ENERGY SECURITY

NHÀ MÁY ĐIỆN KHÍ LNG

What is an LNG plant?

The LNG plant makes out the “black box” of LNG production where completely or partially untreated, raw natural gas in a gaseous state comes in, and refined LNG is shipped out. In general, two main processes take place at the plant: the gas treatment process and the liquefaction process. If natural gas is sold in gaseous state, liquefaction facilities are not necessary. This typically applies to areas with access to a pipeline network. However, when gas markets and gas fields are far apart, production costs are sufficiently low, and marine ports where a plant can be built is relatively close to the gas field, conditions facilitate LNG production.

LNG plant sites can be potentially massive in size and make out an expensive part of an LNG project. Production capacity and plant size vary, but key infrastructure in addition to the specific gas treatment and liquefaction equipment include equipment for handling boil-off gas (BOG) like venting, flaring or re-liquefaction, send-out-systems and cryogenic storage tanks. The individual systems are often closely integrated. The plant also requires infrastructure for LNG loading to ships, which in case either a jetty or the jecttyless transfer sýtem can be used.      

LNG plants are most commonly placed onshore, but for offshore gas fields, production, treatment, liquefaction, storage and transportation can take place using floating liquefied natural gas (FLNG) facilities.

How does the pre-liquefaction treatment of natural gas work?

The well stream of plant feed comes in gaseous form by pipe. Natural gas extracted from the ground contains impurities, water and other

associated fluids, so before liquefaction can take place, the gas needs to go through a treatment process to remove undesired substances. The gas goes through a series of vessels, compressors and pipes where gas is stepwise separated from heavier fluids and impurities.

First, water and condensate are removed, followed by removal of acid gas (carbon dioxide, CO2), hydrogen sulfide (HS2) and mercury (Hg). These substances are unwanted, as they may cause ice forming during liquefaction and corrosion in pipelines and LNG heat exchangers. The remaining mix is precooled, and other, heavier, natural gas liquids are then separated from the mix before liquefaction takes place. Removed hydrocarbons can be stored and sold separately. The remaining gas mostly consists of methane and some ethane, which is brought to liquefaction.

How does liquefaction of LNG work?

Transporting compressed gas long distances by pipe can be costly and time consuming, but by cooling natural gas to -162°C, it turns into liquid matter, and its volume decreases by 600 times. This makes it possible to transport the gas by ship, and this process is made possible at the LNG plant. The liquefaction and LNG cooling process are based on thermodynamic refrigeration cycles, and takes place in cryogenic heat exchangers, which absorbs heat from the natural gas. Flash gas and BOG can be used as fuel for turbines used for onsite power generation.

We mainly separate between two main types of liquefaction processes: the classical cascade process where different refrigerants which vaporize at different temperatures are used, and the mixed refrigerant cycle where a continuous, single blend of refrigerants is cooled. Either way, the end product is LNG, which is stored in cryogenic tanks on site before being shipped off.

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