Figure 1. The heatless regenerative dryer can be a real workhorse if you understand its operational characteristics.
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This theory has been discussed and promoted over many years by many in the industry and even used by some people involved with dryer design and application. During the past decade, a great deal of research and testing has been focused on this subject. The results are that subjecting heatless desiccant dryers (Figure 1) to low-moisture inlet air actually delivers lower dewpoints because there’s less moisture to remove from the desiccant bed and, therefore, less work to be done.
Testing of a heatless dryer at a plant in Illinois revealed that, with a lower moisture load and lower inlet air temperature from the compressor, the unit regularly provides a -60° F pressure dewpoint during the summer and -100° F to -120° F pressure dewpoint during the winter. The primary driver that moves moisture from the desiccant bed is the low relative humidity of the purge rather than the heat of absorption.
At 100 psig, purge air that a heatless dryer requires for proper tower regeneration is found by dividing atmospheric pressure, 14.7 psia, by 114.5 psia (100 psig + 14.7 psia), or 12.7%. That is, to say, at a constant temperature, 12.7 scf of air at atmospheric pressure can hold the same amount of moisture as 100 scf of compressed air at 100 psig.
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The calculated purge rate is increased to 15% to compensate for the fact that the dryer doesn’t purge continuously, but it interrupts purging to re-pressurize, and the purge air leaving the desiccant approaches saturation. When a cubic foot of -40° F pressure dewpoint, 100-psig purge air is expanded into the regenerating tower, the purge air dewpoint drops to -70° F atmospheric dewpoint, which can hold seven to eight times more moisture in vapor form.
The expansion effect on the purge air dewpoint is the primary mechanism at work in a heatless dryer (Figure 2). The liberated heat of adsorption is a byproduct of moisture leaving the beads as the desiccant regenerates. It has a positive but limited effect on the relative humidity difference required to move the moisture. The effect of the purge air expansion, along with the significant volume of purge, is what makes a heatless dryer function.