Nitrogen Rejection Units remove nitrogen from natural gas to prepare it for transport through pipelines. According to the Gas Research Institute, 17% of US gas reserves have high nitrogen. Most pipeline standards require that natural gas contain less than 4% nitrogen. High-nitrogen natural gas is essentially stranded, as it cannot feasibly be transported through pipelines to market. If there is too much nitrogen present in a pipeline, there is a danger of vapor lock or poor combustion. Nitrogen also dilutes the heating value of the gas, resulting in a lower BTU and decreased value.
Nitrogen rejection is a difficult technical separation because of the similar molecular size and low dielectric constants of nitrogen (N2) and methane (CH4) and the lack of a selective reactivity such as there is with carbon dioxide or hydrogen sulfide in an amine plant.