Moisture Measurement Innovation at Work
Integrating nanotechnology into moisture
measurement
|
![]() |
|
|
The Best Choice
for Measuring Moisture in Natural Gas
PhyMetrix Explosion Proof Moisture Analyzer ExMa
and
PhyMetrix Portable Moisture Analyzer PPMa
View a PDF file of this Application Note
REASONS FOR MEASURING THE MOISTURE CONTENT IN NATURAL GAS
1. Natural Gas must often be dried before it can be distributed to its
end users. The drying is necessary to prevent hydrate formation and liquid water
deposition in the pipelines and/or condensation in the compressors; all of which
would either cause damage or poor performance of the equipment. This drying is
often accomplished by dehydration utilizing Tri-ethylene Glycol (TEG)
contactors, which are very effective but introduce a TEG residue carryover into
the Natural Gas. The drying process has a high cost associated with it,
therefore it is important to dry the gas but not spend excessive resources to
over dry it. Thus it becomes important to perform moisture content measurements
on the Natural Gas after it has passed thought the dehydration equipment. Not
dry enough and there may be failures – while too dry and there is a waste of
resources.
2. When Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) is “re-gassed” for pipeline
transmission/distribution, it is passed through heat exchangers which are prone
to leakage thus can introduce unwanted moisture into the very dry gas. Therefore
it is important to monitor the moisture content after the heat exchangers for
leak detection and quality control.
3. The custody transfer of Natural Gas often requires monitoring of the moisture
content of the gas as a quality control.
4. The gas must be sufficiently dry as not to form ice, after cooling from
pressure drops.
CHALLENGES IN MEASURING THE MOISTURE CONTENT IN NATURAL GAS
Natural Gas is mostly Methane; however contaminants are almost always present in
one form or another. The contaminants which are most widely encountered are
Glycol (TEG), Ethanol, Natural Gas Liquids (NGL), H2S, a variety of
particulates as well as other contaminants depending on the gas source. The gas
can be at pressures of 700 psig to 1,400 psig. These operating conditions are
taxing on the typical moisture analyzer, in most cases requiring complex
cleaning procedures such as elaborate rinse/wash procedures, detested by
maintenance crews but needed to keep the typical sensor running reliably.
H2S vapor combined with water becomes a corrosive acid; unlikely at
low moisture levels. Natural Gas is typically dried to 7 pounds of water per
million standard cubic feet (LBS/MMSCF), this water vapor density corresponds to
approximately -40°F dewpoint or 143PPMv of moisture content. Even though this is
not a very high moisture level, it is not what would be considered very dry;
therefore it is expected that some corrosives will form and thus have an effect
on the equipment being used for measuring.
The presence of TEG carryover can cause interference for two major reasons:
1. slowing down the measurement because of its highly
hygroscopic nature
2. shorting the sensor because of its electrical conductivity
(0.002mhos/cm @ 20°C for pure TEG, and significantly higher in the presence of
ionic contaminants).
The use of TEG filters actually makes the measurement even slower because the
filters buildup much more TEG than the sensing devices would have without any
filtration. Since the gas being measured passes through the filters, it
equilibrates with the TEG and slows down the measurement.
To understand the importance of the effect of TEG’s electrical conductivity in
moisture measuring apparatus, one needs to look at the construction of the
moisture sensors. All of the moisture sensors that use the impedance method of
measurement e.g. aluminum oxide, ceramic, polymer etc. have a moisture dependant
capacitor. In all models from all manufacturers except PhyMetrix, both contacts
of the capacitor plates are exposed to the gas under measurement. Normally this
does not present a problem as the gasses being measured are insulators at the
low excitation voltages that are used to measure the capacitance of the sensor.
However when the sensor is coated with a TEG film which is electrically
conductive, the currents conducted through the TEG film (from one plate of the
sensor capacitor to the other plate) cause the measuring electronics to misread
the sensor measurement. PhyMetrix has designed its sensor construction such that
only one of the capacitor plates are exposed to the gas under measurement (the
other plate is completely isolated), thus a coating from an electrically
conductive film does not effect the measurement. This is a unique feature
present only in the PhyMetrix sensor design. A similar problem is encountered
when there is mercury vapor in the gas being measured, where it forms a
conductive film and shorts out the sensors of all other manufacturer’s, while
the PhyMetrix sensor is not effected by any kind of conductive coating.
The presence of particulates may cause abrasive harm to the measuring equipment,
thus there should be a particulate filter to remove them.
Of course the desirability of Natural Gas is its energy content, however this
property also poses an incendiary hazard; thus the measuring equipment must be
certified by appropriate agencies for use in hazardous areas.
THE BEST CHOICE FOR MEASURING IN NATURAL GAS MOISTURE CONTENT
The PhyMetrix Nanotechnology based moisture sensor combined with the unique
PhyMetrix instrument design and the Sampling Systems provide a much needed
solution for Moisture Measurement in the Natural Gas industry.
The NanoTechnology Sensor: The PhyMetrix moisture
analyzers utilize a proprietary Nanotechnology based metal oxide sensor. The
NanoPore structure allows for a quick response on wetting-up and drying-down,
high accuracy and reproducibility. Nanoscience by its very nature allows us to
bring change in the critical properties of materials and thus add a new
dimension to their applications. Consequently, our technology allows accurate,
reproducible and quick measurements in the range of -110°C dewpoint to +20°C
dewpoint.
The Operating Pressure: The PhyMetrix instruments
are designed for a wide variety of applications including gas pipelines (and
specifically for methane), and high operating pressures up to 5,000 psig.
NATURAL GAS MOISTURE SAMPLING SYSTEM:
The PhyMetrix Sampling System consists of:
● An inlet shutoff valve for convenience and
safety while servicing.
● A particulate / coalescing filter equipped
with a drain valve and flow meter allowing a small flow through the drain to
eliminate any possibility of liquid carryover.
● A pressure regulator and indicator, for
lowering the sample pressure to near atmospheric.
● A heat exchanger to compensate for
Joule-Thomson cooling effects.
● A pressure relief valve for safety.
● PhyMetrix ExMa
Explosion proof Moisture Analyzer with built-in sample cell.
● A metering valve and flow meter for flow
control of the gas being measured.
● An explosion proof junction box for
electrical connections.
● An environmentally sealed overall enclosure.
The PhyMetrix Sample System is designed to perform the measurement close to
atmospheric pressure by regulating down the sample gas. This decreases the
likelihood of liquid contaminants (they are vaporized) as well as it reduces the
concentration of water vapor and of H2S thus the likelihood of
corrosives forming is also reduced and sensor life is prolonged.
Due to the unique design of the PhyMetrix sensor, Glycol filtration is not
needed. The absence of a Glycol filter facilitates faster measurements.
HIGH RELIABILITY SAMPLING SYSTEM – AUTO VALIDATION / CALIBRATION
PhyMetrix offers a high reliability sampling system which utilizes a NIST
traceable certified gas to validate / calibrate the analyzer, unattended in the
field. The sampling system facilitates a programmable periodic switchover of the
measurement to a NIST traceable certified bottle of Nitrogen. The analyzer can
then either validate its measurement and report unacceptable drift, or can
recalibrate the sensor and continue operating. The gas can be chosen to have a
moisture content of approximately 7 LBS/MMSCF thus assuring a NIST traceable
measurement near that value. A single bottle of NIST traceable certified
Nitrogen costs less than $500 and will last more than 1 year.
PORTABLE MOISTURE ANALYZER FOR NATURAL GAS
A portable moisture analyzer, such as the handheld model
PPMa can be used to spot check measurements and determine if the on-line
analyzer measurements are in agreement with the portable, which can be
periodically sent to a lab for comparison to a NIST traceable chilled mirror
standard. The Portable analyzer exposes its sensor to the Natural Gas under
measurement for a very short time (few minutes) thus contamination is minimal,
in addition the sensor is stored in a desiccant chamber where the desiccant
absorbs any of the contaminants that were accumulated on the surface of the
sensor.
PHYMETRIX ADVANTAGES
The PhyMetrix product line is ideal for the moisture measurement needs in
Natural Gas combining the on-line (ExMa) and
hand-held (PPMa) analyzers with a Natural Gas
specific Sampling System (PSS-CH4) to result
in:
● High Accuracy over a wide
measuring range -110°C to +20°C dewpoint
● Speed of Response
● Eliminating unpleasant time
consuming cleaning procedures
● Saving valuable service
technician time
● Low Cost of Ownership
● Extremely Easy to Operate, with
intuitive graphical user interface
● Resistant to Contaminants common
in field measurements e.g. Glycol, Ethanol, NGL, H2S
● Superior Reliability
● Hazardous area use approvals
● Portable analyzer available for
spot checking:
•
Small, lightweight, rugged, weatherproof
•
Perfect for testing in tight spaces and above ground locations
•
Field analyzer designed for use outdoors
•
On screen graph indicates when measurement is stable
•
Powered by a rechargeable battery
•
Data logging (single point or continuous) with location/operator tags
•
USB interface for transferring logged data to MS-Excel® spreadsheet
● Expert prompt support from
PhyMetrix engineers.
● Training software available for
technicians to practice on the use of the analyzer at their convenience.
Copyright PhyMetrix Inc., © 2008, 2012