atiaran:
To add any help, experience or recommendations we have to have some basic data:
1) What is the composition of you gas stream? Is it saturated with water?
2) What is the gas stream's temperature (& pressure)?
3) State the TYPE of MeOH ppm you mean. As a chemical engineer you know this is not obvious since it can be on a volume or a mass basis. Without knowing this specifically, nothing can be discussed on a serious level.
4) What is your scope basis? i.e., it it to economically recover the MeOH? Or is it to remove the MeOh for subsequent "clean" emission of the gas to the atmosphere?
All the above are essential in order to evaluate what can be done. Presumably you are presently considering adsorption (using Activated Carbon?) as a viable candidate solution. Cooling-condensing such a large gas stream (especially at low pressure) can be exorbitant - although this is not enough reason yet to discard it.
Is this an academic engineering problem or a real life application?
Art Montemayor
Spring, TX