Krausen
Mechanical
- Jan 1, 2013
- 292
Gentlemen,
I am attempting to size a portable air compressor that will be used to push hydrotest water through a pipeline in order to move the water to another hydrotest segment (mostly uphill). Not having much experience in air compressor sizing, I went back to the basics as I understood. I estimated the inlet flow (ICFM) based on the polytropic thermo process P1*V1^n = P2*V2^n for a closed system. The delivered air (V2) would need flow at 50 cfm at a pressure of 175 psia (P2) to adequately move the water. P2 was estimated based on the worst-case total backpressure the compressor should see during operation (actual backpressure will vary based on location of the water-air interface). I assumed n = 1.25 as a typical polytropic constant for efficient recip compressors. For P1 I calculated 11.2 psia for the atmospheric pressure at 7000 ft, but understand this may need to be lowered due to the air filter on the intake side. The calc resulted in a compresssor ICFM (V1) = 450.
Does this calc make sense?
FYI, I was assuming these portable compressors would be reciprocating but I've learned many of the larger available ones are rotary screw types (not recips). Not sure how this will effect the process or polytropic constant
. Due to the extreme site elevation, I'm also worried about how to derate the compressor & driver (likely a diesel engine).
Thank you in advance for any help on this.
I am attempting to size a portable air compressor that will be used to push hydrotest water through a pipeline in order to move the water to another hydrotest segment (mostly uphill). Not having much experience in air compressor sizing, I went back to the basics as I understood. I estimated the inlet flow (ICFM) based on the polytropic thermo process P1*V1^n = P2*V2^n for a closed system. The delivered air (V2) would need flow at 50 cfm at a pressure of 175 psia (P2) to adequately move the water. P2 was estimated based on the worst-case total backpressure the compressor should see during operation (actual backpressure will vary based on location of the water-air interface). I assumed n = 1.25 as a typical polytropic constant for efficient recip compressors. For P1 I calculated 11.2 psia for the atmospheric pressure at 7000 ft, but understand this may need to be lowered due to the air filter on the intake side. The calc resulted in a compresssor ICFM (V1) = 450.
Does this calc make sense?
FYI, I was assuming these portable compressors would be reciprocating but I've learned many of the larger available ones are rotary screw types (not recips). Not sure how this will effect the process or polytropic constant
Thank you in advance for any help on this.