution circulation rates (cost saving and investment savings). DGA has a very low
freezing point which is good for cold climates. Also provides partial dehydration of the
stream being treated. DGA has good thermal stability, can be reclaimed from
contaminated solutions, and good COS removal. DGA is better mercaptan removal due to
of high concentrations of DGA in solution which increases the solubility for higher
molecular weight mercaptans in the DGA solution.
The advantages of DGA are its high solubility of gaseous and liquid carbon especially in
C5+ hydrocarbons. It will result in higher hydrocarbon losses in the vapor from the rich
solution hydrocarbon flash/skimming drum and in regenerator overhead acid gas stream.
Higher hydrocarbon levels in the DGA regenerator overhead acid gas increase the risk of
operating problems in the downstream sulfur recovery unit. There some things that should
be considered when using DGA:
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 9 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
The following factors should be considered when selecting an amine for a sweetening
application as outlined here in under:
1. The pressure and acid gas content of the sour gas as well as the purity specification
for the product gas.
2. MEA is used for plants where the inlet gas pressure is low and Pipeline Specification
gas or total removals of the acid gases are required. MEA is not preferred for its high
heat of reaction and lower acid gas carrying capacity per unit volume of solution.
3. DEA is used for its lower heats of reaction, higher acid gas carrying capacity and
resultant lower energy requirements. Its potential for selective H2S removal from
streams containing CO2 has not fully been realized.
4. DGA has very high gas carrying capacity usually produces very reasonable net
energy requirements although has high heat of reaction. DGA also has a good
potential for absorbing COS and some mercaptans from gas and liquid streams, and
because of this, DGA has been used in both natural and refinery gas applications.
5. MDEA, with its some outstanding capabilities, resulting from its low heat of reaction,
can be used in pressure swing plants for bulk acid gas removal. MDEA is currently
best known for its ability to preferentially absorb H2S.
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 10 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
Typically flow scheme for gas sweeting system is shown in figure 2. The hydrocarbon or
H2 rich stream to be treated is fed into the bottom of absorber tower (scrubber) and is
passed upward through the packed or trayed absorber, counter current to the amine
solution to insure intimate contacting. The amine solution absorbs H2S, CO2, and acid
gas. The treated carbon stream which has a low acid gas content (sweet) flows overhead
from the top of the absorber tower.
The solution leaving the bottom of the absorber tower has a high loading H2S and CO2
(rich solution) is sent to hydrocarbon flash/skimming drum, which also provides rich
solution surge capacity then preheated in an exchanger and fed to the low pressure
regenerator near the top of tower. Reboiler adds heats to the bottom of the regenerator
causing part of the solution vaporizes thereby providing an upward flow of striping vapors
in the regenerator tower, and then condense partly in the regenerator to supply heats for
the endothermic acid gas desorption reactions and for heating the solution to regenerator
bottom temperature.
Water vapor and acid gases striped from the rich solution flow overhead from the top of
the regenerator tower and are cooled to condense a major portion of the water vapor.
This condensate is collected and continually recycled back to the system to prevent water
loss from the system and thereby maintain unit water balance. It is refluxed back to the
top of regenerator, above the rich solution feed location, to remove traces of alkanolamine
vapor from the overhead stream leaving the top of the tower.
The hot solution leaving the bottom of the regenerator tower has low loading H2S and
CO2 (lean). After partial cooling by heat exchange with the rich solution, lean solution is
cooled by heat exchange with cooling water or air and then pumped to the top of the
absorber tower to complete the solution circuit. Many operating problem can be avoid if
surge volume and filtering are provided for the lean solution and lean solution is fed to
each absorber under flow control. With MEA and DGA, a slipstream of mine solution from
the regenerator bottom is usually fed to a reclaimer purification but if using DEA, the
reclaimer are seldom used.
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 11 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
Sweet
product Overhead
condenser
Acid gas to
Overhead
disposal
KO drum
Lean Overhead
solution KO drum
Regenerator
tower
Knockout Condensed
Hydrocarbon
purge
Reflux pump
Absorber Condensate
Tower purge
Rich/lean
exchanger
Lean filter
Skimmed
hydrocarbon
liquid Lean Lean
pump surge/Storage
tank
Figure 2: Process flow scheme of gas sweetening
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 12 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
Good performance of a gas sweetening systems requires proper choice and control of
process operating conditions. Bellows are variables which affect for gas sweetening
systems:
1. Type of alkanolamine
2. Alkanolamine concentration in solution
Excessive alkanolamine have negative effects which place a practical limit on solution
strength, requires the use of more stainless steel materials, temperature rise in the
absorber due to exothermic heat of the absorption reactions thereby rich end pinch
can occur in the absorber. Also causing higher lean solution loadings and higher acid
gas levels in the absorber overhead product or higher steam requirements for the
regenerator reboiler.
3. Rich solution acid gas loading or solution circulation rate
Increasing the rich solution loading will permit less solution to be circulated, the
solubility of hydrocarbon in the rich amine solution leaving the bottom of the absorber
decreases. Therefore, it is desirable to use as high a rich solution loading as is
feasible. The acid gas loading in the rich solution should be limited because these
factors:
The acid gas equilibrium vapor pressure or concentration over the rich solution
must be sufficiently lower than actual inlet partial pressure to continue the
absorption process.
A higher solution rate will provide a lower bulge temperature. At the bulge
temperature, the equilibrium vapor pressure or concentration of acid gases over
the down-flowing solution reaches its highest value. If the bulge temperature is too
high, no absorption can take place at all point of the tower.
Higher loadings tend to cause higher rates of corrosion.
Too low a solution rate can result in blowing in trayed towers or poor liquid
distribution in packed towers.
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 13 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 14 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
results in lower acid gas concentrations in the overhead product thus improve acid gas
removal by the amine solution. For liquid hydrocarbon treating, the absorber operating
pressure must be sufficiently high to prevent hydrocarbon vaporization in the
absorber, including at the bulge temperature.
9. Regenerator temperature
Regenerator is desirable to operate at the lowest practical temperature to minimize
alkanolamine decomposition and corrosion. The regenerator reboiler must be design
to ensure that metal temperatures in the reboiler do not exceed 300oF and that local
hot spots do not occur in the tube bundle. The regenerator tower bottom temperature
must be sufficiently high to boil the amine solution, at the regenerator bottom
pressure, to generate stripping steam flow up the tower.
10. Regenerator pressure
The regenerator is operate at a pressure as low as practical to minimize the
temperature in the tower thereby reduce corrosion and alkanolamine degradation.
Also lower acid gas partial pressure favors desorption of the acid gases from amine
solution and reduce the MEA and DGA reclaiming temperatures. Higher regenerator
pressure increase the regenerator bottom temperatures resulting in easier solution
regeneration. A typical design regenerator operating pressure is 10 – 15 psig at the
tower top.
11. Regenerator reboiler heat duty
The regenerator reboiler heat duty should be minimize to reduce costs and grassroots
units. Regenerator reboiler heat duties typically equivalent ponds of 60 psig saturated
steam (905 Btu/lb) per gallon circulating amine solution. The reboiler heat duty includes:
1) the sensible heat required to raise the temperatures of the rich amine feed, the reflux,
and the makeup water to the temperature of the reboiler, 2) the heat of reaction to break
chemical bonds between the acid gas molecules and the amine, and 3) the heat of
vaporization of water to produce a stripping vapor of steam.
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 15 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
Reducing the solution circulation rate reduces the reboiler duty by maximizing the acid
gas absorbed per volume of rich solution.
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 16 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 17 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
1. The amine is subject to vaporization and other losses that can be expensive
replenish.
2. Like any hydrogen sulphide removal plant, the amine process is subject to
expensive corrosion problems. A well designed amine plant will have less
corrosion than a poorly designed plant, but nevertheless, will have some corrosion.
3. Amine will remove carbon dioxide that might better be left in the gas.
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 18 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
DEFINITIONS
Acid gases - Impurities in a gas stream usually consisting of CO2, H2S, COS, RSH and
SO2. Most common in natural gas are CO2, H2S and COS.
Acid gas loading - The amount of acid gas, on a molar or volumetric basis, which will be
picked up by a solvent.
Alkanolamine - Organic amine which contains at least one alcohol group and one amine
group, e.g. MEA, DEA DGA.
Anti Foam - Surface active agents used to suppress foaming of a solution. Usually used
in small concentrations ( typically 10 wppm or less ).
Blowing - Condition in a tower in which a fine dispersion or fog of liquid is entrained from
one tray to tray above. It is caused by excessive vapor velocities through tray openings at
relatively low liquid rates. Blowing causes poor vapor/liquid contacting which reduces
tower efficiency.
Bubble Point - Temperature (for a given pressure) or pressure (or a given temperature)
at which the first bubble of vapor appears from a liquid.
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 19 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
Degradation products - Impurities in a treating solution which are formed both reversible
and irreversible side reactions.
Dew Point - For agiven pressure, temperature at which the first drop of condensate forms
from vapor.
Foaming - Condition in which amine solution froth is formed and does not collapse.
Usually caused by contaminants, such as heavy hydrocarbons, in solution. Foaming
decreases tower throughput capacity or efficiency.
Heat of Reaction - Heat released by reactions during absorption of acid gases amine
solution or heat required by reactions during desorption of acid gases from amine
solution.
Heat Stable Salts (HSS) - Salts of alkanolamine are not regenerable, i.e. do not
decompose in the regenerator. HSS are formed by reaction of alkanolamines with acids
stronger than H2S or CO2, such as SO2, SO3, chlorides, thiosulfates, ferrocyanates,
thiocyanic, acids etc.
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 20 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
Knockout ( K.O ) Drum - Drum for disengaging entrained liquid droplets from a stream of
a different phase, usually a gas stream.
Lean End Pinch - Condition in the top of an absorber where the actual vapor pressure (
or concentration ) of acid gas over lean amine solution is very close to the equilibrium
partial pressure ( or concentration ) of acid gas in the absorber overhead product, thus
limiting absorption of additional acid gas into the amine solution.
Lean Solution - Regenerated amine solution, i.e. regenerator bottoms, which has low
acid gas concentrations.
Lean Solution Cooler - Exchanger used to cool lean amine solution from the rich/lean
exchanger before the lean solution is fed to top of the absorber tower.
Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) - Any material having a vapor pressure not exceeding
that allowed for commercial propane composed predominantly of the following
hydrocarbons, either by themselves or as a mixtures: propane, propylene, butane (normal
butane or isobutane) and butylene, as a by-product in petroleum refining or natural
gasoline manufacture.
Minimum Heat Duty or Steam Rate/Requirement - Reboiler heat duty or steam rate
sufficient to satisfy regenerator tower heat balance plus a small excess necessary for
regenerator control.
Organic Acid - Carboxylic acid, with molecular formula RCOOH where R is a hydrogen
atom or alkyl group, e.g. formic, acetic, oxalic or naphthenic acid.
Overhead - Stream exiting from top of a vessel, usually a tower or knockout drum.
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 21 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
Overhead Condensate - Water, saturated with H2S and CO2, which is condensed out of
regenerator overhead vapors by cooling. Recycle of this condensate helps maintain water
material balance in the amine treating unit.
Packing - Inert solids with high surface area/volume used to improve contacting of amine
solution with another phase in a tower.
Pinch - Condition in atower where there is close approach to equilibrium, i.e. there is a
small difference between the actual vapor pressure ( or concentration ) of acid gas over
amine solution and the equilibrium acid gas partial pressure ( or concentration ) over
amine solution.
Reboiler - Heat exchanger ( usually kettle type ) which takes amine solution from bottom
of regenerator and boils it to supply vapors for acid gas stripping from and heating of the
amine solution. Vapors from reboiler return to bottom of regenerator and liquid from
reboiler is lean solution. Steam usually supplies energy to reboiler.
Reclaimer - Vessel for separating alkanolamine from degradation products, heat stable
salts, and solids by batch distillation. Alkanilamine and water distilled from the reclaimer
are returned to the amine treating unit.
Reflux Ratio - Molar ratio of condensed water to acid gas vapors leaving the regenerator
over head condenser.
Rich End Pinch - Condition in the absorber bottom where the actual acid gas partial
pressure ( or concentration ) above rich amine solution is very close ( or equal ) to the
equilibrium acid gas partial pressure ( or concentration ) in the feed to the absorber, thus
limiting absorption of more acid gas into amine solution.
Rich/Lean Exchanger - Heat exchanger which utilizes heat from hot lean amine solution,
leaving the regenerator reboiler, to preheat rich solution feed to the regenerator.
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 22 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
Rich Solution - Amine solution which has passed through the absorber, i.e. absorber
bottoms, and has high concentration of acid gas.
Sour gas - Any gas stream which containing acid gas components H2S and/or NH3, e.g.
absorber feed,regenerator overhead condensate, wash water etc.
Steam Ratio - Ratio of regenerator reboiler steam rate to circulating lean solution rate.
The reboiler steam rate is frequently converted to the equivalent rate of 60psig saturated
steam ( 905 Btu/Lb ).
Stripping Steam - Steam, due to amine solution vaporization in the reboiler, entering the
regenerator bottom from the reboiler. Sripping steam rate is set by the reboiler steam
rate.
Surge/Storage Drum or Tank - Vessel which provides amine solution holdup capacity
for the amine treating unit.
Sweet gas - A gas stream which has acid gas components removed to an acceptable
level
Weeping - Condition in a tower in which liquid continuously leaks through tray openings
to the tray below. It is caused by vapor velocities through tray opening which are too low
to support the liquid level on the tray. Excessive weeping reduces vapor/liquid contacting
and therefore tower efficiency.
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 23 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
NOMENCLATURES
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.
Page 24 of 66
Kolmetz Handbook
KLM Technology Of Process Equipment Design
Group
Rev: 01
Natural Gas Sweetening Systems
Practical Engineering Selection, Sizing
Guidelines for Processing Plant
Solutions and Troubleshooting
March 2012
www.klmtechgroup.com (ENGINEERING DESIGN GUIDELINES)
Greek Letters
Superscript
A Area, ft2
H Heat Duty, Btu/hr
L Load, mol/mol
T Temperature, oF
These design guideline are believed to be as accurate as possible, but are very general and not for specific design
cases. They were designed for engineers to do preliminary designs and process specification sheets. The final
design must always be guaranteed for the service selected by the manufacturing vendor, but these guidelines will
greatly reduce the amount of up front engineering hours that are required to develop the final design. The guidelines
are a training tool for young engineers or a resource for engineers with experience.
This document is entrusted to the recipient personally, but the copyright remains with us. It must not be copied,
reproduced or in any way communicated or made accessible to third parties without our written consent.