Air Receiver Sizing Calculator

System Parameters

Pressure Settings

Actions

Sizing Results

Pressure Differential (Ξ”P): -
Theoretical Receiver Volume (no margin): -
Design Receiver Volume (with margin): -
Recommended Standard Tank Size: -
Standard Tank vs Design Volume: -

Technical Notes

Variable Definitions

  • Q: free-air equivalent flow (FAD/demand) at standard conditions (mΒ³/s or SCFM basis).
  • t: required storage time (s).
  • Pa: atmospheric/standard pressure used as the reference for Q (kPa(a)).
  • Pmax, Pmin: receiver pressures (gauge) at cut-out and cut-in.
  • Ξ”P: pressure band (gauge), Ξ”P = Pmax βˆ’ Pmin.
  • V: receiver internal volume (mΒ³) reported as mΒ³/L or ftΒ³/gal.
  • SF: design margin factor applied to theoretical volume.

Formulas / Logic

  • Core sizing (isothermal ideal-gas approximation): Vth = (Q Β· t Β· Pa) / (Pmax βˆ’ Pmin)
  • Assumes Q is expressed as a free-air / standard volumetric flow at Pa.
  • Design volume: Vdesign = Vth Β· SF.
  • Standard tank selection: chooses the first nominal size β‰₯ Vdesign from the built-in list (L).
The formula is widely used for receiver buffer sizing when the receiver provides demand while pressure decays between two control setpoints.

Assumptions / Notes

  • Isothermal behavior (heat transfer to/from tank) is assumed; short drawdowns can be closer to adiabatic, which may reduce effective storage.
  • Pmax and Pmin are treated as gauge pressures; Ξ”P uses gauge difference (same as absolute difference).
  • Q should be FAD/SCFM at standard conditions (not the compressed volumetric flow in the receiver).
  • Very small Ξ”P leads to large receivers and frequent cycling; consider widening the control band if allowed.
  • Final vessel design must follow applicable pressure vessel codes, materials, corrosion allowance, and inspection requirements.

Standards / References

  • Ideal gas law basis (isothermal storage) commonly referenced in compressed-air engineering handbooks and receiver sizing guidance.
  • ASME BPVC Section VIII (or applicable local code) for receiver mechanical design and certification.
  • Compressed Air & Gas Institute (CAGI) and vendor application guides for receiver sizing philosophy and cycling control.
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