Compressed Air Dryers: Recommended Dew Points
Compressed Air Dryers: Recommended Dew Points
Compressed Air Dryers: Recommended Dew Points
Browse our selection of Compressed Air Dryers online. If you have questions or can't find what you are
looking for online, call our knowledgeable customer service team toll-free: 866-650-1937.
Compressed air dryers reduce the quantity of water vapor, liquid water, hydrocarbon, and hydrocarbon vapor in
compressed air. Moisture in compressed air is harmful. Water damages a compressed air system several ways
The result is lower productivity, increased maintenance, and higher operating costs. You can minimize the
damage wet compressed air can inflict on your system by drying it.
Compressed air is dried to protect the system's piping and process equipment. Dry air also protects against lost
product. Most pneumatic equipment has a recommended operating pressure, dryness level, and a maximum
operating temperature. Set your compressed air's systems dryness level to exceed the requirements of the
equipment it powers.
Audit locations that compressed air is used in your plant and piping runs to determine the dew point
requirement.
Refrigerated air dryers are available in two basic configurations, non-cycling and cycling.
Refrigerated air dryers are available in two basic configurations, non-cycling and cycling.
Simplified refrigeration circuit since hot gas bypass valves are not required
A 60% or more reduction in the required quantity of refrigerant charge
Elimination of compressed air dryer freeze-up potential since the refrigeration system "cycles off" before
freeze-up can occur. Over sizing of the compressed air dryer is therefore not a problem
Additional energy savings since the compressed air dryer dew point can be raised to as high as 60ºF
Microprocessor controls permit automatic dew point suppression below ambient temperature for
maximum energy savings
Montreal Protocol
To protect the ozone layer from further depletion the European Union, Switzerland, United Kingdom, United
States, and other World powers developed and signed the Montreal Protocol. The protocol freezes HCFC
refrigerant production levels at the 1986 level. Under the protocol developed nations will phase HCFC refrigerants
out by 2020. Some HCFC production will continue until 2030. HCFC refrigerants contain chlorine, which damages
the ozone layer.
There are several replacement refrigerants in production. The most common replacement refrigerant is HFC-
134a. It is non-flammable and is a near equivalent to HCFC. HFC-134a does not contain chlorine and therefore
does not damage the ozone layer.
Desiccant Air Dryers
Desiccant Air Dryers utilize chemicals beads, called desiccant, to adsorb water vapor from compressed air. Three
different types of desiccant are commonly used:
Silica Gel - an amorphous form of silica with very good water vapor adsorbing capacity. Silica gel
provides -40ºF (-40°C) to -85°F(-65°C) pressure dew point performance. A high efficiency coalescing
prefilter is required to prevent damage due to liquid water (and oil) slugging. Moisture resistant silica
gel is also available, but with less capacity.
Activated Alumina - a porous form of aluminum oxide with silicon dioxide, activated alumina also has
very good water vapor adsorbing capacity and will provide -40ºF (-40°C) to -100°F (-73.3°C) pressure
dew point performance. Activated alumina provides good resistance to liquid water and is the preferred
desiccant for heatless air dryers, however a high efficiency coalescing prefilter is required.
Molecular Sieve - a porous form of zeolites of specialized desiccants formulated to remove specific
vapor or gas molecules. They have excellent water vapor adsorbing capacity with low relative humidity
inlet and will provide pressure dew points of -100ºF (-73.3°C) or lower. Molecular sieve is easily
damaged when slugged with liquid water or oil, therefore a high efficiency coalescing prefilter is an
absolute must.
Browse our selection of all the types of Dessicant available online.
Silica gel or activated alumina is the preferred desiccants for compressed air dryers. Molecular sieve is usually
only used in combination with silica gel or activated alumina as a polishing bed.
Desiccant air dryers (fig. AD1-4) are usually configured with two pressure vessels, filled with desiccant, switching
valves to direct the compressed air flow and controls for proper switching of the desiccant air dryers vessels.
Single tower versions are available.
Basic operation of a desiccant air dryer consists of one drying cycle and one
regeneration cycle commonly referred to as the NEMA cycle. For example, a 10
minute NEMA cycle consists of a 5 minute drying cycle and 5 minute
regeneration cycle. This cycle is continuously repeated.
During the drying cycle, compressed air, at full pressure, flows through one
desiccant vessel. As the air flows through the desiccant bed, microscopic pores
on the surface of the desiccant beads "strips" the water vapor and hydrocarbon
molecules from the air, thereby reducing the relative humidity of the air. The
relative humidity of the dried air is equivalent to a pressure dew point of -40ºF
(-40ºC) or lower. Since this "stripping" action by the desiccant beads is a result
of a chemical reaction, it produces a small amount of heat, called "heat of
adsorption." The heat produced is minimal and increases the outlet temperature only slightly.
During the regeneration cycle, the switching valves isolate the moisture saturated desiccant vessel, this "off-line"
vessel is depressurized and the desiccant regeneration process begins. Following regeneration, the vessel re-
pressurized with compressed air, is again ready for the next drying cycle.
Desiccant air dryers are available in two basic designs, heatless and heated. Since the drying cycle on all
desiccant air dryers is similar, the difference between heatless and heated designs is found in the regeneration
methods.
Deliquescent Dryers
eCompressedair sells deliquescent dryers. For more information on our Van Air Freedom Deliquescent Dryers
click here.
Deliquescent Dryers (fig. AD1-5) utilize an absorptive type chemical (desiccant) to provide
a 20ºF to 25ºF (-6.6°C to -3.8°C) dew point suppression below the compressed air
temperature entering the dryer. The moisture in the compressed air reacts with the
absorptive material to produce a liquid effluent that is drained out of the dryer. This
effluent must be disposed of in accordance with local regulations.
Deliquescent dryers are typically used in applications such as, sandblasting and logging. They are not
recommended for industrial applications since the dried compressed air exiting the dryer may contain small
amounts of the effluent that may be corrosive to downstream equipment
Dryness is relative (fig. AD1-6). For example for general plant air the compressed air's dew point should be at
least 18°F (-7.8°C) lower than the lowest ambient air temperature encountered to avoid condensation freezing.
Other applications like compressed air used in microelectronics manufacturing can require a dew point of -40ºF
to -100ºF (-40ºC to -73.8ºC). There is a big range of what is considered dry. The technology employed to dry
compressed air depends largely on the dew point you require.
Manufacturers rate their compressed air dryers in accordance with recommended Standard CAGI Standard No.
ADF100 for 33ºF-39ºF (.5ºC - 3.8ºC) pressure dew point. This is based on 100 psig inlet air pressure, 100ºF
(37.7ºC) inlet air temperature, 85ºF (29.4ºC) cooling water temperature (water cooled units) and 100ºF
(37.7ºC) ambient air temperature (air cooled units). The maximum airside pressure drop allowed is 5 psi.
Good installation practice for refrigerated compressed air dryers include:
To select a refrigerated compressed air dryer calculate a corrected flow (scfm). The example below shows how
to perform the calculation.
*It is a best practice to use 100ºF (38ºC) or higher for the ambient temperature to avoid
accidentally under-sizing a compressed air dryer.
**Correction factors are standard. See tables below for correction factors for other
temperatures. Figure AD1-8
Multiply correction factors by compressor flow (scfm) for the corrected flow (scfm).
.86 x 1.51 x 1.16 x 500 scfm (14 m3/min.)= 753 scfm (21 m3/min.)
Refrigerated compressed air dryers are rated in flow (scfm)( m3/min.). Round the corrected flow up to choose a
compressed air dryer.
Desiccant Air Dryers
A wide-range of desiccant air dryers are available. There are two main categories of desiccant air dryers: heated
and heatless. A general rule of thumb is applications below 2000 scfm (56 m3/min) work best with heatless and
applications above 2000 scfm (56 m3/min) work best with heated.
All desiccant air dryers have NEMA cycles. See below chart for the most common NEMA cycles. While one
desiccant tower is online the other tower is regenerating.
Heatless Desiccant Air 6-10 minute cycle (5 minutes online and 3-5
Dryer minutes regenerating)
Externally Heated 4 hour cycle (2 hours online and 2 hours
Desiccant Air Dryers offline
Internally Heated Dryer 8 hour cycle (4 hours online and 4 hours
Blower Purge offline)
Figure AD1-11
For example:
Inlet Temperature: 105°F (40.5°C) (within 120°F (48.8ºC) maximum)
Inlet Flow: 325 scfm (9.1 m3/min)
Inlet Pressure: 120 psig has a correction factor of 1.08
Heated desiccant air dryers have heat spikes and dew point spikes when operated on a fixed cycle. The desiccant
air dryer's tower coming back online after regeneration causes these changes in air quality. The desiccant is hot
from regeneration. That heat dissipates as compressed air passes through it. The desiccant does not collect as
much moisture when it is hot. So, some moisture can get past the desiccant air dryer until its temperature
returns to normal operating temperature.
The heat spike can cause downstream filters to catch fire. To minimize this risk, use high temperature filters
downstream of the desiccant air dryer. A downstream air receiver is recommended to protect downstream
operations from heat spikes and dew point spikes. The air receiver will give the compressed air time to cool.
Manufacturers rate desiccant air dryer capacity in accordance with recommended Standard NFPA/T3.27.2.3M-81
(ANSI B93, 45). This rating is based on 100 psig (7 bar) inlet air pressure, 100ºF (38ºC) inlet air temperature,
and 100ºF (38ºC) ambient air temperature. The maximum air pressure drop allowed is 5 psi. Standard pressure
dew point performance is -40ºF (-40ºC). Many standard models can be modified to provide -100ºF (-73.3ºC)
pressure dew point.
Manufacturers recommend several methods to reduce a desiccant air dryer's dew point to -100°F (-73.3°C)
including:
Internally Heated
Desiccant regeneration (fig. AD1-14) is accomplished by heating the desiccant with internal electric or steam
heaters and purge air. Either atmospheric air or compressed air from the air stream is used as the purge air.
Internally heated compressed air dryers are commonly used for flow rates ranging from 200 to 3400 scfm.
Externally Heated
Externally heated compressed air dryers (fig. AD1-15) regenerate the wet tower by heating purge air from the
compressed air line to 350°F (120.4ºC) or higher and channeling the hot air through the wet tower. The hot air
pulls off the adsorbed moisture, thus regenerating the desiccant. The purge air vents to atmosphere.
Blower Purge
Blower purge is a type of externally heated compressed air dryer. The blower purge takes atmosphere air in
through a blower. The air is heated to between 350ºF and 500ºF (120.4ºC to 260ºC) and channeled to the wet
tower. The hot air drives the moisture off the desiccant.
Heat of Compression
A heat of compression desiccant air dryer (fig. AD1-17) uses the heat generated by the non-lubricated
compressor during normal operation to dry the desiccant. This design reduces utility costs. Heat from
compression compressed air dryers has the lowest utility costs of all heated compressed air dryers.
To select a heated desiccant compressed air dryer determine the inlet temperature, inlet flow, and inlet pressure.
To calculate a corrected flow, multiply the inlet flow (scfm)(m3/min) by the pressure correction factors.
Inlet Flow (scfm)(m3/min) x Pressure Correction Factor x Inlet Temperature Correction Factor = Corrected Flow
For example:
Inlet Flow: 800 scfm (22.4 m3/min)
Inlet Pressure: 130 psig (9 bar) has a correction factor of 1.27
Inlet Temperature: 90ºF (32ºC) has a correction factor of .91
800 x 1.27 x .91 = 925 scfm (22.4 x 1.27 x .91 = 25.9 m3/min)
The corrected flow is 925 scfm (25.9 m (25.9 m3/min). From the manufacturer's selection, you would choose the
closest standard model that is rated with a larger capacity. For example a 1000 scfm (28 m3/min) heated
desiccant air dryer.
To select a deliquescent dryer you need to know the system's inlet flow (scfm)(m3/min) and
inlet pressure (psig)(bar). Using these two factors, select a deliquescent dryer, which is rated to handle pressure
and flow.
Installation Recomendations
Installation Recomendations
1. Replace particulate, coalescer, and filter elements as necessary based on pressure drop. Replace
vapor filter elements when vapors or odors are first detected.
2. Inspect drain valves daily, clean as necessary.
3. Replace desiccant based on manufacturer recommendations.
4. Inspect desiccant once a year and change based on color and condition of beads.
5. Calibrate dew point analyzer regularly
6. Once a year inspect valves replace/repair