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reliquefaction

Reliquefaction is the process of converting a vapor that has been evaporated back into a liquid, typically by removing latent heat through a refrigeration cycle. In cryogenic engineering, reliquefaction is applied to recover vaporized constituents that accumulate in a closed system, most commonly boil-off gas in liquefied natural gas (LNG) storage and transport. By recondensing the gas, reliquefaction minimizes product losses and methane emissions and helps maintain safe pressure and temperature conditions within containment.

In LNG facilities, boil-off gas is generated by heat input and is directed into a reliquefaction loop.

Technologies employed in reliquefaction include various refrigeration cycles, such as mixed-refrigerant cycles, cascade cycles, and Joule-Thomson

Benefits include reduced methane emissions, improved energy efficiency, and enhanced operational flexibility. Limitations involve energy consumption,

The
gas
is
compressed
and
cooled
in
a
refrigeration
system
and
condensed
back
to
liquid,
which
is
returned
to
the
LNG
product
stream
or
stored.
Reliquefaction
is
also
used
in
other
cryogenic
applications
and
in
gas
processing
plants
to
recover
and
reuse
vented
or
evaporated
components.
expansion
schemes.
These
systems
rely
on
heat
exchangers,
compressors,
and
condensers
to
remove
latent
heat
and
promote
phase
change
from
gas
to
liquid.
The
choice
of
cycle
depends
on
factors
such
as
gas
composition,
required
recovery
rate,
energy
efficiency,
and
integration
with
existing
plant
infrastructure.
capital
and
maintenance
costs,
and
control
complexity,
particularly
in
systems
handling
variable
feed
temperatures
and
pressures.