Condensate Stabilization Unit Sinopec Northeast Bureau -- Longfengshan
Unstabilized Condensate
Condensate produced alongside natural gas at separator and metering stations contains significant quantities of dissolved light hydrocarbons -- methane, ethane, propane, and butane -- that remain in solution at the separator operating pressure and temperature. When this unstabilized condensate is transferred to atmospheric storage tanks or road tankers, the pressure reduction causes these light components to flash to vapour.
The consequences of storing unstabilized condensate are significant:
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Storage Tank Overpressure Light component vapour released in a tank generates internal pressure exceeding design limits. Breather valves cannot vent fast enough, leading to roof damage, seal leaks, or structural failure.
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Road Tanker Safety Loading unstabilized condensate creates a vapour pressure hazard. The Reid Vapor Pressure (RVP) of the liquid can far exceed permitted levels for road transport regulations.
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Product Vapour Losses Light components flashing to vapour represent unrecovered hydrocarbon losses, resulting in significant economic impact over time.
The Engineering Solution
Rectification + Stripping Column Design for Variable Feed Compositions
Why Full Distillation?
Unlike a simpler flash cascade (which uses pressure reductions and loses C3/C4 to overhead vapour), a full distillation design achieves low RVP specifications required for road transport while efficiently recovering valuable propane and butane back into the liquid product.
Rectifying Section (Above Feed)
Concentrates light components (methane, ethane) in the rising vapour while allowing heavier components (propane, butane, C5+) to be recovered into the liquid phase via reflux wash.
Stripping Section (Below Feed)
Uses heat from the reboiler to generate ascending vapour that strips dissolved light components from descending liquid. Sets the final RVP of the stabilized product.
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Optimised Feed Stage Placement Positioned by rigorous process simulation to handle the specific variable composition range at Longfengshan, minimising reboiler duty across normal operating conditions.
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Reboiler & Overhead System Selected based on available site utilities. Overhead vapour is cooled to return propane-rich reflux, while non-condensed gas routes to the station fuel gas system.
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Cold Climate Design Considerations Built for severe Northeast China winters. Includes heat tracing and insulation on instrument impulse lines, piping freeze protection, and start-up heating provisions for cold starts.
Technical Scope Summary
| Component | Description |
|---|---|
| Condensate stabilization column | Rectifying + stripping design; feed stage optimised for variable feed composition |
| Column internals | Liquid distributors, packing support plates, redistributors, or trays per simulation |
| Reboiler & Condenser | Type per available utility; condenser sized for reflux duty |
| Reflux drum | Horizontal vessel; liquid level control; reflux pump connections |
| Heat Exchangers | Feed preheater to reduce reboiler duty; Product cooler for storage/tanker temp |
| Piping & Instruments | Per P&ID; cold climate insulation/tracing; Temp, pressure, level, flow instruments |
The Significance of the Longfengshan Reference
Related Equipment & Solutions
Unstabilized Condensate. Variable Feed Composition. Cold Climate.
We Have the Reference.
If your project involves condensate stabilization -- whether from a single producing well or multiple sources -- the Longfengshan project is the most directly relevant reference for column design and cold climate provisions. Send us your feed condensate composition and target RVP, and our process engineers will assess your requirements within 1-2 business days.