Calculation to convert Nl/min to l/min
5 Answers
Hi,
What you say is absolutely right. If you say "10 Nl/min it means 10 l/min in normal conditions, so it means 10 l/min at 1 bar (absolute)."
And when I say "50 Nl/min at 7 bar", what I mean to say is this:
50 Nl/min is the flow/capacity. (50 l/min at normal conditions). But the system is 7 bar. So yes, the l/min at 7 bar will be about 7 times lower.
About your situation: are you sure the compressors capacity is given in l/s at 7 bar (not Nl/sec). Very often, even compressor manufacturers use the wrong terminology.
If the word "FAD" (free air delivery) is used, that's (almost) the same as Nl/min.
For example: Capacity FAD: 99 l/s -- means: 99 l/s is sucked in and compressed to (for example 7 bar). So the output flow will be about 7 times smaller.
To be sure, compare your compressor to these examples:
- 15 kW air compressor running at 7.5 bar, gives 155 m3/h FAD
- 22 kW air compressor running at 7.5 bar, gives 217 m3/h FAD
Hope this explain it more :) It can be really confusing sometimes, even for me writing this right now :)
I highly recommend to check out my free course "Compressed Air Basics" - all this is and more is explained!
Good luck. Let me know if you need any more info.
Cas
Also, you need to consider that Nm3/h and FAD are not exactly the same. FAD flow will depend on atmospheric pressure (altitude) and ambient air temperature and humidity. I have found an excel conversion tool from Nm3/h to FAD here:
https://herramientasdeingenieros.com/conversion-de-nm3-h-a-fad-para-aire-comprimido/
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