Silicone-free filters are used in applications where absolutely no silicone can enter the customer's compressed air. Typically, this is required in painting industries (such as automotive paint, metal paint and aircraft paint), and in certain electronics. The reason is that in some applications, such as paint spray applications, Silicones cause large problems, such as blisters, poor adhesion and craters.
Our standard filters are not specially treated, so they can contain Silicones, due to the use of certain components. Therefore, we have a special silicone-free filter range, which exists of non-Silicone containing parts (it does not mean that silicones are filtered out). In order to be "silicone-free", the filter housings and elements are produced in a clean room, and all components of the filter elements and housings are treated in a special manner (certified) to be guaranteed free from silicones. Every filter is certified as guaranteed Silicone-free, or so-called "paint compatible" by the Fraunhofer Institute.
The flanged filters have multiple filter elements, whereas the threaded filters only have one per filter. Moreover, the elements of the flanged filters have an extra thread for fixation into the head, whereas the elements of the threaded filters only have double O-rings for fixation.
No, the rated flow rate of the filters is also the maximum flow rate of the filters (100%). When the flow is higher than the rated flow (e.g. 120%), the performance is no longer guaranteed. A lower flow rate (e.g. 80%) is not a problem, the performance (pressure drop and efficiency) will be better than the nominal flow. In other words, the filter should be operated at a maximum of exactly the nominal flow, not more.
No. The outlet oil concentration of a G-C filter combination is 0.008 mg/m3 of liquid oil and oil aerosol, the G-C combination does not filter any oil vapors. The total oil concentration after a G-C combination is therefore higher, as it still contains oil vapor. The oil vapor content can be 10-100x higher (depending on the air temperature) than the liquid oil content downstream, and as such causes the total oil concentration to exceed purity class 1. We therefore state class 2 in oil after a G-C combination). As a G-C combination does not filter any oil vapor, an activated carbon filter (V) or tower (VT) is required to guarantee a purity class 1 in total oil content, i.e. < 0.01 mg/m3 (in our case the total oil content downstream a VT is even below 0.003 mg/m3).
The ISO class for oil is the sum of the oil vapor and the oil aerosol content. In the datasheet, only the value for the oil aerosol carry-over is published (0.008 mg/m3), and remains approximately constant during the filter lifetime. The oil vapor content can vary a lot during the lifetime of the filter and is dependent on the age of the used compressor oil, and on the gas temperature. To guarantee the customer's air purity, keeping in mind that the oil vapor content needs to be added to the oil aerosol content, a quality class of 2 (< 0.1 mg/m3) is selected for oil after a G-C combination.
The performance of our filters is tested according to ISO 12500-1 (aerosol) and ISO 12500-3 (dust), for stand-alone filters. These data are published in the leaflet and technical datasheet as oil carry-over (mg/m3) and dust count efficiency (%). Measuring the performance of a stand-alone filter allows a direct comparison with ISO-tested competition filters. However, in practice, a filter is (almost) never used as a stand-alone. Therefore, ISO 8573-1 is applied to determine the air purity class for the complete compressed air installation, including dryers and the complete filter train. Examples of the most typical installations are given in the filter leaflet.
The inlet air of the V/VT should be completely dry to avoid water adsorption into the activated carbon, which could lead to a lower air purity and a shorter lifetime, because water vapor adsorption implies less capacity available for oil vapor to adsorb. That is why we always advise to install a dryer in front of V/VT.
This is a wrong terminology, from the time when filtration mechanisms were not yet fully understood. Back in the day, it was believed that oil coalescence filters work as sieves, where the particles are larger than the media pores and are hence retained at the media surface. As a result of the sieving mechanism, smaller pores simply lead to smaller particles downstream. Therefore, in the past, the filters were referred to as the maximum size of the downstream particles, i.e. the finer G filter was referred to as 0.1 µm filter, and the more open C filter as a 1 µm filter. However, the reality is less straightforward. The pores of our glass fiber media are much larger than the particle sizes, and hence different filtration mechanisms occur, based on the collision and sticking of oil droplets onto fibers. These collision mechanisms are inertial impaction, interception and diffusion, which each operate at a certain particle size range. In other words, our G and C filters operate at the whole particle size spectrum, and therefore, it is wrong to define them as 0.1 or 1 µm filters. Instead, we define our filters with the total oil concentration which is found downstream: a G filter is referred to as a 70 μg/m3 filter and a C filter as a 8 μg/m3 filter.
A V and a VT are activated carbon filters. Activated carbon is carbon material in the form of pellets, powder, etc. which has been "activated", i.e. consists of millions of microscopic pores. Activated carbon filters remove organic vapors – small molecules – from the compressed air system by capturing these molecules inside the pores of the carbon pellets/powder. Since these molecules are captured inside the pellets/powder and not in the spaces between the carbon pellets/powder, while the air mainly flows around the activated carbon material, the air stream is not blocked more upon operation, so the pressure drop of the filter does not rise. However, at a certain time, all pores are completely filled with oil, so that no more oil vapor can be captured anymore. When this happens, new arriving oil vapor simply moves through the V/VT, so the element needs to be replaced. This event is called the "breakthrough" of the V/VT.
For critical applications it is always recommended to install a VT activated carbon tower; as this product provides the optimal protection against oil vapor at fluctuating oil loads and temperature variations, with a guaranteed lifetime of 4000 hours. The V is a basic oil vapor protection, mainly meant for general industry.
V | VT | |
Lifetime (hours) | 1000 | 4000 |
Maximum temperature (°C) | 35 | 66 (use correction factors) |
Flow range (l/s) | 10-8000 | 20-310 |
Back pressure could lead to implosion of the filter elements. When elements implode, this leads to contamination of the customer's compressed air, and hence the elements should be replaced immediately. To overcome this, Pneumatech filter elements consist of two cores, made out of perforated stainless steel. This in contrast to the weaker expanded steel cores. Do you want to experience the difference between expanded steel and perforated stainless steel? Please order our Filter Box.
MPPS: Most Penetrating Particle Size, the particle size for which the efficiency is the lowest.
After the oil droplet has collided with a fiber and is captured by one of the three capturing mechanisms (impaction, interception or diffusion, see question 5), the total filter efficiency can be calculated. The total filter efficiency at every particle size is a result of the combination of these three filtration mechanisms, as presented schematically in the figure below (red: impaction, blue: interception, green: diffusion). In other words, it is the sum of the efficiency by impaction, interception and diffusion.
As is clear in the figure below, the dependence of the capturing mechanisms on particle size causes the efficiency curve to exhibit a minimum. In our applications, this minimum is typically found in the size range of 0.1 – 0.2 µm (in the example in the figure, the MPPS is 0.15 µm). These particles are the most difficult to separate, and are thus referred to as "most penetrating particle size", MPPS. The exact location of the MPPS, the importance of each filtration mechanism and the total filtration efficiency depend on e.g. the air velocity, the inner structure of the media, the oil size distribution, and oil concentration.
Yes, it is a misconception that the differential pressure indicator does not work correctly due to pollution with oil. However, the pressure drop of coalescence filters will remain approximately constant during the filter lifetime, and can hence not be used as a service indicator.
The dry pressure drop of oil aerosol filters is irrelevant. After +/- 50 running hours (dependent on the installation and operating conditions), the pressure drop has already reached its steady state ("wet pressure drop"), which will remain constant during the filter life. This wet pressure drop is published in the leaflet. The pressure drop of particulate filters S & D does not reach a steady state value, but slowly increases during the lifetime. The speed with which the pressure drop increases depends on the amount of dust. It is therefore more straightforward to only publish the initial pressure drop ("dry pressure drop"), instead of a pressure drop during operation.
The performance of our oil coalescence filters is only marginally dependent on temperature, provided that the maximal temperature of 66⁰C is not exceeded (because a higher temperature could damage the filter media). Therefore, there are no correction factors required for other operation temperatures. On the other hand, oil vapor filters do decrease in performance at increasing temperature, because the amount of gas increases. Therefore, the V can only be used until 35⁰C, to maintain the lifetime of 1000 hours. For the VT, there are correction factors for the temperature to determine the correct size, so that the lifetime remains 4000 hours.