Abstract

A way to increase the efficiency of positive-displacement air compressor is spraying the lube oil to exploit it not only as lubricating and sealing agent but also as thermal ballast. This work seeks the experimental evidence in sliding-vane compressors by measuring the air standard volume flow rate and the electrical power input of three diverse configurations. The first configuration, taken as the reference, employs a conventional injection system comprising calibrated straight orifices. The other two, referred to as advanced, adopt smaller orifices and pressure-swirl full-cone nozzles designed for the purpose; the third configuration utilizes a pump to boost the oil pressure. The laser imagining technique shows that the nozzles generate sprays that break-up within a short distance into spherical droplets, ligaments, ramifications and undefined structures. Tests on the packaged compressors reveal that the advanced configurations provide almost the same air flow rate while utilizing half of the oil because the sprays generate a good sealing. Moreover, the sprayed oil is acting as a thermal ballast because the electrical input is reduced by 3.5% and 3.0%, respectively, if the pump is present or not , while the specific energy requirement, accounting for the slightly reduced air flow, by 2.4% and 2.9%, respectively.

Highlights

  • Positive-displacement machines are used widely for air compression in commercial and industrial applications

  • This work seeks for the experimental evidence of the thermal effect of lubricating oil sprayed in sliding-vane air compressors, starting from the positive indications of a previous study [4]

  • The reference compressor is a large-size sliding-vane rotary compressor in which lubricating oil is inserted into the chambers with a conventional system comprising a number of calibrated straight orifices drilled on the stator

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Summary

Introduction

Positive-displacement machines are used widely for air compression in commercial and industrial applications. This work seeks for the experimental evidence of the thermal effect of lubricating oil sprayed in sliding-vane air compressors, starting from the positive indications of a previous study [4]. Due to their cylindrical shape, sliding-vane compressors are adequate because oil can be sprayed axially from the end plates. The experimental evidence is sought by measuring the air standard volume flow rate and the electrical power input and by reconstructing the pressure-angle diagram (known as the indicator diagram) in a compressor equipped with either a conventional injection or an advanced spraying system. The advanced system is implemented in two configurations, depending whether an external pump is employed to boost the oil pressure

Compressor configurations
Experimentation
Results and discussion
Conclusions
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