Volume 43, Issue 5 pp. 942-949
Research Article

Effectiveness of Amine Concentration and Circulation Rate in the CO2 Removal Process

Emily C. George

Emily C. George

University of the West Indies, Chemical Engineering Department, St. Augustine Campus, 001 Trinidad, Republic of Trinidad and Tobago

Search for more papers by this author
Carmen Riverol

Corresponding Author

Carmen Riverol

University of the West Indies, Chemical Engineering Department, St. Augustine Campus, 001 Trinidad, Republic of Trinidad and Tobago

Correspondence: Carmen Riverol ([email protected]), Chemical Engineering Department, University of the West Indies, St. Augustine Campus, Trinidad, 001, Republic of Trinidad and Tobago.Search for more papers by this author
First published: 27 January 2020
Citations: 5

Abstract

Optimization of an amine-based method is vital to ensure product quality, equipment safety, and system efficiency. Here, the effectiveness of amine concentration and circulation rate is evaluated for a diglycolamine (DGA)-based facility. The performance is measured using the concentration of carbon dioxide in the treated gas and the net acid gas loading of the amine solution. Both amine concentration and circulation rate were observed to affect the system efficiency. An optimal operating range was identified for the gas plant studied established on the performance criteria. The analysis is based on a proprietary mass transfer-based process simulator of an amine-based acid gas treating facility and field data.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.