Process Equipment

Gas Expander Calculations

Calculate gas expansion work recovery, expansion ratios, temperature drop, power generation from pressure letdown, and integration with compression systems for NGL recovery and cryogenic plants.

Typical efficiency

80-85%

Isentropic efficiency for turboexpanders in NGL recovery plants.

Temperature drop

~70-120°F per stage

Expansion from 800-1000 psia to 200-400 psia produces significant cooling.

Power recovery

500-5000 HP

Typical turboexpander sizes for gas processing applications.

Use this guide when you need to:

  • Calculate power recovered from gas expansion.
  • Determine outlet temperature after expansion.
  • Size turboexpanders for NGL recovery.
  • Integrate expanders with compression.

1. Overview & Applications

Gas expanders recover energy from high-pressure gas by expanding it through a turbine, producing shaft work while simultaneously cooling the gas. This process is fundamental to natural gas liquids (NGL) recovery and cryogenic gas processing.

NGL recovery

Turboexpander plants

Expand high-pressure gas to low temperature for ethane+ recovery (70-95% recovery).

Pressure letdown

Energy recovery

Recover work from pipeline pressure reduction instead of throttling (JT valve).

LNG plants

Refrigeration cycle

Expanders provide refrigeration duty in cascade and mixed refrigerant systems.

Air separation

Cryogenic cooling

Expand air to cryogenic temperatures for nitrogen/oxygen separation.

Expander vs. Joule-Thomson (JT) Valve

Parameter Turboexpander JT Valve (Throttling)
Process type Isentropic expansion (ideal) Isenthalpic expansion
Work recovery Yes - shaft power output No - energy lost as heat
Temperature drop Larger (70-120°F per stage) Smaller (30-50°F typical)
Efficiency 80-85% isentropic 0% (irreversible process)
Capital cost High ($2-5M typical) Low ($50-100k)
NGL recovery 70-95% ethane+ 40-60% ethane+
Maintenance Moderate (rotating equipment) Low (no moving parts)
Side-by-side schematic comparing turboexpander with radial turbine wheel and shaft power output versus JT throttling valve with no work recovery, showing different temperature drops
Turboexpander recovers shaft work and produces larger temperature drop compared to isenthalpic JT valve throttling.

Key Concepts

  • Isentropic expansion: Ideal expansion at constant entropy; actual expansion less efficient due to friction and heat transfer
  • Expansion ratio: Ratio of inlet to outlet pressure (P₁/P₂); typical range 2:1 to 4:1 per stage
  • Isentropic efficiency (η): Ratio of actual work to ideal isentropic work; 80-85% typical for turboexpanders
  • Expander brake: Device to absorb expander power - typically drives compressor, generator, or oil brake
  • Choke limit: Maximum flow through expander at sonic velocity; sets minimum downstream pressure
Economic justification: Turboexpanders justify capital cost when: (1) sufficient pressure drop available (>500 psi), (2) high gas flow rate (>10 MMscfd), (3) high NGL content (>3 GPM ethane+), or (4) power recovery value exceeds capital and maintenance costs. Payback typically 2-5 years.

2. Work Recovery Calculations

Gas expansion through a turboexpander recovers shaft work by extracting energy as the gas pressure decreases. The work recovered depends on inlet conditions, expansion ratio, gas properties, and expander efficiency.

Ideal Isentropic Work

Isentropic Expansion Work: W_ideal = (ṁ × R × T₁ × Z_avg) / (MW × (k-1)) × [1 - (P₂/P₁)^((k-1)/k)] Where: W_ideal = Ideal shaft work (HP or kW) ṁ = Mass flow rate (lb/hr or kg/hr) R = Universal gas constant (1545 ft-lb/lbmol·°R or 8314 J/kmol·K) T₁ = Inlet temperature (°R or K) Z_avg = Average compressibility factor MW = Molecular weight (lb/lbmol or kg/kmol) k = Specific heat ratio (Cp/Cv) P₂/P₁ = Pressure ratio (outlet/inlet) Convert to horsepower: HP_ideal = W_ideal / 33,000 (if W in ft-lb/min) Or using flow rate in ACFM: HP_ideal = (Q₁ × P₁ × k) / (229 × (k-1)) × [(P₂/P₁)^((k-1)/k) - 1] Where Q₁ = Inlet volumetric flow (ACFM)

Actual Work with Efficiency

Actual Expander Work: W_actual = W_ideal × η Where: η = Isentropic efficiency (0.75-0.85 typical) For turboexpanders: η = 0.80-0.85 (well-designed, high flow) η = 0.75-0.80 (smaller units, lower flow) η = 0.70-0.75 (older designs) Efficiency affects both work and temperature: T₂_actual = T₁ - η × (T₁ - T₂_ideal) Where: T₂_actual = Actual outlet temperature T₂_ideal = Ideal isentropic outlet temperature

Polytropic Expansion Work

Polytropic Process (GPSA Method): W_poly = (n/(n-1)) × Z_avg × R × T₁ × [1 - (P₂/P₁)^((n-1)/n)] / MW Where: n = Polytropic exponent For EXPANSION (per GPSA Eq. 13-10): n = k / [1 - ((k-1)/k) × (1 - η_poly)] Note: This differs from compression where: n_compression = k / [1 + ((k-1)/k) × (1/η_poly - 1)] Polytropic efficiency for turboexpanders: η_poly = 0.82-0.88 (well-designed units) η_poly = 0.78-0.82 (smaller units) Relationship between efficiencies: η_isentropic ≈ η_poly × [(k-1)/k] / [(n-1)/n] Polytropic efficiency is typically higher than isentropic for expanders.
Temperature-entropy diagram showing isentropic, polytropic, and isenthalpic expansion paths from high pressure inlet to low pressure outlet with work output area shaded
T-s diagram: Actual polytropic expansion falls between ideal isentropic path and wasteful isenthalpic (JT) throttling.

Power Generation Options

Brake Type Application Efficiency Capital Cost
Compressor (direct drive) Recompression, refrigeration 95-98% Low (integrated)
Electric generator Power export to grid 92-95% Moderate
Oil brake Dissipate excess power 0% (heat only) Low
Variable speed drive Load matching 90-94% High

Example Calculation 1: Turboexpander Work

Calculate power recovered from gas expansion in NGL plant:

Given: Inlet flow: 40 MMscfd (0°F, 14.7 psia base) Inlet conditions: 850 psia, 80°F Outlet pressure: 300 psia Gas MW: 19.5 lb/lbmol k = 1.25, Z_avg = 0.92 Isentropic efficiency: 82% Step 1: Convert flow to mass rate T_std = 460°R, P_std = 14.7 psia ṁ = (40 × 10^6 scfd × MW) / (379.5 scf/lbmol) ṁ = (40 × 10^6 × 19.5) / 379.5 ṁ = 2,056,917 lb/day = 85,705 lb/hr Step 2: Inlet absolute temperature T₁ = 80 + 460 = 540°R Step 3: Pressure ratio r = P₂/P₁ = 300/850 = 0.353 Step 4: Calculate ideal work W_ideal = (85,705 × 1545 × 540 × 0.92) / (19.5 × 0.25) × [1 - 0.353^0.20] W_ideal = (85,705 × 1545 × 540 × 0.92) / 4.875 × [1 - 0.768] W_ideal = 1.324×10^10 / 4.875 × 0.232 W_ideal = 6.29×10^8 ft-lb/hr Step 5: Convert to horsepower HP_ideal = 6.29×10^8 / (33,000 × 60) HP_ideal = 318 HP Step 6: Apply efficiency HP_actual = 318 × 0.82 HP_actual = 261 HP Converted to kW: 261 HP × 0.746 kW/HP = 195 kW

Specific Work per Unit Flow

Work per Standard Volume: w = HP / Q_std Where: w = Specific work (HP/MMscfd) Q_std = Standard volumetric flow rate Typical values for turboexpanders: - 800→300 psia: ~6-8 HP/MMscfd - 1000→400 psia: ~7-9 HP/MMscfd - 1200→500 psia: ~8-10 HP/MMscfd Higher pressure drop → higher specific work Richer gas (higher MW) → higher specific work
Practical sizing: Turboexpanders sized for maximum expected flow rate with turndown capability to 50-60% of design. Below turndown limit, bypass or recycle required. Oversizing by 10-15% provides operational margin. Typical commercial sizes: 500 HP, 1000 HP, 2000 HP, 5000 HP.

3. Expansion Ratio & Pressure Calculations

Expansion ratio selection balances temperature drop (for NGL recovery), work recovery, and mechanical constraints. Multi-stage expansion may be required for very high pressure drops.

Single-Stage Expansion Limits

Maximum Practical Expansion Ratio: r_max = P₁ / P₂ ≤ 4:1 to 5:1 per stage Limitations: 1. Mechanical stress on wheel (tip speed limits) 2. Temperature drop per stage (metallurgy) 3. Choke flow limit (sonic velocity) 4. Surge/efficiency considerations Typical operating ranges: Conservative: 2.5:1 to 3:1 Standard: 3:1 to 4:1 Aggressive: 4:1 to 4.5:1 For r > 5:1, use two stages in series
Performance chart showing turboexpander isentropic efficiency peaking at 85% in the 2.5-4.0 expansion ratio range, with secondary axis showing temperature drop increasing with ratio
Turboexpander performance: Efficiency peaks at moderate ratios (2.5-4:1); higher ratios require multi-stage expansion.

Multi-Stage Expansion

Two-Stage Expander System: Overall ratio: r_total = P₁ / P₃ Stage ratios (equal work split): r₁ = r₂ = √(r_total) Example: P₁ = 1200 psia, P₃ = 200 psia r_total = 1200/200 = 6:1 Two stages: r₁ = r₂ = √6 = 2.45:1 P₂ = 1200 / 2.45 = 490 psia Interstage pressure: P₂ = √(P₁ × P₃) P₂ = √(1200 × 200) P₂ = 490 psia Interstage reheating often used to: - Increase work output - Prevent hydrate formation - Optimize NGL recovery

Pressure Drop Components

Component Typical ΔP Impact
Inlet piping 5-10 psi Reduces available P₁
Inlet valve/nozzle 10-20 psi Throttling loss
Expander wheel Major pressure drop Work extraction
Outlet diffuser 5-10 psi Velocity recovery
Outlet piping 5-10 psi Flow resistance

Choke Flow Considerations

Critical Pressure Ratio (Choking): r_critical = (2/(k+1))^(k/(k-1)) For k = 1.25: r_critical = (2/2.25)^5 = 0.565 This means: P₂_min = P₁ × 0.565 Below this pressure ratio, flow becomes choked (sonic) and further pressure reduction does not increase flow. Example: P₁ = 800 psia P₂_min = 800 × 0.565 = 452 psia Cannot expand below 452 psia in single stage without choking Choking implications: - Limits expansion ratio - Fixes mass flow rate - Requires oversized outlet piping - May require two-stage expansion

Inlet Pressure Requirements

  • Minimum inlet pressure: Typically 400-500 psia for economic turboexpander operation
  • Optimal inlet pressure: 800-1200 psia for single-stage NGL recovery
  • High pressure systems: >1200 psia may require two-stage expansion
  • Pressure stability: ±5% variation acceptable; larger swings require control system
  • Turndown capability: Most expanders operate 50-100% of design flow; below 50% requires bypass

Example Calculation 2: Stage Pressure Selection

Design two-stage expander for high-pressure letdown:

Given: Inlet: 1500 psia, 100°F Final outlet: 250 psia Flow: 60 MMscfd Target: Equal work per stage Step 1: Overall ratio r_total = 1500 / 250 = 6:1 Step 2: Check single-stage feasibility r_total = 6:1 exceeds 4:1 limit → Two stages required Step 3: Equal ratio per stage r₁ = r₂ = √6 = 2.45:1 Step 4: Interstage pressure P₂ = P₁ / r₁ = 1500 / 2.45 = 612 psia Or: P₂ = √(P₁ × P₃) = √(1500 × 250) = 612 psia ✓ Step 5: Verify each stage Stage 1: 1500 → 612 psia (r = 2.45) Stage 2: 612 → 250 psia (r = 2.45) Both stages within 2.5:1 limit ✓ Step 6: Interstage reheating If T after Stage 1 = -20°F Reheat to 60°F before Stage 2 → Increases Stage 2 work by ~15% → Prevents hydrate formation

4. Temperature Drop Prediction

Gas temperature decreases during expansion due to work extraction. Accurate temperature prediction is critical for NGL recovery optimization, hydrate prevention, and metallurgy selection.

Ideal Isentropic Temperature

Isentropic Temperature Drop: T₂_ideal = T₁ × (P₂/P₁)^((k-1)/k) Where: T₂_ideal = Ideal outlet temperature (°R or K) T₁ = Inlet temperature (°R or K) P₂/P₁ = Pressure ratio k = Specific heat ratio (Cp/Cv) Temperature drop: ΔT_ideal = T₁ - T₂_ideal ΔT_ideal = T₁ × [1 - (P₂/P₁)^((k-1)/k)] For k = 1.27 (natural gas): (k-1)/k = 0.27/1.27 = 0.213

Actual Temperature with Efficiency

Actual Expander Outlet Temperature: T₂_actual = T₁ - η × (T₁ - T₂_ideal) Or: ΔT_actual = η × ΔT_ideal Where: η = Isentropic efficiency (0.80-0.85) Lower efficiency → less temperature drop because less work extracted from gas Alternative form: T₂_actual = T₁ - η × T₁ × [1 - (P₂/P₁)^((k-1)/k)]

Temperature Drop Examples

Inlet P/T Outlet P Ratio Ideal ΔT Actual ΔT (η=0.82)
800 psia, 80°F 300 psia 2.67:1 118°F 97°F
1000 psia, 90°F 350 psia 2.86:1 125°F 103°F
1200 psia, 100°F 400 psia 3.0:1 130°F 107°F
1500 psia, 100°F 500 psia 3.0:1 130°F 107°F
600 psia, 70°F 250 psia 2.4:1 103°F 84°F

Assumes k = 1.27, isentropic efficiency = 82%

Hydrate Formation Concerns

Hydrate Temperature Prediction: Gas hydrates form when: 1. Free water present 2. Temperature below hydrate point 3. Pressure above ~250 psia (approx) Hydrate temperature (empirical): T_hydrate ≈ 40°F + 0.015 × P Where P = pressure (psia) At 300 psia: T_hydrate ≈ 44.5°F At 500 psia: T_hydrate ≈ 47.5°F At 800 psia: T_hydrate ≈ 52°F Prevention methods: 1. Dehydration upstream (< 7 lb H₂O/MMscf) 2. Methanol injection (500-2000 ppm) 3. Glycol injection (MEG, TEG) 4. Maintain T > T_hydrate + 10°F safety margin Methanol depression: ΔT = K × (wt% MeOH) / (100 - wt% MeOH) K ≈ 2300°F (empirical constant)

Low-Temperature Metallurgy

Material Minimum Temperature Application
Carbon steel (SA-106) -20°F Standard expander casing
3.5% Ni steel -50°F Cold service upgrade
9% Ni steel -100°F Cryogenic applications
Stainless 304/316 -320°F LNG service
Aluminum (5083) -320°F Lightweight cryogenic

Example Calculation 3: Temperature Prediction

Predict outlet temperature and check for hydrate risk:

Given: Inlet: 900 psia, 85°F Outlet: 320 psia k = 1.27, η = 0.83 Gas: 0.6 lb H₂O/MMscf (dry) Step 1: Inlet absolute temperature T₁ = 85 + 460 = 545°R Step 2: Pressure ratio r = P₂/P₁ = 320/900 = 0.356 Step 3: Ideal outlet temperature T₂_ideal = 545 × 0.356^0.213 T₂_ideal = 545 × 0.769 T₂_ideal = 419°R = -41°F Step 4: Actual outlet temperature T₂_actual = 545 - 0.83 × (545 - 419) T₂_actual = 545 - 0.83 × 126 T₂_actual = 545 - 105 T₂_actual = 440°R = -20°F Step 5: Check hydrate temperature T_hydrate = 40 + 0.015 × 320 = 44.8°F Step 6: Evaluate risk T_outlet = -20°F < T_hydrate = 44.8°F ΔT_margin = -20 - 44.8 = -64.8°F BELOW hydrate point Conclusion: HIGH RISK of hydrate formation Step 7: Mitigation required Option 1: Inject methanol (1000 ppm typical) Option 2: Preheat inlet to 120°F Option 3: Increase dehydration to < 4 lb/MMscf With preheat to 120°F: T₁ = 580°R T₂_actual = 475°R = 15°F Still below hydrate point → methanol required
Temperature control: Outlet temperature cannot be independently controlled - it follows thermodynamic relationship with pressure ratio and efficiency. To increase outlet temperature: (1) increase inlet temperature, (2) reduce pressure ratio, or (3) reduce expander efficiency (inefficient but sometimes done via spoilers). Pre-expansion heating common practice.

5. Compression Integration

Turboexpanders are typically integrated with compressors to utilize recovered power and recompress low-pressure gas for sales or further processing. Proper integration optimizes energy efficiency and NGL recovery.

Expander-Compressor Configurations

Common Integration Schemes: 1. Direct-Coupled Configuration: Expander shaft directly drives compressor - Single rotating assembly - No gearbox required - Must match speeds (10,000-15,000 rpm typical) - Power balance: HP_expander ≥ HP_compressor 2. Geared Configuration: Gearbox between expander and compressor - Independent speed optimization - More flexible for different loads - Gearbox efficiency: 98-99% - Higher capital cost 3. Electric Generator/Motor: Expander drives generator, motor drives compressor - Maximum flexibility - Can export excess power - Lower mechanical efficiency (90-93%) - Highest capital cost

Power Balance Calculations

Expander-Compressor Power Matching: HP_compressor = HP_expander × η_mech - HP_losses Where: η_mech = Mechanical transmission efficiency HP_losses = Bearing, seal, auxiliary losses (50-100 HP typical) For direct-coupled: η_mech = 0.97-0.98 (bearing losses only) For geared: η_mech = 0.98-0.99 (gearbox + bearings) If HP_expander > HP_compressor: - Install brake or generator to absorb excess - Or recycle compressor discharge to increase load If HP_expander < HP_compressor: - Install helper motor (electric or turbine) - Or reduce compressor load (lower flow/ratio)

NGL Recovery Plant Configuration

Block flow diagram of turboexpander NGL recovery plant showing inlet separation, dehydration, gas-gas heat exchange, expander-compressor integration, cold separator, demethanizer, and residue gas recompression
Turboexpander NGL plant: Expander power offsets 60-80% of residue gas recompression; cold expansion enables high C2+ recovery.
Typical Turboexpander Plant Layout: 1. Gas Inlet → Separators (remove liquids) 2. Dehydration (TEG or molecular sieve) 3. Heat Exchangers (cool against cold tail gas) 4. Expander Inlet Chiller (optional propane refrigeration) 5. Turboexpander (expand to -20 to -60°F) 6. Cold Separator (remove condensed NGLs) 7. Demethanizer Column (separate C1 from C2+) 8. Side-stream Compressor (recompress residue gas) 9. Residue Gas Cooler (cool before sales) 10. NGL Stabilization (remove volatiles) Expander integration points: - Expander outlet → Demethanizer feed (cold separation) - Compressor suction → Demethanizer overhead (CH₄-rich) - Compressor discharge → Heat exchange → Sales gas Energy integration: - Expander work offsets ~60-80% of compression power - Remaining power from electric motor or gas turbine

Residue Gas Recompression

Parameter Typical Range Notes
Suction pressure 200-400 psia Expander outlet / demethanizer pressure
Discharge pressure 800-1200 psia Sales gas or pipeline spec
Compression ratio 2.5:1 to 4:1 Single or two-stage
Power required 60-120% of expander power Depends on flow split and ratio
Flow rate 70-90% of inlet flow Reduced by NGL extraction

Example Calculation 4: Integrated System

Design expander-compressor system for NGL plant:

Given: Inlet gas: 50 MMscfd, 1000 psia, 90°F Expander outlet: 350 psia NGL recovery: 15% of inlet flow (by volume) Residue gas to sales: 950 psia Step 1: Expander power (from prior calculation) Assume: 7.5 HP/MMscfd for 1000→350 psia HP_expander = 50 MMscfd × 7.5 HP/MMscfd HP_expander = 375 HP With efficiency η = 0.82: HP_actual = 375 × 0.82 = 308 HP Step 2: Residue gas flow NGL extracted = 15% = 7.5 MMscfd equivalent Residue flow = 50 - 7.5 = 42.5 MMscfd Step 3: Compressor suction flow Reduce to actual conditions (350 psia, ~-10°F) Use same calculation approach Q_compressor ≈ 42.5 MMscfd at base conditions Step 4: Compressor power required Ratio: r = 950 / 350 = 2.71:1 Assume: 8.0 HP/MMscfd for this ratio HP_comp = 42.5 × 8.0 = 340 HP With compressor efficiency η = 0.80: HP_required = 340 / 0.80 = 425 HP Step 5: Power balance HP_expander = 308 HP (available) HP_comp_required = 425 HP HP_deficit = 425 - 308 = 117 HP Step 6: Helper motor sizing Mechanical losses ≈ 5% = 21 HP Total helper motor = 117 + 21 = 138 HP Select: 150 HP electric motor Configuration: - Expander provides 308 HP - Helper motor provides 150 HP - Total available: 458 HP - Compressor uses: 425 HP - Margin: 33 HP (7.8%) Alternative: Reduce sales pressure to 900 psia Reduces compression ratio to 2.57:1 HP_comp reduces by ~8% → No helper motor needed

Control and Operability

  • Speed control: Governor maintains expander speed at setpoint (typically 12,000-15,000 rpm)
  • Surge control: Compressor anti-surge valve prevents flow reversal and damage
  • Bypass control: Expander bypass (JT valve) for startup, shutdown, low-flow conditions
  • Temperature control: Inlet heater adjusts for hydrate prevention and NGL recovery optimization
  • Pressure control: Sales gas pressure controller adjusts compressor discharge
  • Load sharing: Multiple expander-compressor trains share load via common discharge header
Design philosophy: Size expander for maximum expected flow. Size compressor for average residue gas flow at design pressure ratio. Provide helper motor for peak loads and startup. Include JT bypass valve for low-flow operation and emergency depressurization. Typical plant uptime: 95-98% with proper design and maintenance.