Saturate gas plants

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Oil refinery in California. (Source: California Energy Commission)
Chemical Engineering (main)


October 19, 2006, 3:39 pm
October 9, 2011, 10:11 pm
Source: OSHA

Saturate (sat) gas plants in petroleum refining separate refinery gas components including butanes for alkylation, pentanes for gasoline blending, LPG's for fuel, and ethane for petrochemicals. Because sat gas processes depend on the feedstock and product demand, each refinery uses different systems, usually absorption-fractionation or straight fractionation. In absorption-fractionation, gases and liquids from various refinery units are fed to an absorber-deethanizer where C2 and lighter fractions are separated from heavier fractions by lean oil absorption and removed for use as fuel gas or petrochemical feed. The heavier fractions are stripped and sent to a debutanizer, and the lean oil is recycled back to the absorber-deethanizer. C3/C4 is separated from pentanes in the debutanizer, scrubbed to remove hydrogen sulfide, and fed to a splitter where propane and butane are separated. In fractionation sat gas plants, the absorption stage is eliminated.

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Citation

(2011). Saturate gas plants. Retrieved from http://editors.eol.org/eoearth/wiki/Saturate_gas_plants