1. Overview
Performance analysis of reciprocating compressors involves measuring and calculating key parameters to ensure the machine is operating efficiently and within design limits. Regular analysis helps identify developing problems before they cause failures.
Analysis Methods
| Method | Measures | Application |
|---|---|---|
| P-V diagram | Cylinder pressure vs. volume | Valve condition, leakage, work |
| Flow measurement | Actual throughput | Volumetric efficiency |
| Power measurement | Driver input power | Overall efficiency |
| Temperature monitoring | Discharge, valve temps | Valve condition, ratio |
| Vibration analysis | Mechanical condition | Bearing, foundation issues |
2. P-V Diagrams (Indicator Cards)
The pressure-volume diagram is the most powerful tool for analyzing reciprocating compressor performance. It shows cylinder pressure plotted against piston position through a complete cycle.
Theoretical P-V Diagram
An ideal cycle consists of four phases forming a closed loop:
1→2
Compression
Polytropic curve, pressure rises as volume decreases.
2→3
Discharge
Horizontal line at discharge pressure, gas expelled.
3→4
Expansion
Clearance gas re-expands, mirror of compression.
4→1
Suction
Horizontal line at suction pressure, cylinder fills.
Interpreting Real P-V Cards
Actual P-V diagrams deviate from ideal due to valve losses, pulsation, and leakage:
| Observation | Cause | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Rounded corners at valve events | Normal valve losses | None if within spec |
| Suction line slopes down | Suction valve restriction | Inspect/clean valves |
| Discharge line slopes up | Discharge valve restriction | Inspect/replace valves |
| Compression curve shifted left | Ring or valve leakage | Inspect rings, valves |
| Oscillations on suction/discharge | Pulsation | Check dampeners, piping |
3. Volumetric Efficiency
Volumetric efficiency (VE) is the ratio of actual gas volume delivered to the theoretical piston displacement. It's the primary indicator of compressor capacity and health.
Factors Affecting Volumetric Efficiency
- Clearance volume: Higher clearance = lower VE
- Compression ratio: Higher ratio = lower VE
- Valve losses: Restriction reduces effective VE
- Ring leakage: Blow-by reduces delivered volume
- Gas heating: Suction heating reduces density
- Compressibility: Z-factor variation affects VE
Clearance Effects
| Compression Ratio | VE at 10% Clr | VE at 20% Clr | VE at 40% Clr |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2:1 | 92% | 84% | 68% |
| 3:1 | 86% | 72% | 44% |
| 4:1 | 80% | 60% | 20% |
| 5:1 | 74% | 48% | -4%* |
*Negative VE means cylinder cannot compress at this ratio with this clearance
4. Rod Load Analysis
Rod load is the force transmitted through the piston rod to the crosshead. It consists of gas load (from pressure differential) and inertia load (from reciprocating mass acceleration). Total rod load must stay within frame limits.
Gas Load Calculation
Inertia Load
The reciprocating mass creates additional load that varies with crank position:
Rod Reversal
The rod must experience both tension and compression each revolution to ensure proper lubrication of the crosshead pin bearing:
| Condition | Cause | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| No reversal | Low suction P, high discharge P | Crosshead bearing damage |
| Marginal reversal | Operating near limits | Reduced bearing life |
| Good reversal | Balanced loading | Normal bearing life |
5. Power Calculation
Compressor power can be calculated theoretically or measured. Understanding both methods helps identify inefficiencies and validate performance.
Indicated Horsepower
Power calculated from P-V diagram (work per cycle × cycles per unit time):
Theoretical Adiabatic Power
Brake Horsepower
BHP is the power delivered to the compressor shaft, accounting for all losses:
6. Troubleshooting Guide
Common performance problems and their diagnostic indicators:
Low Capacity
| Symptom | Possible Cause | Check |
|---|---|---|
| Low flow, normal pressures | Suction valve leakage | P-V card shows compression curve shift |
| Low flow, high discharge temp | Discharge valve leakage | Valve temperature high |
| Low flow, normal temps | Ring blow-by | P-V card, ring inspection |
| Gradual capacity loss | Packing leakage | Vent flow measurement |
High Power Consumption
| Symptom | Possible Cause | Check |
|---|---|---|
| High power, normal capacity | Valve pressure drops | P-V card rounded corners |
| High power, low capacity | Internal recirculation | Valve leakage test |
| Erratic power readings | Liquid carryover | Separator operation |
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