Compressor PDF
Compressor PDF
Compressor PDF
Fluid machinery
Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
If any of these items are not taken into account, the end user of
the equipment will be faced with a history of an unreliable process
and will pay dearly in terms of lost product revenue.
The rotating equipment environment Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
Proper design of process conditions, piping and foundations, selection of other components
(drivers, transmission devices and auxiliaries) and proper specification of ambient conditions
all must be considered. If any of these items are not taken into account, the end user of the
equipment will be faced with a history of an unreliable process and will pay dearly
in terms of lost product revenue.
Maximization of profit Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
In order to maximize the profit, a piece of machinery must have:
1. Minimum capital and installation cost
2. Maximum reliability,
3. Maximum product throughput and
4. Minimum operating cost (maximum efficiency).
Reliability does not take into account planned down time. Availability considers planned
downtime (turnarounds, etc.). Availability directly affects the product revenue.
Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
Compressor
Definition Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
Symbol for pump and compressor used in Process Flow Diagram (PFD)
Exemplary PFD:
Taxonomy of compressor Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
The compressor operating point can be defined as the equilibrium between the
required net process system energy (duct, flange, elbow, etc.) and the compressor
produced energy (i.e. head). A system is a set of connected things or parts that
work together. In our case, a set of components (vessels), exchangers, furnaces,
control valves, etc. and pipin work together to produce a resistance to flow at the
compressor flanges.
Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
Depending on the fluid being pumped, low flow operation can result in a
high temperature rise through the pump because the amount of energy
absorbed by the liquid is low compared to that absorbed by friction losses.
Reciprocating compressors Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
How it works?
1. As the piston moves to compress, a constant volume of gas
will be displaced.
2. The discharge pressure developed will be the pressure at the
discharge flange caused by the process pressure and system
resistance.
3. The gas in the cylinder will exit only when the pressure
developed in the cylinder is greater than the pressure at the
compressor discharge flange.
Reciprocating compressors Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
The compression cycle
Check valves keep the fluid flow from reversing. As with all positive displacement
pumps, piston pumps generate a pulsating flow. To minimize the pulsation, multiple
pistons or pulsation-dampening reservoirs are installed. Piston pumps are sized on
the basis of the displacement of the piston and the required flow rate and discharge
pressure. Check valves (or, on critical applications, double check valves) are selected
to protect against backflow.
Screw compressors Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
o improve compressor efficiency, oil is injected into the inlet cavity to aid sealing and to
provide cooling
Lobes Compressor Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
The blower design consists of two figure-eight elements or lobes. These lobes are
geared to drive in opposite directions. Characteristics of lobes blower:
1. Since the rotary lobes need to maintain clearance between each of the lobes a
single stage blower can achieve only limited pressure ratio differential—typically
2.0.
2. However, it is capable of compressing large volumes of gas at efficiencies up to
70%. Therefore, lobes blower is frequently used as boosters to boost low
pressure gas (at or near atmospheric pressure) to the inlet of larger compressors.
3. The blower discharges gas in discrete pulses, similar to the reciprocating
compressor
Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
Dynamic Compressor
Dynamic compressor Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
Two types of dynamic compressors are
1. axial compressor and
used primarily for medium and high horsepower applications
2. the centrifugal compressor.
utilized in low horsepower applications.
Both the axial and centrifugal compressors are limited in their range of operation by
what is commonly called:
1. Stall (or surge) and
The stall phenomena occurs at certain conditions of flow, pressure ratio, and speed
(rpm), which result in the individual compressor airfoils going into stall similar to that
experienced by an airplane wing at a high angle of attack. The stall margin is the area
between the steady state operating line and the compressor stall line.
2. Stone wall.
Stone wall does not have the dynamic impact that is prevalent with stall, but it is
a very inefficient region. Furthermore, operation at or near stonewall will result in over
temperature conditions in the downstream process.
Axial vs. centrifugal compressor Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
How it works?
The centrifugal compressor, like the axial compressor, is a
dynamic machine that achieves compression by applying inertial
forces to the gas (acceleration, deceleration, turning) by means
of rotating impellers.
Operating point of dynamic compression Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
Surging line
Compressor curve
The operating point is defined as the equilibrium condition that exists between the head
produced by the compressor and the head required by the system.
A system is a set of connected things or parts that work together. In our case, a set of
components (vessels), exchangers, furnaces, control valves, piping work, etc. together to
produce a resistance to flow at the compressor flanges.
Operating point of dynamic compression Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
Important notes:
1. When it is not necessary and in an emergency situation, compressor combination
either in series or in parallel MUST be avoided since it will increase the
investment cost and electrical energy consumption.
2. The aboves rule for compressor combination apply also for othe machines moving
the fluid, i.e. Fan, blower, and pump
Compressor and pump combination Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
Series combination Parallel combination
Compressor and pump combination Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
Surging
Surging Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
The following are some of the usual causes of surge that are not related to
machine design:
1. Restriction in suction or discharge of system
2. Sudden change in resistance of pipe/ducting network
3. Process changes in pressure, temperatures, or gas composition
4. Internal plugging of flow passages of compressor (fouling)
5. Inadvertent loss of speed
6. Instrument or control valve malfunction
7. Malfunction of hardware such as variable inlet guide vanes
8. Operator error
9. Mal-distribution of load in parallel operation of two or more
compressors
10. Improper assembly of compressor, such as a miss-positioned rotor
11. Excess extraction of gases between sections
These will cause low flow turbulence and/or increase in the rotational speed of
the impeller (see the previous page)
Surging Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
Characteristics of surge:
1. Surge is defined as the lower limit of stable operation in a compressor, and it
involves the reversal of flow.
2. The intensity of surge varies from application to application and is proportional to
the density of the fluid. Higher pressure and higher molecular weight applications
can result in greater mechanical damage.
3. Surge is a high speed phenomenon.
4. Pressure rapidly fluctuates.
5. Noise is generated.
6. Mechanical damage can occur.
7. Unit may trip.
8. the gas will move back and forth in the compressor frequently, e.g. up to six (6)
times per second and not be cooled, therefore temperature increases can be
rapid and thermal expansion can cause major damage during surge.
9. for a low-pressure-ratio compressor, the surge usually initiates in the diffuser
section. For units with single-stage pressure ratios above 3:1, surge is probably
initiated in the inducer.
10. Of all the effects listed, by far the most damaging is rapid temperature increase
for this can cause internal rubs of the compressor at operating speed resulting in
impeller breakage, diaphragm breakage, extreme labyrinth seal wear and possible
case breakage.
Anti-surge control system Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
The quickest way to eliminate surge is to rapidly reduce the discharge pressure by opening
a blow-off or recycle valve in the discharge process system whenever the operating point
moves too close to the surge limit line.. This decreases network resistance.
On discharge, a check valve shall be installed to prevent reverse flow and minimize surge.
The check valve shall be located as close as possible downstream of the compressor to
minimize mass inventory. A check valve at the compressor outlet will limit the downstream
volume and increase the required system response time of the surge control system.
Anti-surge control system Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
For example, the anti-surge control maintains 80% flow through the compressor, even
though the process flow requirement is less than 80%. if the process requires only 60% flow
(Point A), the antisurge control maintains 20% flow through the recycle line. Flow through
the compressor is equal to the process flow (60%) plus the recycle flow (20%), or 80%.
Recycle flow would, of course, be zero whenever the process was using 80% flow or more.
The high energy cost for compression would justify minimizing recycling, when operating at
reduced throughput, by using a variable speed drive which, in turn, complicates the anti-
surge control system.
Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
Choke/Stonewall
Choke Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
Characteristics of choke:
1. The high flow limit of the dynamic curve
is known as choke, or stonewall and is
defined as the maximum flow a given
impeller can handle.
2. Choke flow is caused by high velocity
friction.
3. Unlike surge, stonewall is not a
destructive phenomena
Operational data (Gathered from experience) Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta
1. Fans are used to raise the pressure about 3% (12 in. water), blowers raise to less
than 40 psig, and compressors to higher pressures, although the blower range
commonly is included in the compressor range.
2. For Vacuum application: reciprocating piston type decrease the pressure to 1 Torr;
rotary piston down to 0.001 Torr, two-lobe rotary down to 0.0001 Torr; steam jet
ejectors, one stage down to 100 Torr, three stage down to 1 Torr, five stage down
to 0.05 Torr.
3. A three-stage ejector needs 100 lb steam/lb air to maintain a pressure of 1 Torr.
4. In-leakage of air to evacuated equipment depends on the absolute pressure, Torr,
and the volume of the equipment, V cuft, according to w = kV2/3 lb/hr, with k =
0.2 when P is more than 90 Torr, 0.08 between 3 and 20 Torr, and 0.025 at less
than 1 Torr.
5. Outlet temperature of compressor : T2 = T1(P2/P1)a
6. To compress air from 100°F, k = 1.4, compression ratio = 3, theoretical power
required = 62 HP/million cuft/day, outlet temperature 306°F.
7. Exit temperature should not exceed 350–400°F; for diatomic gases (Cp/Cv = 1.4)
this corresponds to a compression ratio of about 4.
8. Compression ratio should be about the same in each stage of a multistage unit,
ratio = (Pn/P1)1/n, with n is number of stages.
9. Efficiencies of fans vary from 60–80% and efficiencies of blowers are in the range
of 70–85%.
Operational data (Gathered from experience) Dr. Victor Yuardi Risonarta