Feedback Search Site Map
Air Products Products Customer Support Technology About Us Investor Info Corporate Responsibility Career Opportunities Press Room APDirect
Welcome 
 
Technical papers/patents 
Technology Equipment 
Photo Gallery 
Contacts 
Gasification Home 
 
Air Products Home 
Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. -- Gas-To-LiquidGas-To-Liquid
Gas-To-Liquid
Gas-To-Liquid contact ussearchsite map
 

Look to Air Products for Gasification

 

In the face of rising oil, natural gas and electricity costs, gasification becomes an increasingly attractive option for providing affordable, clean energy. Whether you require syngas to produce chemicals, fuels, electricity, hydrogen or steam, Air Products can help.

With more than 30 years of experience in supplying oxygen for gasification applications, Air Products has the technical expertise necessary to integrate oxygen plants into such gasification and partial oxidation processes as Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC), polygen, Gas-to-Liquids (GTL) and Coal-to-Liquids (CTL), and our engineers have published extensively in this area. In addition to our skills in process integrated and related controls strategies, we can help customers evaluate design options to determine costs and benefits.

 

Experience

Air Products has an impressive and proven record in designing, constructing, and operating air separation units (ASU's) to supply oxygen for major oil and coal gasification, chemical and other projects worldwide. We are able to comply with local specifications and design codes and use our own specifications in the design and procurement of equipment for a reliable air separation facility.

Currently we are completing the construction of a 7,000 metric ton per day oxygen facility for a customer in Ras Laffan, Qatar. When operational, the project will be the biggest and most technically advanced gas-to-liquids plant in the world. The project will use approximately 330 million cubic feet per day of lean methane rich gas from Qatar's North Gas Field as feedstock to produce 34,000 barrels per day of liquids (24,000 b/d of diesel, 9,000 b/d of naphtha and 1,000 b/d of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG).

A recently completed single train 2,800 metric ton per day oxygen plant is in operation in Trinidad, used to convert natural gas into methanol. A smaller 1,613 metric ton per day oxygen plant is under construction in Chile for another methanol facility. A selected list of major gasification related oxygen plants supplied by Air Products is listed below.

On-stream

Location

O2, MT/D

O2, bar(g)

Trains

Feedstock

End Use

2008

Nigeria

7,000

 

2

Gas

Gas-to-Liquids

2006

Nanjing PRC

1,600

75

1

Coal

MeOH/CO

2005

Qatar

7,000

36

2

Gas

Gas-to-Liquids

2005

Chile

1,613

41

1

Gas

MeOH

2004

Trinidad

2,800

42

1

Gas

MeOH

2000

China

1,370

103

1

Naptha

Fertilizer

1999

Baytown, TX

2,360

76

1

Resid

H2/CO

1998

South Africa

1,900

32

1

Coal

Chemicals

1997

Netherlands

3,175

76

1

Resid

H2/Power

1996

Polk County, FL

1,840

40

1

Coal

IGCC

1996

Houston, TX

Pipeline

 

 

Gas

H2/CO

1994

Netherlands

1,780

33

1

Coal

IGCC

1987

Plaquemine, LA

1,360

45

1

Coal

IGCC

1984

Convent, LA

1,360

79

2

Resid

H2

1983

Kingsport, TN

1,230

86

3

Coal

Chemicals

1979

LaPorte, TX

2,730

86

3

Resid

Syngas

 

Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) Experience

Air Products has supplied three dedicated air separation units (ASU) and an oxygen pipeline supply for various integrated gasification combined cycle facilities ranging from 100 to 250 MW.

On-stream

Location

O2, MT/D

O2, bar(g)

Trains

Feedstock

End Use

1997

Netherlands

3,175

76

1

Resid

H2/Power

1996

Polk County, FL

1,840

40

1

Coal

IGCC

1994

Netherlands

1,780

33

1

Coal

IGCC

1987

Plaquemine, LA

1,360

45

1

Coal

IGCC

The Netherlands plant was the world's first fully integrated air separation facility. The 1,780 metric ton oxygen plant obtains all of its air feed via gas turbine air extraction. The unit operates at an elevated pressure, with residual nitrogen compressed and returned to the combustion turbine. Designing the Netherlands ASU to meet the demanding requirements of a highly integrated application has uniquely prepared Air Products to provide equipment and services to serve the needs of any project.

In addition to our experience at Lousiana, Florida, Netherlands and other projects, Air Products has participated in many design and study efforts worldwide to advance gasification combined cycle facility design. In performing IGCC studies, Air Products has worked with all the major combustion turbine suppliers and most of the leading engineering contractors in this industry. Air Products has provided ASUs for various levels of integration with gas turbine combined cycle facilities, as show below:

  • The standalone or non-integrated option uses a low air feed pressure ASU selected to reject waste nitrogen to the atmosphere.
     
  • The nitrogen integrated design provided for the Florida facility uses an elevated air feed pressure ASU, optimized for a combination of equipment cost and power consumption.
     
  • The full air and nitrogen integrated option is designed around the air supply pressure from the gas turbine's air compressor. At the Netherlands facility, all the air for the ASU is supplied via extraction from the gas turbine and all residual nitrogen is compressed for injection into the turbine
     
  • In addition to the configurations described above there are other possible arrangements such as multiple air compressor trains that supply air to a common air separation train.  Such a configuration can also include air and/or nitrogen integration with gas turbines.

Click here to enlarge image

 

A New Air Separation Technology

A new air separation technology—Ion Transport Membrane Oxygen (ITM) is an enabler for advanced clean power and can reduce the cost of gasification. ITM is based on ceramic membranes that selectively transport oxygen ions when operated at high temperature and is being developed by an Air Products-led team in partnership with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).  Under the influence of an oxygen partial pressure driving force, the ITM oxygen process achieves a high-purity, high flux separation of oxygen from air. By integrating the oxygen-depleted, non-permeate stream with a gas turbine system, the overall process co-produces high-purity oxygen, power, and steam if desired. As a result, the technology is ideally suited for advanced power generation processes that require oxygen as a feedstock for gasification or combustion, making IGCC and oxygen-enriched combustion ideal applications for ITM Oxygen technology.

ITM Oxygen

ITM Oxygen intergrated with a turbine power cycle
produces oxygen, power and/or steam