EcoBlasting.Com Technology in Action 

Home Contact Info Feedback News Search

Air Facts
 

 

Home
Up

Some Facts about Compressed Air

Compressed air has applications in virtually all industries. Its uses range from being an efficient, reliable source of pneumatic power in manufacturing plants to operating critical instrumentation in process industries. In every application, air quality can be adversely affected by contaminants like water, oil and dirt. The result is lower productivity, increased maintenance, and higher operating costs. For these reasons, air system designers must recognize and understand the types of contaminants they face.

The most prevalent contaminant is water. Water, in the form of vapor, enters the air system at the compressor intake, and is concentrated to the saturation point by compression. As cooling occurs downstream of the compressor, the moisture in this saturated air condenses into harmful liquid water.

Still another contaminant, oil, is injected into air systems by lubricated compressors. Many gallons of oil can enter an air system over the course of a year in this way.

Dirt takes many forms in air systems since it enters from several different sources. Small particles of atmospheric dust not removed by intake filters are concentrated by compression. Pipescale forms over time by the gradual rusting process. Hot-running, lubricated compressors create fine particles of carbon dust when lubricants break down.

Today's air system designer is faced with the challenge of improving air quality through the selection of drying and filtering equipment that is best suited to removing these contaminants. Judgments must be made based on the particular application, the degree of dryness and cleanliness required, and the types of equipment available.

 

  1. How much water is in compressed air?

 

Answer 1: For example, a 25 HP Air Compressor running continuously for 24 hours at full load, with inlet conditions of 75 degrees and 75% relative humidity can generate up to 18 gallons per day. There will be proportionately more or less water depending on the compressor size, inlet conditions and duty cycle.

 

  1. How much water can be removed by drying compressed air?

 

Answer 2: Actually, nearly two-thirds of the water in compressed air (or 12 of 18 gallons in the answer to question one can be removed with an efficient and clean aftercooler. An aftercooler is a heat exchanger located at or downstream of the air compressor which is either cooled by a fan or can be water cooled. By reducing the compressed air temperature every twenty degrees, half of the water vapor is condensed to a liquid and can be removed with a moisture separator and automatic drain trap. Most aftercoolers reduce the temperature to about 100° F.

 

However, this is still not "dry enough" for many uses of compressed air, such as painting, instrumentation, robotics, etc.

 

The next step in drying is to install a refrigerated air dryer. This continues to cool the air to just under 40° F., which reduces the water left to only 5 % of the total (using the example in question one, of the 18 gallons per day total, less than one gallon of water is left). This is adequate drying for 90% of the compressed air systems.

 

If the compressed air lines are not exposed to temperatures below 40° F. then the remaining water will stay in a vapor or gas form and will not condense or liquefy.

 

If there are air lines exposed to freezing temperatures or additional dryness is required due to the critical use of the compressed air, then a desiccant dryer would be required. Desiccant dryers remove over 99% of the water in compressed air and are usually rated with pressure dew points of minus 40 or minus 100° F.

 

A membrane dryer could also be used downstream of a refrigerated dryer for point-of-use/ critical applications.

 

  1. What's the best type of dryer?

 

Answer 3: It depends. A desiccant dryer provides more efficient water removal, but it's also more expensive initially and most require about 15% of the rated inlet capacity (SCFM) for purging, so you lose compressed air.

 

Therefore, the "best" type of dryer in many cases is a refrigerated dryer due to its lower initial and operating cost.

 

Many newer compressed air systems may use a combination of dryers. A refrigerated dryer sized for the air compressor will remove 95% of the water and provide adequate dry air for most plant applications. Additional desiccant or membrane dryers sized for the specific application (i.e. dust collector exposed freezing temperature; CNC plastic molding equipment; food processing application, etc.) can be installed downstream of the refrigerated dryer and prior to where the critical dry air is required.

 

  1. What type of filters are recommended for dryers?

 

Answer 4: We recommend a 5-micron pre-filter for a refrigerated dryer. This removes the larger particles and droplets and helps keep the internal heat exchanger on the dryer cleaner. A high efficiency coalescing filter rated at .01 microns can be placed downstream of the refrigerated dryer for additional cleaning.

 

On a desiccant air dryer we recommend the 5 micron pre-filter followed immediately by the coalescing .01 micron filter. This helps prevent any oil contamination of the desiccant material. A 1 micron particulate filter should be placed downstream of the desiccant dryer to capture any desiccant dust from migrating downstream.

 

A vapor filter which removes oil vapor, odors and taste can be used as a final filter in either case.

 

In all filter selections, the rated pressure drop should be as low as possible (1-3 psi) to ensure longer element life.

 

  1. I have a refrigerated air dryer installed and it had been working fine, but suddenly I'm finding water in my compressed air, what's going on?

 

Answer 5: There could be several explanations for this problem. The most common is the auto drain on the moisture separator of the dryer is fouled up and not working. "Float-type" drain traps require regular maintenance. To help eliminate this problem, we recommend electric solenoid valve drain traps. The new Wilkerson WRD-series dryer has this as a standard. Older or smaller dryers can be retrofitted to use an electric drain trap.

 

Other maintenance-related reasons could be excessive high inlet temperature, high ambient temperature, a dirty condenser, heat exchanger, or a malfunctioning fan motor.

 

The most serious explanation could be a leak in the refrigerant system or a bad refrigeration air compressor.

 

The new Wilkerson WRD-series refrigerated dryers have a visual dew point indicator on its control panel which can forewarn you of a problem before you get water downstream. Also available as an option is a set of dry contacts which will signal a high dew point alarm to a separate horn, light or master building computer. This option can be added later to any WRD dryer.

 


 

 Harmon Distributing wishes to thank Wilkerson Air for the preceding information.

 

More information may be found at:

 

Wilkerson Operations
Pneumatic Division 
v  Richland, Michigan 49083 USA
Phone:  269.629.2550 
Fax:  269.629.2475

 

 

Hit Counter  Harmon Distributing LogoHarmon Distributing

 

Home ] Up ]

Send mail to Webmastr@Eco-Blaster.Com with questions or comments about this web site.
Copyright © 2004 HarmonDistributing@Eco-Blaster.Com
Last modified: 07/07/06