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Courses/Engineering/Process Piping/Oil and Gas

Introduction to Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG)

Introductory Course (the first in a series of progressively more complex courses on LNG)

Created bySteven Vitale
4.6
(9 reviews)
BeginnerUpdated Dec 21, 2024
Introduction to Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG)

What You'll Learn

check_circleUnderstand the hazards associated with natural gas
check_circleUnderstand the methods of storing LNG
check_circleUnderstand the methods of transporting LNG
check_circleUnderstand the methods of vaporizing LNG
check_circleExplain the characteristics and properties of LNG
check_circleUnderstand some of the safety measures and devices needed to manage an LNG facility

About This Course

This course is the first in a series of Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) courses. It is designed for engineers entering the specialty of LNG or those who want to understand the basics of LNG production, storage, transportation, safety measures, and vaporization.

Learners taking this course are expected to have a basic understanding of thermodynamics and heat transfer (boiling, condensation, pressure-temperature relationships, etc.). The learner will understand the origins of natural gas and the required pre-treatment before natural gas is converted to LNG. The reasons for, and methods of, reducing the concentration of acid gases, mercury, water vapor, and heavy hydrocarbons before liquefaction will be covered.

The course will cover many unique characteristics of LNG. Emphasis will also be given to the need for relief valves and special LNG phenomena, such as Rapid Phase Transformation, LNG spill behavior, LNG storage tank inventory rollover, the effects of nitrogen in LNG, and re-condenser use. The importance of proper design (spring hangers, expansion joints, etc.) and maintenance will be presented. Importantly, the learner will appreciate the need to maintain safe and reliable plant operations through proper training of plant personnel.

The course will also highlight the importance of strictly following procedures, recognizing anomalies, understanding the technologies, and using the Management of Change process. The need for auxiliary and backup auxiliary systems will also be presented.

The course will aim to develop a culture of preemptive thinking, continuous learning, continuous improvement, and ethical behavior to avoid accidents and unreasonable risks. The most important intention of this course is to give the learner the basic technical knowledge, at an introductory level, needed to begin their study on how to continue making the Liquefied Natural Gas industry “Safe and Reliable.”

Your Instructor

Steven Vitale
Steven Vitale
menu_book18 courses
star28 reviews

** Mechanical Engineering and Process Engineering ** Dr. Vitale is a graduate of NYU Tandon School of Engineering (formerly NY Polytechnic University) with a B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering and an M.S. in Civil Engineering. He has been licensed as a P.E. in 6 states and keeps his P.E. licenses active in New York, Pennsylvania, and New Mexico. Dr. Vitale has worked in the natural gas and LNG industry for over 50 years. In 2004 he retired as Vice President and Chief Engineer over Gas Engineering and 28 Production facilities for KeySpan Energy across New York City, Long Island, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire. During his employment with KeySpan, he often taught Thermodynamics, Heat Transfer, Fluid Dynamics, and other energy courses at NY Polytechnic University. From 2004 to the present, Dr. Vitale has focused on consulting for the Gas Industry with a specialty in training the industry’s human resources on how to make safety and reliability their major focus through understanding the technologies. More than half of Dr. Vitale’s consulting has been focused on training Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) Operating personnel on generic and site-specific operations of their plants. Dr. Vitale has generated and delivered training materials for import terminals, export terminals, peak shavers, and portable LNG facilities. His courses have been both open-enrollment and plant-specific. He has trained clients in the U.S., Canada, Mexico, South America, Europe, Mid-East, and China. Dr. Vitale has also provided expert testimony for justifying asset (pipeline and service) replacement programs and new facilities (LNG or pipeline or compressors) for system reinforcements to meet the peak-day demands of the industry’s customers. Dr. Vitale’s passion is to train Gas Operators on their gas systems' safe, reliable, and efficient operation and develop a continuous learning culture.

Credit Information

Do these courses count toward my professional development requirements?

This portal is provided as a training and development resource for City of Markham employees. Every course is delivered by a qualified subject matter expert or learning organization, is quantifiable in hours, and is verifiable — you receive a documented certificate of completion for every course you finish, stored on LearnFormula indefinitely.

If you hold a professional designation (for example in engineering, accounting, human resources, or law), courses may be counted as professionally relevant, verifiable learning activities toward your continuing professional development. Individual practitioners are responsible for confirming that an activity meets the requirements of their professional body. For questions about the City of Markham's training and development policies, please speak with your people leader or Human Resources.

What Students Are Saying

4.6
Student's Choice
9 reviews

Frequently Asked Questions

We are a registered provider with 327+ associations and regulatory bodies worldwide. We operate across 29 global markets including Canada, the US, Australia, and the UK. Every course page clearly displays its specific accreditations. Upon completion, you receive a professional certificate that can be validated online. Our certificates include all necessary accreditation details, credit hours, and completion dates, and are formatted specifically to meet the submission requirements of most global regulatory bodies.