Carbon Dioxide Mixture
Carbon Dioxide (CO2) may
combine with water to form carbonic acid. Carbonic acid is mildly corrosive
and at higher pressures can condense into a liquid which will act as a
solvent and dilute the cylinder lubrication. The
gas properties of the CO2 mixture should be reviewed at the required operating
conditions.
See the chart below for recommended
materials of construction for piston rods and valves based on suction
pressure and CO2 concentration.
The recommendations for compressor
piston rod and valve materials are:
For sweet natural gas with a carbon
dioxide concentration less than 5%, or at 5% with a suction pressure less
than 1200 psig, or with a carbon dioxide concentration up to 50% with
a suction pressure less than 400 psig, or with any suction pressure lower
than 400 psig, use standard piston rod and valve materials.
For sweet natural gas with a carbon
dioxide concentration outside the above limits, use 17-4PH stainless steel
piston rods and stainless steel compressor valves. (It
is recommended that standard valves be used for unit start-up. Once
the system is confirmed clean, the stainless steel valves should be installed).
CO2 is soluble in mineral oils,
thereby reducing the oil / gas mixture viscosity. Mineral
oils are completely miscible into CO2, which reduces the effectiveness
of the oil. Compounding
mineral oils or PAG (poly-alkaline-glycol) synthetic lubricants are commonly
used.
See Cylinder and Packing Lubrication
Requirements--6.5 in the Ariel Packager's Standards
and
contact Ariel in Mount Vernon for a recommendation.
Ariel
Corporation Application Manual
6-Sept-2001