It is often assumed that installing a dryer will eliminate water problems. In reality, the result depends on the dryer type, installation position, and piping conditions. The first step is to correctly understand the types and roles of air dryers.
Key Points
- The main types of compressed air dryers are refrigerated, desiccant, and membrane dryers.
- Desiccant dryers require desiccant replacement, while membrane dryers require consideration of purge air consumption.
- Each type has its own strengths and limitations.
- A dryer conditions the entire air stream upstream; it is different from point-of-use protection against re-condensation.
- Selection becomes easier when you focus on what you want to stop and where you want to stop it.
Conclusion first: there is more than one type of air dryer
Although people often say “air dryer” as if it were one category, there are actually several types. The three most common types are refrigerated dryers, desiccant dryers, and membrane dryers.
The important question is not “which type is best,” but “which type fits the application.”
Even under the same name “dryer,” the target dryness level, operating burden, initial cost, and installation target can be different. Selecting only by the type name may lead to a configuration that does not fit the site.
Main types of compressed air dryers
Refrigerated dryer
The most common type. It cools compressed air so that moisture condenses and can be separated. It is widely used as a standard solution in many factories.
Desiccant dryer
This type removes moisture using a desiccant material. It is often selected when a lower dew point is required.
Membrane dryer
This type separates water vapor through a membrane. It may be considered for compact configurations or equipment-level drying.
Related auxiliary equipment
Aftercoolers, drain traps, and other upstream devices are also important for reducing the moisture load before the dryer or downstream equipment.
Simple comparison of the three types
| Type | Characteristics | Suitable applications | Points to note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Refrigerated | Standard type that is easy to use for general applications | Standard drying for factory-wide compressed air | May not be suitable when an extremely low dew point is required. Power supply is required. |
| Desiccant | Suitable for aiming at a lower dew point | Applications requiring higher drying performance | Periodic desiccant replacement is required, so maintenance cost and shutdown planning must be considered. |
| Membrane | Compact and easy to consider at equipment level | Local use and precision applications | If upstream air quality is poor, downstream equipment may be burdened. A certain amount of purge air is required. |
Point: What matters is not only the dryer type, but how dry the air must be, where the dryer will be used, and how much operating burden can be accepted.
What is a refrigerated dryer?
A refrigerated dryer cools compressed air and condenses moisture. It is the most common type and is used in a wide range of factory applications.
When there is no special requirement, a refrigerated dryer is often the first option. It is a well-balanced choice for standard applications and is easy to introduce in many factories.
However, a refrigerated dryer mainly conditions the entire air stream immediately after the compressor. It may not prevent droplets from forming again inside piping or just before equipment.
What is a desiccant dryer?
A desiccant dryer removes moisture using a desiccant material. It is often selected when a lower dew point is required and is a strong option for applications with strict dryness requirements.
Strength
It can produce drier air and is suitable for stricter drying conditions.
Point to note
The desiccant is a consumable material, so periodic replacement is required. Replacement cost, timing management, and shutdown planning must be considered.
Therefore, a desiccant dryer should not be chosen simply because it is “higher performance.” It should be selected after confirming whether that level of dryness is truly required.
What is a membrane dryer?
A membrane dryer separates water vapor through a membrane. It may be considered for compact, equipment-level, or local drying applications.
However, membrane dryers are designed to handle water vapor. If liquid droplets or debris enter directly, upstream protection becomes important.
Strength
It is easy to use for local applications and equipment-level dew point control.
Point to note
Because purge air is consumed, the system must be designed considering both processing capacity and air consumption.
For this reason, when membrane dryers are used, it becomes even more important to reduce liquid droplets and contaminants upstream.
Common misunderstanding: installing a dryer does not solve everything
This point is very important. A dryer conditions the entire compressed air stream, but it does not always stop re-condensation or liquid droplet inflow just before equipment.
It is not rare to see water problems even after an air dryer is installed. This does not always mean the dryer is broken. Re-condensation may be occurring inside piping or just before the equipment.
In other words, dryers are important, but it is risky to assume that every water problem will stop only by installing a dryer.
Selection should start from “what to stop” and “where to stop it”
To avoid selecting the wrong dryer, it is better to organize actual site conditions before choosing by dryer type.
1. What do you want to stop?
Clarify whether the target is water vapor, liquid droplets, fine particles, or other contaminants.
2. Where do you want to stop it?
The approach differs depending on whether the target location is immediately after the compressor or just before equipment.
3. How dry does the air need to be?
Clarify whether the application is a standard use or a precision application requiring a lower dew point.
4. What operating burden is acceptable?
Maintenance, replacement, inspection, desiccant replacement, and purge air consumption should all be considered.
It becomes easier to organize the system when you think of dryers as devices that condition the air upstream, and point-of-use devices as protection against re-condensation near equipment.
Related articles: how to combine dryers with WELL AIR
After understanding the types of dryers, the next step is to understand why water can still appear just before equipment and how WELL AIR can be combined with dryers.
Recommended next articles
These articles explain the role of dryers and the concept of point-of-use protection just before equipment.
First, organize the right concept for your application
Whether refrigerated, desiccant, or membrane drying is suitable depends on required air quality, installation point, and piping conditions. It is safer to choose based on role and location, not only by dryer type.
- You want to organize the right dryer concept for your facility
- You want to understand why water still appears even after installing a dryer
- You want to include point-of-use protection in your system design
This article provides general information about the types and selection of compressed air dryers. When selecting actual equipment, please confirm required dew point, air flow, piping conditions, temperature environment, existing system configuration, and maintenance plan.