Which Processes in Geothermal Power Plants Require Process Gas Analyzers?

Which Processes in Geothermal Power Plants Require Process Gas Analyzers?

Picture of Sharon Ye
Sharon Ye

Technical Sales - Energy & Environment

Content

Geothermal energy is a clean and reliable renewable resource — but geothermal fluids rarely contain pure steam. Most reservoirs release a mixture of steam, brine, and naturally occurring gases called non-condensable gases (NCGs). These gases cannot be ignored. A process gas analyzer enables operators to detect real-time changes in gas concentration across the entire production cycle, supporting safer plant operation, regulatory compliance, and more stable power generation.

Engineers rely on process gas analyzers at four critical stages:

  1. Wellhead and production monitoring
  2. Steam separation and turbine inlet control
  3. Non-condensable gas (NCG) removal systems
  4. Environmental emission monitoring

Each monitoring point serves a different operational purpose. Together, they form a complete gas management strategy across all three geothermal plant types — dry steam, flash steam, and binary cycle.

The wellhead is where geothermal fluids first reach the surface, carrying dissolved gases from the reservoir. Monitoring here provides the earliest possible warning of hazardous conditions, corrosion risks, and reservoir changes — before the fluid enters any plant equipment.

As the fluid travels upward, pressure decreases, part of the liquid flashes into steam, and dissolved gases separate into the vapor stream. A gas analyzer installed at this point reveals gas-to-steam ratios and reservoir chemistry from the very start of the production cycle.

Key Gases Monitored at the Wellhead

GasRisk / Significance
H₂S (Hydrogen Sulfide)Toxic and highly corrosive; safety hazard even at trace levels
CO₂ (Carbon Dioxide)Dominant NCG in most geothermal fields; drives condenser pressure
CH₄ (Methane)Flammability risk in enclosed or confined areas
O₂ (Oxygen)Signals air ingress or system leakage; not naturally present in reservoirs

Operational Benefits of Wellhead Gas Monitoring

  • Characterizes reservoir chemistry and long-term gas distribution trends
  • Detects early shifts in well productivity or reservoir pressure
  • Identifies corrosion and safety hazards before fluid reaches downstream equipment
  • Provides the first control point in the entire geothermal gas management chain

How Does a Process Gas Analyzer Support Steam Separation and Turbine Inlet Control?

High NCG content in steam entering the turbine increases back-pressure and directly reduces electricity output. Continuous monitoring at the steam separator outlet and turbine inlet ensures steam quality stays within design specifications.

After separation, steam travels to the turbine. Any non-condensable gases carried in the steam raise turbine back-pressure, weakening expansion efficiency and lowering power generation from the same steam volume. Gas analyzers at this stage allow operators to adjust separator conditions before performance degrades.

NCGs do not condense inside the condenser. They accumulate, raise condenser pressure, and degrade the turbine vacuum — directly cutting plant power output.

How NCGs Harm Condenser Performance

After steam exits the turbine, it enters the condenser and cools back into water. NCGs, however, remain in gas form and accumulate inside the condenser. As gas concentration builds, condenser pressure rises, weakening the vacuum required for efficient turbine expansion. Higher back-pressure means less electricity from the same steam flow.

NCG Gas Removal Systems Used in Geothermal Plants

Geothermal facilities use dedicated gas removal systems to maintain proper vacuum conditions:

  • Steam jet ejectors — the most common choice for low gas-content fields; use high-velocity steam to draw NCGs from the condenser
  • Hybrid ejector-compressor systems — combine steam ejectors with mechanical vacuum pumps for improved efficiency at moderate gas loads
  • Mechanical compressors — used in high gas-fraction fields; directly extract and compress the gas stream before discharge

What the Analyzer Measures in the NCG Removal Unit

A process gas analyzer continuously measures CO₂ and H₂S concentrations in the extracted gas stream. This data helps operators:

  • Evaluate gas extraction efficiency in real time
  • Adjust ejector pressure or compressor load when gas concentration rises unexpectedly
  • Maintain stable condenser vacuum for peak turbine performance

The result is three measurable outcomes: stronger condenser vacuum, more stable ejector operation, and higher overall plant efficiency.

Although geothermal plants burn no fuel, they release naturally occurring reservoir gases — primarily H₂S and CO₂ — into the atmosphere. Regulations in most countries require continuous emission measurement and reporting at designated discharge points.

What Makes HS the Primary Emission Concern

Hydrogen sulfide is the main environmental concern in geothermal facilities due to its strong odor and toxicity even at low concentrations. Many plants install dedicated abatement systems to capture or convert H₂S before any release. Modern treatment technologies can eliminate more than 99% of H₂S when properly monitored and controlled.

Key Emission Monitoring Locations

Monitoring PointWhat Is Measured
Cooling tower ventsTrace H₂S releases during condensation
Gas abatement system inlet and outletTreatment efficiency verification
Exhaust stacks and vent pointsCO₂, CO, and O₂ before atmospheric release

Continuous monitoring at each discharge point keeps the plant within permitted emission limits and maintains operating licenses.

A sudden or unexpected shift in gas concentration is one of the earliest indicators of:

  • Reservoir pressure changes or declining well productivity
  • Air ingress or system leaks
  • Scaling or blockage in production pipelines
  • NCG removal system underperformance

Early detection reduces unplanned downtime and prevents cascading equipment failures across the plant.

Monitoring LocationPrimary Purpose
WellheadReservoir characterization, early safety screening
Steam separator outletSteam quality verification before the turbine
Turbine inlet pipelineBack-pressure control and efficiency protection
Condenser NCG removal unitVacuum optimization and ejector/compressor control
Emission stacks and ventsRegulatory compliance and permit maintenance

Conclusion

Managing non-condensable gases is one of the most critical operational challenges in geothermal power generation. From the wellhead to the emission stack, process gas analyzers provide the real-time visibility needed to protect turbine performance, maintain condenser vacuum, and meet environmental obligations.

If you are evaluating monitoring solutions for a geothermal facility, EaseGas offers reliable process gas analyzers built for harsh industrial environments — covering CO₂, H₂S, CH₄, and O₂ measurement across every stage of geothermal production. Selecting the right analyzer technology is just as important as choosing the right monitoring location. Different measurement principles perform better under different process conditions.

What gases are typically present in geothermal power plants? 
Geothermal fluids commonly carry NCGs including CO₂, H₂S, CH₄, and N₂. These gases originate from underground formations and travel with steam through the plant.

Why are process gas analyzers important in geothermal power plants? 
They provide real-time gas analyzers data that helps operators protect equipment, maintain turbine efficiency, and meet safety and environmental standards. Without monitoring, gas buildup silently reduces output and accelerates corrosion.

Why must non-condensable gases be removed from geothermal systems? 
NCGs accumulate in the condenser, raise internal pressure, and weaken the turbine vacuum. This directly reduces power output from the same steam volume.

How does gas monitoring improve turbine performance? 
By ensuring stable, low-NCG steam quality at the turbine inlet, monitoring reduces back-pressure, improves expansion efficiency, and increases electricity generation per unit of steam consumed.

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