JavaMoose
Computer
- Sep 8, 2003
- 49
I've looked through here and out on the web and couldn't find the solution (maybe I was asking the wrong question).
We're setting up a CO2 system feeding some equipment. We have waste CO2 piped to us with the following specs: .35 - .48 bar; 150*F; 123SCFM; 0.034 molar H20; .95 molar CO2. Ambient air temperature will be between 75*F and 90*F - this system is skid mounted outdoors.
The system as it's designed so far is using an after-cooler to bring the temperature down to 100*F and lower the dew point, filter/water trap to recover the gross condensate, then into a single stage compressor (Sullair ES-6 10H-24KT Oil Flooded) and compressed to 6.89 bar. After leaving the compressor it goes to a coalescing particulate filter then on to a refrigerated air dryer.
My problem is that I am trying to determine what the outlet temperature of the CO2 will be leaving the compressor? The air dryer has a max input temperature of 140*F and I want to be sure I'm not exceeding that.
We're setting up a CO2 system feeding some equipment. We have waste CO2 piped to us with the following specs: .35 - .48 bar; 150*F; 123SCFM; 0.034 molar H20; .95 molar CO2. Ambient air temperature will be between 75*F and 90*F - this system is skid mounted outdoors.
The system as it's designed so far is using an after-cooler to bring the temperature down to 100*F and lower the dew point, filter/water trap to recover the gross condensate, then into a single stage compressor (Sullair ES-6 10H-24KT Oil Flooded) and compressed to 6.89 bar. After leaving the compressor it goes to a coalescing particulate filter then on to a refrigerated air dryer.
My problem is that I am trying to determine what the outlet temperature of the CO2 will be leaving the compressor? The air dryer has a max input temperature of 140*F and I want to be sure I'm not exceeding that.