Hydraulic Fluid Decompression and How to Control It

photo credit eaton vickersOne of our readers wrote to me recently regarding the following problem:

“I have a problem with a large garbage compactor. Each and every time the valve cycles the hydraulic cylinder, there is a loud bang. What are the possible causes?”

Assuming this noise is being generated by the hydraulics, i.e. it is not a symptom of a mechanical problem, its likely cause is uncontrolled decompression of the hydraulic fluid.

This problem arises because hydraulic fluid is not perfectly rigid. The ratio of a fluid’s decrease in volume as a result of increase in pressure is given by its bulk modulus of elasticity. The bulk modulus for hydrocarbon-based hydraulic fluids is approximately 250,000 PSI, (17,240 bar) which results in a volume change of around 0.4% per 1,000 PSI (70 bar). When the volume change of hydraulic fluid under pressure exceeds 10 cubic inches (160 cubic centimeters) decompression must be controlled.

The compression of hydraulic fluid results in storage of energy, similar to the potential energy stored in a compressed spring. Like a compressed spring, compressed fluid has the ability to do work. If decompression is not controlled, the stored energy dissipates instantaneously. This sudden release of energy accelerates the fluid, which does work on anything in its path. Uncontrolled decompression stresses hydraulic hose, pipe and fittings, creates noise and can cause pressure transients that damage hydraulic components.

Decompression is an inherent problem in hydraulic press applications, which have large volume cylinders operating at high pressures (a garbage compactor is effectively a press). Although hydrocarbon-based hydraulic fluids compress 0.4% to 0.5% by volume per 1,000 PSI, in actual application it is wise to calculate compression at 1% per 1,000 PSI. This compensates for the elasticity of the cylinder and conductors and a possible increase in the volume of air entrained in the fluid.

So if the combined captive volume of the hydraulic cylinder and conductors on our garbage compactor was 10 gallons and operating pressure was 5,000 PSI, the volume of compressed fluid would be 0.5 gallons (10 x 0.01 x 5). This equates to potential energy of around 33,000 watt-seconds. If the release of this amount of energy is not controlled, you can expect to hear a bang!

How to control decompression

Decompression is usually controlled by converting the potential energy of the compressed fluid into heat. This can be achieved by metering the compressed volume of fluid across an orifice. A simple decompression control circuit, which will eliminate the bang from our garbage compactor, is shown below.

Hydraulic press decompression control circuit.

Hydraulic press decompression control circuit.

When the directional control valve (1) is activated to extend the hydraulic cylinder (5), fluid enters the cylinder via the check valve (2). Pressurization of the cylinder during extension closes the pressure reducing valve (3), so that when the directional control valve (1) is activated to retract the cylinder (5) the compressed volume of fluid is metered across the orifice (4). When pressure upstream of the orifice (4) falls below the setting of the pressure reducing valve (3) the remaining fluid in the cylinder flows back to tank across the pressure reducing valve (3). The sequence valve (6) prevents pressurization of the rod side of the cylinder before the piston side has decompressed and the pressure reducing valve (3) has opened. You can watch a 45 second simulation video of this circuit in action, here.

When it occurs, the effects of decompression can be very damaging to a hydraulic machine. Which means failing to control it can be a costly mistake. And to discover 6 other costly mistakes you want to be sure to avoid with your hydraulic equipment, get “Six Costly Mistakes Most Hydraulics Users Make… And How You Can Avoid Them!” available for FREE download here.

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