The
difference between dry and wet gas:
-
- Dew Point
wet or dry- is based on
the operating temperature corresponding to its dew point. Some reference state
when operating temperature 10F higher than the dew point temperature, it is
considered as dry gas.To be conservative , the operating temp. should be
the minimum operating temp. possible.
Dry
gas --------> Min. operating temp. - dew point = at least 10F
The
difference can be in % or 30-40F higher than the dew point. The
more the margin the safer it is to make sure there is no
condensation.
The reasoning
behind it that the operating temperature shall high enough to prevent
condensation due to pressure drop along the pipeline.
- BTU
The
difference is the amount of water vapor it hold and consequently the amount of
BTU produce.
Dry
Gas is defined as being less than 1050 BTU
West
Gas - 1050 BTU to 1350 BTU Super Rich - greater than 1350 BTU.
The
super rich will contain more condensate and high API oil. The wet gas,
typically more LNG's.
- HC content
When
natural has a high methane concentration, the gas is considered dry.
When
natural gas contains ethane, butane, pentane or natural gasoline, collectively
referred to as natural gas liquids (NGL) or condensates, the gas is considered
wet.
Wet
gas: This usually refers to unprocessed gas. Basically as it comes from the
well. Even after it has gone through the gathering stations process (removing
BS&W) it is still considered "wet" due to the H2O content it
still has. Not all gas that comes from the well is "wet". There are
places that produce very dry gas.
Dry
gas: The finished, ready for sales gas (mostly methane) at the end of the
process.
- Usage
NGLs
are currently more valuable than natural gas and typically follow oil prices.
Wet gas ia more valuable than dry or sales gas. Sales gas is used for home
heating.
To
extract the NGLS, the wet natural gas is transported through pipeline to a
processing plant. At the plant, the liquids are first extracted from the
natural gas and then separated into their base components. The remaining
portion of the gas after the methane (used for such things as home heating) has
been separated out. There can be a number of different products here, such as;
ethane, propane, gasolines, butanes, iso-butanes, etc... They will be processed
further.
The
boiling points for the different products in the stream are different and to
separate out the product you are looking for you must reach the temperatures
that give you both liquids and gas (that's how they separate....then the gas
goes out the top of a vessel and the liquids fall to the bottom). In order to
reach the temperature necessary to keep the methane in gaseous state while
putting the others into a liquid state you are reaching temperatures of roughly
-140 degrees Fahrenheit. Were there to be water or CO2 in the stream you would
freeze up your process. Potential catastrophic damage to equipment and
piping.
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