Intelligent Compressed Air: System Equipment

At the end of Naval Nuclear Power School, students who’ve just spent two years learning how to boil water must pass a comprehensive examination board before they’re released into the fleet as real live “Navy Nucs.” One popular question at these boards (in 1987 anyway) was to describe, in detail, the path a drop of seawater takes to become reactor coolant (a warship at sea must be self-reliant, and that includes making our own pure water.) A correct answer would prove the student’s knowledge of various piping systems, the steam distilling and water purification processes, reactor coolant chemistry maintenance, and, if you were lucky, a deep dive into the Six Factor Formula which mathematically defines the six events* that affect the probability of neutron multiplication, and hence, the sustainability of nuclear fission in the reactor core:

*Two of these six events relate to the thermalization of neutrons by the coolant. That’s why it’s considered to be a valid part of the ‘seawater-to-reactor-coolant’ question.
The block on the left represents a cubic foot of air at atmospheric pressure. The one on the right represents how much space the first one takes up when compressed to 100psig.

In that same vein, for today’s EXAIR blog, I thought I’d trace a Standard Cubic Foot (SCF) of air from the compressor room, through a typical industrial compressed air system, to its point of use. First, let’s define what that is: Imagine a cubic foot of air in front of you. If the atmospheric pressure is 14.5psia (average for sea level elevation), the ambient temperature is 68°F, and relative humidity is 0%, then that’s one Standard Cubic Foot of air. Now, let’s say this air is in an ideal compressor room – ‘ideal’ meaning those atmospheric conditions apply – and follow its path to an EXAIR Super Air Knife:

  • Filter, Part 1 (intake): When the air compressor draws our SCF in, it passes through filtration media to remove impurities like dust, oil, and moisture. It’s important to remember that this filter is there to PROTECT THE COMPRESSOR from those contaminants, not to provide any measure of cleanliness to the compressed air itself.
  • Compression: This is where our SCF gets compressed by reciprocal or rotating elements imparting energy to it, and it now occupies considerably less space than it did in the atmosphere. This also raises the temperature. When all the molecules that comprise our SCF get closer together, they run into each other more often, and that increased friction makes them hotter. Which can be bad, unless we do something about it.
  • After cooler: Hot compressed air can cause unsafe surface temperatures and can damage gaskets, seals, or other components in the downstream system. Cooling our SCF down is the first thing we want to do after compressing it.
  • Filter, Part 2 (discharge): While the Intake Filter takes care of impurities that could have damaged the compressor, the compressor itself can add some back into our SCF – like oil, wear particulate from meshing gears or seals on moving parts, etc. You’ll want to remove those as well, before letting them go any further in the system. Contaminants like that can really do a number on the operation and effectiveness of some types of dryers.
  • Dryer: While the intake filter removes some finite amount of moisture from our SCF before compression, the compression cycle increases the moisture concentration of it. Dryers come in different types and configurations, each with their own pros & cons, and certain types are more suitable for certain situations. Here’s a link to a blog on the subject by Jordan Shouse that’s both informative and entertaining!
  • Primary Storage: Once our SCF gets cooled, cleaned, and dried, it can take a little break if it’s not needed right away, in a receiver tank. Such a tank, like EXAIR’s Model 9500-60 60 Gallon Receiver Tank (right), near the compressor discharge, serves several purposes:
    • It maintains header pressure during any load transients that happen too quickly for the compressor to keep up in real time.
    • It provides further moisture removal, as any water that condenses in this receiver can be drained from a valve on the bottom.
    • It also allows the compressed air to cool further.
  • Distribution Header Piping: This is the “highway,” if you will, that our SCF travels to where it’ll be used. It’s not alone, either – there are sometimes hundreds, if not thousands, of other SCF’s passing through every minute. And if it’s not appropriately sized, there’ll be problems akin to traffic jams on crowded roads. The appropriate size and layout of the header piping will be determined by a number of factors – here’s a link to a blog with more details on that.
  • Airdrops: These are the branches from the distribution header that lead to the various points of use in the facility. Our SCF will take whichever one it gets directed to…in this case, the aforementioned EXAIR Super Air Knife. The proper size of the drop piping or hose will be determined by the compressed air consumption of the load(s) serviced by the drop, and its length from the header. In the case of our EXAIR Super Air Knife that our SCF is heading towards, the recommended in feed pipe sizes are listed in the Installation/Maintenance Guide:
The longer the drop length, the larger the diameter needs to be to compensate for line loss due to friction.
  • Filter, Part 3 (point of use): Good engineering practice calls for point-of-use filtration. Our SCF has already been through two filters, I know, but it’s also potentially picked up some more contamination along the way. Rust from the inside walls of iron pipes is the most common culprit. The EXAIR Super Air Knife that our SCF is heading towards needs its supply to be filtered for particulate to a level of 10 microns or less. EXAIR Automatic Drain Filter Separators have 5-micron particulate elements, and centrifugal elements that ‘spin’ out any remaining moisture. Depending on the needs of the application, we also have Oil Removal Filters with coalescing elements for oil/oil vapor. They also provide additional particulate filtration to 0.03 microns.
  • Regulator: It’s taken a good deal of effort and expense to get our SCF to this point, so it only makes sense to use it as efficiently as possible. A Pressure Regulator allows us to precisely ‘dial in’ the supply pressure so that we don’t use it (or any of the other SCF’s that it’s traveling with) any more than needed.
EXAIR Automatic Drain Filter Separators (left) can be directly coupled to Oil Removal Filters (center) and Pressure Regulators (right) for a compact installation, free from threaded connections.
EXAIR’s award-winning EFC Electronic Flow Control is a ‘plug and play’ system that can save you THOUSANDS of dollars in compressed air costs.
  • Shutoff valve: Years ago, I talked to an engineer at a company that was using one of our Super Air Knives to blow off parts that were passed in front of it by a robot. The robot’s arm turned & rotated the part in the air curtain to ensure it got completely blown off. This only took a couple of seconds, as the operators had ‘tweaked’ the arm movement to do it as quickly as possible. However, there were about 15 seconds between parts…and the Super Air Knife WAS BLOWING THAT WHOLE TIME. Since they’d already told me how great their automation techs were at programming the robot, I suggested that they go one more step and install a Solenoid Valve in the supply line to the Super Air Knife and use the robot’s logic to open it right before the robot got there, and close it right after the robot left. Step Four of our Six Steps To Optimizing Your Compressed Air System is to “turn off the compressed air when it’s not in use,” and by doing so, they reduced the compressed air consumption of this one Super Air Knife by about 80%. THAT’S optimized. If you don’t have existing logic to do this, our EFC Electronic Flow Control will do it for you.
  • The Super Air Knife: At long last, our SCF is ready to fulfill its purpose, and the Super Air Knife will help it do so in the most efficient way possible. It uses that SCF of air, along with all the others that pass through, to entrain a WHOLE BUNCH of SCF’s from the surrounding environment. The amplification ratio for EXAIR Super Air Knives is 40:1, making them the most efficient compressed air-blowing products on the market.
EXAIR Super Air Knives come in lengths from 3″ to 108″, and are available from stock in aluminum, 303SS, 316SS, or PVDF.

It’s been a LONG time since I’ve used the Six Factor Formula for the neutron life cycle in nuclear fission (and honestly, I haven’t missed it all that much), but every day, I use formulas and figures related to:

Just to name a few. If you’d like to “math something out,” (just not the Six Factor Formula, please), give me a call.

Russ Bowman, CCASS

Application Engineer
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Critical Components of Your Compressed Air System

In any manufacturing environment, compressed air is critical to the operation of many processes. You will often hear compressed air referred to as a “4th utility” in a manufacturing environment. The makeup of a compressed air system is usually divided into two primary parts: the supply side and the demand side. The supply side consists of components before and including the pressure/flow controller. The demand side then consists of all the components after the pressure/flow controller.

The first primary component in the system is the air compressor itself. There are two main categories of air compressors: positive-displacement and dynamic. In a positive-displacement type, a given quantity of air is trapped in a compression chamber. The volume of which it occupies is mechanically reduced (squished), causing a corresponding rise in pressure. In a dynamic compressor, velocity energy is imparted to continuously flowing air by a means of impellers rotating at a very high speed. The velocity energy is then converted into pressure energy.

Still on the supply side, but installed after the compressor, are after coolers, and compressed air dryers. An after cooler is designed to cool the air down upon exiting from the compressor. During the compression, heat is generated that carries into the air supply. An after cooler uses a fan to blow ambient air across coils to lower the compressed air temperature.

When air leaves the after cooler, it is typically saturated since atmospheric air contains moisture. In higher temperatures, the air is capable of holding even more moisture. When this air is then cooled, it can no longer contain all of that moisture and is lost as condensation. The temperature at which the moisture can no longer be held is referred to as the dewpoint. Dryers are installed in the system to remove unwanted moisture from the air supply. Types of dryers available include: refrigerant dryers, desiccant dryers, and membrane dryers.

Also downstream of the compressor are filters used to remove particulate, condensate, and lubricant. Desiccant and deliquescent-type dryers require a pre-filter to protect the drying media from contamination that can quickly render it useless. A refrigerant-type dryer may not require a filter before/after, but any processes or components downstream can be impacted by contaminants in the compressed air system.

Moving on to the demand side, we have the distribution system made up of a network of compressed air piping, receiver tanks when necessary, and point of use filters/regulators. Compressed air piping is commonly available as schedule 40 steel pipe, copper pipe, and aluminum pipe. Some composite plastics are available as well, however PVC should NEVER be used for compressed air as some lubricants present in the air can act as a solvent and degrade the pipe over time.

Receiver tanks are installed in the distribution system to provide a source of compressed air close to the point of use, rather than relying on the output of the compressor. The receiver tank acts as a “battery” for the system, storing compressed air energy to be used in periods of peak demand. This helps to maintain a stable compressed air pressure. It improves the overall performance of the system and helps to prevent pressure drop.

Finally, we move on to the point-of-use. While particulate and oil removal filters may be installed at the compressor output, it is still often required to install secondary filtration immediately at the point-of-use to remove any residual debris, particulate, and oil. Receiver tanks and old piping are both notorious for delivering contaminants downstream, after the initial filters.

Regulator and filter

In any application necessitating the use of compressed air, pressure should be controlled to minimize the air consumption at the point of use. Pressure regulators are available to control the air pressure within the system and throttle the appropriate supply of air to any pneumatic device. While one advantage of a pressure regulator is certainly maintaining consistent pressure to your compressed air devices, using them to minimize your pressure can result in dramatic savings to your costs of compressed air. As pressure and flow are directly related, lowering the pressure supplied results in less compressed air usage.

EXAIR manufactures a wide variety of products utilizing this compressed air to help you with your process problems. If you’d like to discuss your compressed air system, or have an application that necessitates an Intelligent Compressed Air Product, give us a call.

Tyler Daniel, CCASS

Application Engineer
E-mail: TylerDaniel@EXAIR.com
Twitter: @EXAIR_TD

Compressor Image courtesy of Tampere Hacklab via Creative Commons License

How to Manage Condensate in Your Compressed Air System

If you operate an air compressor, you’re drawing water vapor into your compressed air system.  Factors like climate control (or lack thereof,) and humidity will dictate how much.  If (or more to the point, when) it condenses, it becomes an issue that must be addressed.  There are several types of dryer systems to choose from, usually when you buy your compressor…we’ve covered those in a number of blogs.  Some of these can leave a little more water vapor than others, but remain popular and effective, when considering the cost, and cost of operation, of the different types.

So, how do you handle the condensate that the dryer doesn’t remove?

  • Receivers, or storage tanks (like EXAIR Model 9500-60, shown to the right,) are commonly used for several reasons:
    • By providing an intermediate storage of compressed air close to the point of use, fluctuations across the system won’t adversely affect an application that needs a constant flow and pressure.
    • This also can keep the air compressor from cycling rapidly, which leads to wear & tear, and additional maintenance headaches.
    • When fitted with a condensate drain (more on those in a minute,) they can serve as a wet receiver.  Condensate collects in the bottom and is manually, or automatically emptied.
  • Condensate drains, while popularly installed on receivers, are oftentimes found throughout larger systems where the vapor is prone to condense (intercoolers, aftercoolers, filters and dryers) and where the condensation can be particularly problematic (drip legs or adjacent to points of use.) There are a couple of options to choose from, each with their own pros & cons:
    • Manual drains are self explanatory: they’re ball valves; cycled periodically by operators.  Pros: cheap & simple.  Cons: easy to blow down too often or for too long, which wastes compressed air.  It’s also just as easy to blow down not often enough, or not long enough, which doesn’t solve the condensate problem.
    • Timer drains are self explanatory too: they cycle when the timer tells them to. Pros: still fairly cheap, and no attention is required.  Cons: they’re going to open periodically (per the timer setting) whether there’s condensate or not.
    • Demand, or “zero loss” drains collect condensate until their reservoir is full, then they discharge the water.  Pros: “zero loss” means just that…they only actuate when condensate is present, and they stop before any compressed air gets out.  Cons: higher purchase price, more moving parts equals potential maintenance concerns.
  • The “last line of defense” (literally) is point-of-use condensate removal.  This is done with products like EXAIR Automatic Drain Filter Separators.  They’re installed close to compressed air operated devices & products, oftentimes just upstream of the pressure regulator and/or flow controls…the particulate filter protects against debris in these devices, and the centrifugal element “spins” any last remaining moisture from the compressed air flow before it gets used.

Good engineering practice calls for point of use filtration and moisture removal, such as that provided by EXAIR Filter Separators.

Efficient and safe use of your compressed air includes maintaining the quality of your compressed air.  If you’d like to find out more about how EXAIR Corporation can help you get the most out of your compressed air system, give me a call.

Russ Bowman
Application Engineer
EXAIR Corporation
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