geooffy
Chemical
- Dec 12, 2007
- 2
Hi, I was wondering if anyone has any experience removing salt from natural gas.
In my situation I'm seeing salt depositing in a compressor downstream of an inlet separator. The inlet separator is quite large for this application so I shouldn't be seeing any free water carrying over.
I also conisdered that the salt might be carrying over as submicron aresols, but the compressor feeds a glycol dehyrator after which there is a sales meter which also regularily plugs up with salt (there isn't anywhere but the inlet gas that this salt could be coming from).
Does anyone think that salt in aresol form could carry right through a dehydrator? Any other ideas on what could be happening here?
Thanks.
In my situation I'm seeing salt depositing in a compressor downstream of an inlet separator. The inlet separator is quite large for this application so I shouldn't be seeing any free water carrying over.
I also conisdered that the salt might be carrying over as submicron aresols, but the compressor feeds a glycol dehyrator after which there is a sales meter which also regularily plugs up with salt (there isn't anywhere but the inlet gas that this salt could be coming from).
Does anyone think that salt in aresol form could carry right through a dehydrator? Any other ideas on what could be happening here?
Thanks.