zdas04
Mechanical
- Jun 25, 2002
- 10,274
I keep having conversations with process engineers where they say they are doing "dew point control" and don't need to manage the discharge temperature on oil flooded screw compressors. When I ask them what "dew point control" means I get the "you are NOT supposed to ask that, everyone knows the answer" look and typically no answer.
I'm just a MechE not an exahalted ChemE, but I didn't sleep through ALL of my thermo classes. "Dew point" is "the temperature (varying according to pressure and humidity) below which water droplets begin to condense and dew can form". In other words at a given temperature and pressure, the 100% relative humidity water vapor content is the "dew point". If I have 7 lbm/MMSCF [112 mg/SCF] gas at 1000 psia [6.9 MPa] and 32°F [0C] then I am at dew point or 100% RH. When I put that gas into a pipeline and lose 200 psi [1.3 MPa] to friction and heat the gas to a ground temp of 66°F [18.9C] then the 100% RH point goes to 33 lbm/MMSCF [528 mg/SCF] so the actual RH is 21%.
Now lets look at what happens in a compressor. Lets say that suction conditions are:
[ul]
[li]Suction Pressure ==> 14.5 psia [100 kPaa][/li]
[li]Suction Temperature ==> 140°F [60C][/li]
[li]Suction Water Content ==> 9483 lbm/MMSCF [150,200 mg/SCF][/li]
[li]Gas flow rate ==> 1 MMSCF/day [28 kSCM/day][/li]
[/ul]
If the machine does 10 compression ratios and we are managing the temperature out of the screw then we see:
[ul]
[li]Discharge Pressure ==> 145 psia [1 MPaa][/li]
[li]Discharge Temperature ==> 206°F [97C][/li]
[li]Dew Point water content ==> 4384 lbm/MMSCF [70,180 mg/SCM][/li]
[/ul]
My question is "What dew point are you controlling in your dew point control scheme and how are you accomplishing this 'control'?" I really want to know. I had a packager tell me last month that the skid he was designing for a client had dew point control so using a cooler bypass 3-way valve with a 140°F [60C] bullet in it would be fine. I asked him to send me drawings of his dew point control device that would let him ignore the thermodynamics of gas compression and phase change (sounded like an AMAZING device). He blew me off.
In the scenario above, 206°F is not high enough for all of the incoming water vapor to leave as water vapor. For that to happen I would need to heat the oil to 248°F ]120C] (which has the potential to create other problems) or cool the inlet to 110°F [43C] (which requires an inlet gas cooler). It seems like something called dew point control would allow a PLC to compare the inlet 100% RH point to the outlet 100% RH point and make pressure/temperature adjustments to make sure that the water content at 100% RH is higher on the discharge than the incoming stream so the gas leaves the compressor with all the water that came in and still be sub-saturated. I've never seen any of this kind of equipment or real-time calculations on screw packages pulling on raw gas. Has anyone else?
David Simpson, PE
MuleShoe Engineering
In questions of science, the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of a single individual. ùGalileo Galilei, Italian Physicist
I'm just a MechE not an exahalted ChemE, but I didn't sleep through ALL of my thermo classes. "Dew point" is "the temperature (varying according to pressure and humidity) below which water droplets begin to condense and dew can form". In other words at a given temperature and pressure, the 100% relative humidity water vapor content is the "dew point". If I have 7 lbm/MMSCF [112 mg/SCF] gas at 1000 psia [6.9 MPa] and 32°F [0C] then I am at dew point or 100% RH. When I put that gas into a pipeline and lose 200 psi [1.3 MPa] to friction and heat the gas to a ground temp of 66°F [18.9C] then the 100% RH point goes to 33 lbm/MMSCF [528 mg/SCF] so the actual RH is 21%.
Now lets look at what happens in a compressor. Lets say that suction conditions are:
[ul]
[li]Suction Pressure ==> 14.5 psia [100 kPaa][/li]
[li]Suction Temperature ==> 140°F [60C][/li]
[li]Suction Water Content ==> 9483 lbm/MMSCF [150,200 mg/SCF][/li]
[li]Gas flow rate ==> 1 MMSCF/day [28 kSCM/day][/li]
[/ul]
If the machine does 10 compression ratios and we are managing the temperature out of the screw then we see:
[ul]
[li]Discharge Pressure ==> 145 psia [1 MPaa][/li]
[li]Discharge Temperature ==> 206°F [97C][/li]
[li]Dew Point water content ==> 4384 lbm/MMSCF [70,180 mg/SCM][/li]
[/ul]
My question is "What dew point are you controlling in your dew point control scheme and how are you accomplishing this 'control'?" I really want to know. I had a packager tell me last month that the skid he was designing for a client had dew point control so using a cooler bypass 3-way valve with a 140°F [60C] bullet in it would be fine. I asked him to send me drawings of his dew point control device that would let him ignore the thermodynamics of gas compression and phase change (sounded like an AMAZING device). He blew me off.
In the scenario above, 206°F is not high enough for all of the incoming water vapor to leave as water vapor. For that to happen I would need to heat the oil to 248°F ]120C] (which has the potential to create other problems) or cool the inlet to 110°F [43C] (which requires an inlet gas cooler). It seems like something called dew point control would allow a PLC to compare the inlet 100% RH point to the outlet 100% RH point and make pressure/temperature adjustments to make sure that the water content at 100% RH is higher on the discharge than the incoming stream so the gas leaves the compressor with all the water that came in and still be sub-saturated. I've never seen any of this kind of equipment or real-time calculations on screw packages pulling on raw gas. Has anyone else?
David Simpson, PE
MuleShoe Engineering
In questions of science, the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of a single individual. ùGalileo Galilei, Italian Physicist