Dan Lannan said:
I'm working on a project involving compressing air to a desired high pressure. So far the only equation I've been paying attention to is the ideal gas law. My question is if an air compressor pump is rated to create a maximum pressure of 100 psi based on its inlet being at atmospheric pressure, does this mean if the inlet is at 100 psi already the pump will be able to raise the outlet pressure to a 200 psi maximum? In other words, is the difference between inlet and outlet pressure the only thing to consider here? It seems too simple that daisy chaining low-cost compressor motors together could achieve incredibly high air pressures. If anyone could explain or drop a link or reference to any good resources which explain the mechanisms at play here I would greatly appreciate it. Thanks!
Hi - the thought experiment I would suggest is that you imagine placing the second compressor in a sealed pressure vessel and raise the pressure of that vessel using the first compressor. The point of this thought experiment is to highlight the differential pressure between the interior of a compressor and the ambient exterior.
Does your second compressor "know" that the 'ambient' pressure around it is infact already raised considerably above atmospheric?
The air around the second compressor will have increased density but the long hand expression is more useful here, the air will have higher mass per unit volume - will that affect any components ?...they will certainly do more work since they are shifting more mass. Also consider if any of the heating effects will be radically different. Are the components more likely to fail because they are exposed to an ambient pressure that is higher than usual or are they only sensitive to the differential pressure - ie consider components that have the same (high) pressure on all sides and then compare with components that have a high pressure on one side and a low pressure on the other side - it is these latter components that are exposed to both the interior pressure and the external pressure that are more likely to fail.
I suspect that as long as each daisy chained compressor is contained in a pressure vessel that is fed by the preceding compressors that you could go a long way - that is until...
1. Components fail simply because the construction materials change when exposed to a sufficient pressure - I am not referring to differential pressure - for instance a plug that has one surface external and one surface internal - we have already eliminated differential pressure by using pressure vessels. Here I mean simply that a material will change physical properties when immersed ( on all sides ) in sufficient pressure. Many solids are very resistant to pressure if on all sides - its differential pressure ( different on one side to the other ) that causes stress and failure.
2. The gases being compressed have changed physical properties sufficiently to cause damage, overloading or fatigue to components. Again I suspect you can go a long way here.
3. Liquification of gases - stay above critical temperature.
In short I suspect that what kills a compressor in a daisy chaining experiment is not "absolute pressure" but rather differential pressure - as long as the ambient pressure is only 100psi lower than the internal pressure then I suspect you could successfully chain quite a few compressors at room temperature.
The thought experiment places responsibility of withstanding the pressure of atmospheric to final output pressure on the pressure vessel which surrounds each compressor and is pressurised by the output of the preceding compressors.
Is this a cop-out - just shifting responsibility onto the pressure vessels?
In a way yes...
But it does in turn lead to thought experiment - what if the pressure vessels were spheres and placed one inside the other - each pressure vessel containing both a compressor and a set of pressure vessels one inside the other - babushka doll style - that way each compressor sees only a 100psi differential but so does each pressure vessel.
That's why I suggested a pressure vessel that is a sphere so that the sheet metal or whatever is acting more like a very strong soap bubble ( tensile ) rather than say a steel box which will not scale very nicely as a pressure container.