Compressed Air | Technical Encyclopedia & Energy Optimization
Manufacturing Industry Guide - 2026 Edition

Master Your
Compressed Air

From thermodynamics to IoT control: reduce your pneumatic energy consumption by up to 35%

10–15%
of a plant's
electricity bill
30%
lost to leaks
on average
<2 years
typical
return on investment
10
technical
chapters

Start
CHAPTER 1

Introduction: Compressed Air, the 4th Energy Source

Compressed air is often called the "fourth energy fluid" after electricity, gas, and water. In a typical manufacturing plant - automotive, food processing, textiles, rubber, plastics - it represents 10 to 15% of total electricity consumption. A compressed air failure almost systematically leads to production stoppage.

The advantages are numerous: safety in explosive atmospheres, robustness of tools, simplicity of implementation. But this ease hides a major energy cost: producing 1 Nm³ of compressed air at 7 bar requires approximately 0.12 to 0.16 kWh, and only 10 to 15% of this energy is delivered to the point of use. The rest is lost as heat, leaks, and pressure drops.

Figure 1 - Complete Pneumatic Energy Chain
INTAKEAmbient air 1 bar COMPRESSOR100% electrical energy TREATMENTDrying - Filtration NETWORKDistribution - Leaks USE10–15% delivered Heat −70% Leaks −30%
Goal of this guide: provide you with the theoretical and practical tools to analyze each link in the pneumatic chain, from production to usage, in order to identify and quantify savings opportunities.
CHAPTER 2

Thermodynamic Fundamentals & Definitions

Mastering compressed air begins with understanding the physical quantities that characterize it. Confusing relative and absolute pressure, or real and standard flow rates, can lead to sizing errors of 20%.

2.1 Pressure: Relative, Absolute, Differential

Gauge pressure (bar g): read on a pressure gauge. This is the pressure above atmospheric pressure.

Absolute pressure (bar a): gauge pressure + atmospheric pressure (~1.013 bar at sea level). All thermodynamic calculations use absolute pressure.

Pabs = Pgauge + 1.013 (bar)

2.2 Flow Rates: Actual, Standard, Mass

Actual flow rate (m³/h): volume measured at actual conditions.

Standard cubic meter (Nm³/h): volume converted to fixed reference conditions (0 °C, 1.01325 bar a). This is the universal unit for comparison.

1 Nm³/h ≈ 1.2 kg/h (dry air at 0 °C)

2.3 Specific Energy (kWh/Nm³) - Key KPI

Specific energy is the key performance indicator of an installation. It measures the electrical energy consumed to produce a standard volume of air.

Specific Energy = Total Power (kW) / Flow Rate (Nm³/h)

A good ratio is between 0.110 and 0.130 kWh/Nm³ at 7 bar for modern screw compressors. Above 0.140 kWh/Nm³, an investigation is necessary.

Figure 2 - Specific Energy (kWh/Nm³) vs. Load Factor (%)
Specific Energy (kWh/Nm³) Load Factor (%) 0.100 0.110 0.120 0.130 0.140 0.150 VSD ON/OFF Throttling ⚠️ Area to investigate (specific energy > 0.140 kWh/Nm³) VSD - Variable Speed Drive ON/OFF - Start/Stop Inlet throttling
Figure 3 - P-V Diagram: Compression Cycles
Pressure P (bar a) Volume V (m³) Isothermal (ideal) Polytropic (real) Adiabatic Area = compression work W (J) ↓ Isothermal minimizes work

Wattnow Application

Our sensors continuously measure pressure, temperature, and flow rate. Specific energy is calculated in real-time with alerts for abnormal deviations.

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The 8 chapters that make a
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Access field-tested methods: leak calculations, network sizing, advanced regulation, and quantified case studies.

Chapter 3 - Compression TechnologiesScrew, piston, centrifugal: which compressor for which load profile?
Chapter 4 - Regulation & SavingsVSD vs ON/OFF vs throttling: calculating real gains
Chapter 5 - Drying & Filtration ISO 8573Choosing and sizing treatment according to required air quality
Chapter 6 - Networks: Pressure DropsCalculation, velocity, optimal diameter
Chapter 7 - Leak Calculation & CostMeasurement methods, reduction plan
Chapter 8 - Manufacturing Case StudyAssessment, action plan, quantified savings
Chapter 9 - IoT & Real-time KPIsSensor architecture, CUSUM, predictive alerts
Chapter 10 - Technical AppendicesCharts, calculation tables, orders of magnitude
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CHAPTER 3

In-Depth Compression Technologies

Two main families are distinguished: positive displacement compressors and dynamic compressors. The choice depends on flow rate, pressure, required air quality, and load profile.

TypePower (kW)kWh/Nm³AdvantagesDisadvantages
Scroll2–200.115–0.130Quiet, oil-freeLow flow rate
Piston2–2500.095–0.110Good efficiency, high PHeavy maintenance
Oil-injected screw10–3500.105–0.115Robust, reliableOil in air
Oil-free screw30–5000.115–0.1250% oil air+50% investment
Centrifugal>2000.120–0.135Very high flow ratesEnergy-intensive blow-off

3.1 Oil-injected screw compressors

Most common in industry (10 to 350 kW). Two helical rotors rotate in opposite directions. Oil injection ensures sealing, cooling, and lubrication. Specific energy: 0.105–0.115 kWh/Nm³ at full load.

3.2 Centrifugal compressors

Reserved for high flow rates (> 2,000 Nm³/h). Air is accelerated by an impeller then slowed down in a diffuser. Their regulation by blow-off is very energy-intensive if demand drops.

Centrifugal case: blow-off (discharge to atmosphere) is pure loss. A poorly controlled centrifugal can consume 90% of its rated power to deliver 40% of the useful flow.
CHAPTER 4

Regulation Modes & Energy Performance

A compressor rarely operates at full load continuously. In manufacturing, the load factor often varies between 40 and 80%. The regulation mode determines consumption at partial load.

Figure 6 - Typical distribution of pressure losses in a compressed air network
35% 30% 20% 10% Pressure losses Coalescing filters 35% Piping (length) 30% Fittings, elbows, valves 20% Dryers & treatments 10% Others (take-offs, etc.) 5% Source: Analysis of 150 industrial networks - Wattnow 2026

4.1 Variable Speed Drive (VSD)

A drive adapts the motor speed to the exact demand. Ideal solution for highly variable loads (30 to 80%). Specific energy remains almost constant. Additional purchase cost: +50%, but profitable in 1 to 3 years.

4.2 Start/Stop (ON/OFF) with timer

The compressor alternates between full load and idling. Effective if load factor is > 70%. Idle consumption: 20–30% for oil-injected screws.

4.3 Inlet throttling

A valve limits the intake flow. Simple but penalizing: at 50% load, it still consumes 85% of rated power. Avoid if load varies significantly.

Centrifugal case: a poorly controlled centrifugal can consume 90% of its rated power to deliver 40% of the useful flow.
CHAPTER 5

Air Treatment: Drying & Filtration (ISO 8573)

Raw compressed air contains moisture, dust, and oil aerosols. Treatment must be adapted to the end use to avoid corrosion, malfunctions, and product contamination in the production line.

5.1 Refrigeration dryers

Cool the air to condense water, then reheat. Dew point: +3 °C. Low power consumption: 2 to 3% of compressor energy.

5.2 Adsorption dryers

Necessary for negative dew points (down to −70 °C). Regeneration with purge air consumes 15 to 20% of nominal flow rate.

5.3 Purity classes ISO 8573-1

ClassParticles (max/m³)Dew point (°C)Oil (mg/m³)Application
120,000 (0.1–0.5 µm)≤ −70≤ 0.01Critical pharma, electronics
2400,000 (0.5–1 µm)≤ −40≤ 0.1Fine instrumentation, painting
390,000 (1–5 µm)≤ −20≤ 1Pneumatic automation
4-≤ +3≤ 5Tools, blowing
5-≤ +7≤ 25General non-critical use
⚠️ Coalescing filters generate 0.2 to 0.4 bar pressure drop each. Replace cartridges regularly to avoid overconsumption.
CHAPTER 6

Distribution Networks: Pressure Drops & Sizing

A poorly designed network can cause 1 to 3 bar losses, forcing over-compression - which means +6 to 7% consumption per additional bar.

6.1 Pressure drop calculation in piping

ΔP (bar) = (L × Q1.85) / (50,000 × d5 × P)

L = length (m) · Q = flow rate (l/s) · d = internal diameter (mm) · P = absolute pressure (bar)

6.2 Sizing rules

  • Air velocity: 6 to 10 m/s in mains, 10 to 15 m/s in branches.
  • Slope of 1 to 2% in the direction of flow, with drains at low points.
  • Loop networks to reduce pressure drops and allow maintenance without shutdown.
  • Take-offs from the top (gooseneck) to avoid drawing condensate.
Economic impact: +0.5 bar pressure = +3.25% consumption. For 1,000,000 kWh/year, this represents 32,500 kWh/year or ~€3,900/year of pure waste.
CHAPTER 7

Leak Management: Detection, Calculation & Cost

Leaks are the most widespread source of waste. A leak rate of 20 to 40% is common in manufacturing industry.

7.1 Leak flow rate according to orifice size

Ø (mm)3 bar (l/s)5 bar (l/s)7 bar (l/s)Annual cost* (€/year)
1 mm0.60.91.2≈ €497
2 mm2.43.64.8≈ €1,988
3 mm5.48.110.8≈ €4,478
5 mm15.122.530.1≈ €12,470

*Cost calculated at 7 bar, 6,000 h/year, €0.12/kWh, specific energy 0.16 kW/(m³/h)

7.2 Overall leak rate measurement method

Qleaks (m³/h) = (ΔP × V_network × 60) / Δt

7.3 Structured management plan

Detection: visual inspection (soapy water) + ultrasonic detectors.
Repair: tightening fittings, replacing seals, hoses, quick couplings.
Prevention: train operators, install machine-specific shut-off valves.
CHAPTER 8

Case Study: Tire Manufacturing Plant

8.2 Initial energy assessment

IndicatorMeasured valueAssessment
Average flow rate7,527 Nm³/h-
Specific energy (production)0.129 kWh/Nm³⚠️ Upper limit
Specific energy (central)0.138 kWh/Nm³🔴 Needs improvement
Leak flow rate (holidays)2,537 Nm³/h🔴 33.7% of flow!
1
Leak reduction: 100 points identified → savings 1,269 Nm³/h.
2
Use optimization: drying nozzles, blow-off regulation → savings 658 Nm³/h.
3
Replace orifice flowmeters with low ΔP models → gain 0.3 bar.
4
Parallel control of two centrifugals via PLC → elimination of blow-off periods.

Final result

Consumption reduced from 7,527 to 5,600 Nm³/h (−25.6%). Overall savings: ~€340,000/year. Return on investment < 2 years.

CHAPTER 9

IoT & Advanced Energy Management

Connected sensors enable a shift from reactive maintenance to predictive and continuously optimized management.

Figure 7 - IoT monitoring architecture for a compressed air station
SENSORS ⚡ Power (kW) 💨 Flow (Nm³/h) 🌡️ Pressure (bar) 🌡️ Temperature (°C) GATEWAY Edge computing Modbus TCP / Profinet CLOUD PLATFORM Wattnow Analytics Specific energy calculation CUSUM algorithm Email / SMS alerts 5-year storage - ISO 50001 DASHBOARD Decision & action Mobile & web Real-time KPIs ① Measure ② Collect ③ Analyze ④ Act

9.1 Real-time KPIs

KPIFormulaAlert thresholdAction
Specific energykWh / Nm³> 0.130 kWh/Nm³Check regulation, filters
Leak rate(Q night / Q prod) × 100> 15%Ultrasonic detection campaign
Filter ΔPP downstream – P upstream> 0.6 barReplace filter cartridge

9.2 Early detection by CUSUM

CUSUM is a statistical technique that detects progressive drifts. Applied to specific energy, it identifies fouling or nascent leaks before they become critical.

Early detection example

At a plastic component manufacturing site, CUSUM detected an 8% drift over three weeks. Replacement of clogged filter: savings €12,000/year.

CHAPTER 10

Technical Appendices & Charts

A.1 Leak flow rates (l/s) - complete table

Ø (mm)2 bar3 bar4 bar5 bar6 bar7 bar8 bar
10.450.600.750.901.051.201.35
21.822.423.023.624.234.835.43
34.085.436.778.129.4710.8212.17
511.3515.0818.8322.5826.3330.0833.83

A.2 Equivalent lengths (minor losses)

ObstacleDN 25DN 40DN 50DN 80DN 100
Standard 90° elbow1.52.53.55.57.0
Full bore valve0.30.50.71.11.5
Filter (clean)4.57101620

A.3 Orders of magnitude - quick reference

  • Oil-injected screw full load: 0.105–0.115 kWh/Nm³
  • Oil-free screw: 0.115–0.125 kWh/Nm³
  • Centrifugal full load: 0.120–0.135 kWh/Nm³
  • Refrigeration dryer: 2–3% of compressor energy
  • Adsorption dryer (purge air): 15–20% of nominal flow rate
  • Gain per bar of pressure saved: −6 to 7% consumption
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