Rotating Equipment

Compressor Selection

Compare centrifugal and reciprocating compressors for gas compression applications. Based on GPSA application maps and industry guidelines.

Reciprocating

Up to 12,000 psi

Best for high pressure, low flow, variable loads

Centrifugal

Up to 400,000 acfm

Best for high flow, continuous duty, high reliability

Overlap zone

1,000-10,000 acfm

Either type may be viable; detailed analysis required

Use this guide when you need to:

  • Select between centrifugal and reciprocating
  • Evaluate turndown and reliability requirements
  • Compare capital vs operating costs
  • Determine number of stages required

1. Selection Overview

Compressor selection is one of the most critical decisions in gas processing and pipeline design. The choice between centrifugal and reciprocating machines affects capital cost, operating efficiency, reliability, and maintenance requirements for the life of the facility.

Reciprocating

Positive displacement

Fixed volume per stroke. Flow nearly independent of discharge pressure.

Centrifugal

Dynamic compression

Adds velocity then converts to pressure. Flow varies with head developed.

Key trade-off

Flexibility vs reliability

Recip offers more turndown; centrifugal offers fewer wearing parts.

NGPSA Application Map

The NGPSA provides application maps showing typical ranges for each compressor type based on flow rate and discharge pressure:

General guidelines:
  • Below 1,000 acfm: Reciprocating usually favored
  • 1,000-10,000 acfm: Either type may work - detailed evaluation needed
  • Above 10,000 acfm: Centrifugal usually favored
  • Above 1,500 psig: Reciprocating often required

2. Side-by-Side Comparison

The following table summarizes key differences between centrifugal and reciprocating compressors based on industry guidelines:

Parameter Reciprocating Centrifugal
Max discharge pressure 12,000 psi (50,000 hyper) 1,450 psi (horiz), 15,000 psi (barrel)
Max inlet flow Limited by cylinders 400,000 acfm
Turndown capability 100% to 20% or lower 20-30% (fixed speed), 40-50% (VFD)
Reliability/availability Lower (more wearing parts) 98-99% typical
Compression ratio/stage 1.2 to 4.0 (typical 3:1) Depends on MW and stages
Capital cost Lower for small capacity Lower for large capacity
Operating cost Higher maintenance Lower maintenance, may need VFD
Delivery lead time 16-30 weeks typical 40-60 weeks typical
Installation footprint Larger, requires foundation More compact per capacity
Best for low MW gas Yes (hydrogen service) Many stages required

3. Reciprocating Compressors

Reciprocating compressors use pistons driven by a crankshaft to compress gas in cylinders. They are positive displacement machines - the volume compressed per stroke is fixed regardless of discharge pressure (within mechanical limits).

Operating Principle

Reciprocating Displacement: Q = (pi/4) x D^2 x S x N x n x VE Where: Q = Displacement (cfm) D = Cylinder bore diameter (inches) S = Stroke length (inches) N = Speed (rpm) n = Number of cylinders VE = Volumetric efficiency (typically 0.80-0.95)

Advantages

  • High pressure capability: Up to 12,000 psi in standard designs, 50,000+ psi in hypercompressors
  • Excellent turndown: Can reduce flow from 100% to 20% or lower using unloaders, variable speed, or clearance pockets
  • Low flow applications: Practical down to very small flows
  • Multiple services: Can handle multiple streams with different cylinders on same frame
  • Low MW gases: Efficient for hydrogen and light gases
  • Shorter lead time: Typically 16-30 weeks vs 40-60 for centrifugal

Disadvantages

  • Lower reliability: More wearing parts (valves, piston rings, rod packing)
  • Higher maintenance: Valve replacement, packing adjustment, piston ring wear
  • Pulsation: Requires pulsation dampeners and careful piping design
  • Larger footprint: Requires heavy foundation for vibration
  • Flow limitations: Large flows require many cylinders

Compression Ratio Limits

Stage Compression Ratio: Typical per-stage limits: - Lubricated cylinders: 3.5:1 to 4.0:1 - Non-lubricated: 2.5:1 to 3.0:1 Discharge temperature constraint: T2 = T1 x (P2/P1)^((k-1)/k) Where: T2 = Discharge temperature (absolute) T1 = Suction temperature (absolute) k = Specific heat ratio (Cp/Cv) Max discharge temp typically 275-325 F
Multi-stage design: For high overall compression ratios, use multiple stages with intercooling. Each stage ratio typically limited to 3:1 to control discharge temperature and valve loading.

4. Centrifugal Compressors

Centrifugal compressors use rotating impellers to accelerate gas, then convert velocity to pressure in diffusers. They are dynamic machines - flow varies with head developed, and performance follows characteristic curves.

Operating Principle

Polytropic Head: Hp = Zavg x R x T1 x [(P2/P1)^((n-1)/n) - 1] / (MW x (n-1)/n) Where: Hp = Polytropic head (ft-lbf/lbm) Zavg = Average compressibility factor R = Universal gas constant (1545 ft-lbf/lbmol-R) T1 = Suction temperature (R) n = Polytropic exponent MW = Molecular weight Head per stage typically 8,000-12,000 ft-lbf/lbm

Advantages

  • High reliability: 98-99% availability with proper maintenance
  • Low maintenance: Few wearing parts, longer run times between overhauls
  • High capacity: Up to 400,000 acfm in single machine
  • Compact: Smaller footprint per unit capacity
  • No pulsation: Smooth flow, simpler piping design
  • High MW efficiency: Excellent for heavier gases (natural gas, propane, CO2)

Disadvantages

  • Limited turndown: 20-30% fixed speed, 40-50% with VFD
  • Surge limit: Minimum flow required to prevent damaging surge
  • Pressure limits: Horizontal split case limited to ~1,450 psig
  • Low MW challenges: Hydrogen requires many stages
  • Longer lead time: 40-60 weeks typical
  • Higher capital for small sizes: Minimum economic size ~1,000 hp

Surge and Stonewall

Surge: Occurs at low flow when developed head cannot overcome discharge pressure. Results in flow reversal and mechanical damage. Prevented by recycle or blowoff. Stonewall (Choke): Occurs at high flow when gas velocity reaches sonic in impeller throat. Maximum flow limit of machine. Operating range typically 70-100% of design flow (fixed speed) or 50-100% with VFD.

Molecular Weight Effect

Head developed per stage is inversely proportional to molecular weight:

Gas MW Relative Head Stages for 4:1 CR
Hydrogen214.5x air8-12
Natural Gas181.6x air2-4
Air/Nitrogen291.0x (reference)2-3
CO2/Propane440.66x air1-2
Refrigerant860.34x air1
Hydrogen compression: Centrifugal compressors for hydrogen require many stages due to low molecular weight. For high-pressure hydrogen service, reciprocating machines are often the only practical choice.

5. Selection Factors

Compressor selection involves weighing multiple factors. No single parameter determines the choice - it's the combination of requirements that drives the decision.

Flow Rate

Flow Range Typical Selection Notes
< 500 acfmReciprocatingBelow economic centrifugal size
500-2,000 acfmFavor reciprocatingSmall centrifugals available but costly
2,000-10,000 acfmEither - evaluateOverlap zone, project-specific
10,000-50,000 acfmFavor centrifugalMultiple recip frames needed
> 50,000 acfmCentrifugalOnly practical choice

Discharge Pressure

Pressure Range Typical Selection Notes
< 500 psigEitherBoth types well suited
500-1,500 psigEither - evaluateBarrel centrifugals available
1,500-5,000 psigFavor reciprocatingLimited centrifugal options
> 5,000 psigReciprocatingOnly practical choice

Turndown Requirements

Low (0-20%)

Either type OK

Constant load applications. Centrifugal may be simpler.

Moderate (20-40%)

Slight recip advantage

Centrifugal with VFD can handle. Recip uses unloaders.

High (40-60%)

Favor reciprocating

Beyond typical centrifugal range without recycle.

Very High (60%+)

Reciprocating required

Only positive displacement handles this turndown.

Reliability Requirements

  • Standard (95-97%): Either type acceptable. Include spares planning.
  • High (97-99%): Centrifugal favored. Fewer wearing parts.
  • Critical (99%+): Centrifugal with spare rotor, or 2x100% reciprocating.

Cost Considerations

Capital cost: Reciprocating typically lower for small sizes (<2,000 hp). Centrifugal lower for large sizes (>5,000 hp). Overlap zone is project-specific.

Operating cost: Centrifugal has lower maintenance but may need VFD for efficiency. Reciprocating has higher parts replacement but may be more efficient at off-design conditions.

Lifecycle cost: Consider 20-year ownership including maintenance, parts, downtime, and energy. Centrifugal often wins for continuous high-utilization service.

6. Application Examples

Gas Gathering

Scenario: Field compression from 50 psig to 500 psig, 3,000 acfm, variable flow as wells decline

Analysis:

  • Moderate flow: Both types in range
  • Moderate pressure: Both types capable
  • High turndown needed: Favors reciprocating
  • Remote location: Reciprocating may have faster parts supply

Selection: Reciprocating with capacity control unloaders

Pipeline Transmission

Scenario: Mainline compression, 1,000 psig to 1,200 psig, 50,000 acfm, continuous operation

Analysis:

  • High flow: Strongly favors centrifugal
  • Low compression ratio: 1.2:1, single stage centrifugal
  • High reliability needed: Centrifugal 99% availability
  • Continuous duty: Maintenance windows limited

Selection: Centrifugal, gas turbine driven

Hydrogen Service

Scenario: Refinery hydrogen, 200 psig to 3,000 psig, 1,000 acfm

Analysis:

  • Low MW (2): Centrifugal would need 8-12 stages
  • High pressure: Beyond horizontal centrifugal limits
  • Moderate flow: Reciprocating handles easily
  • High compression ratio: 3-4 reciprocating stages with intercooling

Selection: Reciprocating, multi-stage with intercoolers

Refrigeration

Scenario: Propane refrigeration, 20 psia to 200 psia, 20,000 acfm

Analysis:

  • High MW (44): Efficient centrifugal compression
  • High flow: Favors centrifugal
  • Continuous duty: High reliability needed
  • Single stage sufficient for compression ratio

Selection: Centrifugal, single or two-stage

7. Station Design Best Practices

Based on established industry plant facility design practices, the following practical considerations often override pure hydraulic performance in the final equipment selection.

Project Lifecycle & Economics

Short Project Life

Favor Reciprocating

Lower initial installation cost makes them attractive for projects with limited horizons (e.g., declining fields) where long-term efficiency is less critical.

Long Project Life

Favor Centrifugal

Higher initial cost is justified by reduced long-term operating and maintenance costs over 20+ years.

Site-Specific Constraints

Constraint Impact on Selection
Noise Ordinances Local ordinances may make noise abatement costs for gas engines or turbines prohibitive. Electric motor drives may be required near residential areas.
Emissions Existing station emissions may limit adding more HP. Low-NOx turbines or electric drives may be the only permit-able options in non-attainment areas.
Delivery Time Compressor packages are long-lead items. "Stock" reciprocating units often have shorter lead times (16-24 weeks) than custom centrifugal bundles (40-60 weeks).
Manning Unmanned remote stations benefit from the simpler auxiliary systems and higher reliability of centrifugal units compared to the intensive maintenance of recips.

Selection Decision Matrix

Use this decision matrix to guide the preliminary selection process:

Factor Select Reciprocating If... Select Centrifugal If...
Flow Rate Variable or Low (<10,000 ACFM) Steady High Base Load (>10,000 ACFM)
Compression Ratio High (> 3.0 per stage) Low to Moderate (< 2.0 per stage)
Flow Variation High fluctuation (Swing Load) Constant (Base Load)
Gas MW Low (Hydrogen, Helium) High (Propane, CO2, Natural Gas)
Maintenance Staff available for frequent service Remote/Unmanned operation