Skip to main content
Mercury Removal from Natural Gas
Gas Treatment & Drying

Mercury Removal from Natural Gas

Sulphur impregnated activated carbon mercury removal from natural gas, condensate, and refinery streams to protect cryogenic and brazed aluminium equipment from mercury amalgam attack.

The Challenge
Trace mercury in natural gas (typically 1 to 100 µg/Nm³ depending on the reservoir) forms amalgams with aluminium that destroy brazed aluminium plate fin heat exchangers in LNG and ethylene cold boxes. A single point source release can write off a heat exchanger worth tens of millions of dollars.
Quick Answer

Mercury removal from natural gas uses a fixed bed of sulphur impregnated activated carbon to capture elemental and ionic mercury as mercury sulphide. Outlet mercury is reduced below 10 ng/Nm³ to protect cryogenic LNG main heat exchangers, ethylene cold boxes, and brazed aluminium plate fin equipment from amalgam attack.

Mercury Removal from Natural Gas

The Mercury Amalgam Risk to Cold Box Equipment

Trace mercury contamination in natural gas, condensate, and refinery streams is a low concentration, high consequence problem. At typical reservoir levels of 1 to 100 µg/Nm³ the mercury is invisible in the gas; downstream it forms amalgams with aluminium that progressively destroy brazed aluminium plate fin heat exchangers in LNG plants, ethylene cold boxes, and cryogenic air separation units. The SorbiTech mercury guard bed is the standard protection across these duties.

Sulphur Impregnated Activated Carbon Captures Hg as HgS

The bed is a fixed bed of sulphur impregnated pellet activated carbon. Elemental mercury (Hg⁰) physisorbs onto the carbon micropore structure; the impregnated sulphur reacts to form mercury sulphide (HgS), which is held irreversibly through the bed life. Ionic mercury (Hg²⁺) precipitates directly as sulphide on contact. Outlet mercury falls below 10 ng/Nm³, the standard target for LNG and cold box protection.

Mercury Removal from Natural Gas process equipment

Bed Location and Campaign Design

The mercury guard sits downstream of the dehydration bed to prevent water condensation in the guard, which would block the bed and accelerate breakthrough. SorbiTech sizes the bed for the operator contracted campaign, typically 3 to 5 years for sweet natural gas service. The bed is single use; spent media (containing 0.5 to 5 weight percent mercury) is classified as hazardous waste under Basel Convention rules.

Delivery and Hazardous Waste Disposal

Delivered as a complete mercury guard bed package with adsorber vessel, switching valves, and the SorbiTech impregnated carbon charge. The SorbiTech service contract handles the spent media changeout under nitrogen, the hazardous waste manifest, the licensed transport to a thermal mercury recovery facility, and the chain of custody documentation for the operator regulatory reporting. Sector coverage is oil and gas.

Selection Guidance

Sulphur impregnated activated carbon (chemisorption to mercury sulphide) is the reference grade. Bed sized for 3 to 5 year campaign at typical natural gas mercury loads. Single use media, no regeneration. Located downstream of dehydration to prevent water condensation in the guard bed.

A Specified, Verified Solution

Define the duty

We capture your process conditions: flow, composition, pressure, temperature, and the target outlet specification.

Select media & configuration

Our engineers recommend the adsorbent grade and system type that meet the duty with margin.

Size & engineer

Bed sizing, vessel design, and cycle parameters are engineered to your case and documented for approval.

Commission & verify

We support loading, start up, and performance verification against the guarantee.

Specify a Solution for This Application

Provide your process conditions and our team will recommend the grade, configuration, and sizing.