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Compression is a critical decision. It's often treated as an afterthought.

In biogas upgrading and renewable natural gas projects, the compressor is not a peripheral component. It directly determines plant availability, energy consumption, maintenance frequency, and compliance with grid injection requirements.

Yet in most projects, compression technology is selected late — based on familiarity, lowest quoted price, or catalogue availability. For plants running 8,000 hours a year or more, that approach creates long-term operational and financial risk that rarely shows up in the initial budget.

The question is not which compressor is cheapest to buy. It is which technology delivers the lowest total cost over the lifetime of the plant, for your specific gas composition, pressure requirements, and operating profile.

What this whitepaper covers

The guide walks through a realistic biogas upgrading scenario — from feed gas characterization to grid injection — and applies a structured evaluation framework across three compression principles.

  • The seven criteria that determine compression technology fit for continuous biogas applications
  • How rotary vane, liquid ring, and screw compressors compare across reliability, gas tolerance, efficiency, and serviceability
  • Why a higher upfront investment can reduce total cost for high-runtime plants
  • How system-level design — redundancy, variable speed drives, integrated monitoring — affects long-term performance
  • What plant operators and EPCs should ask before specifying compression technology
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Three technologies. Different strengths. One right answer for your application.

There is no universally superior compression technology for biogas. Each principle has genuine advantages — and real limitations. The correct choice depends on your operating conditions, not on what is most commonly specified.

Rotary vane compressors Designed for continuous, base-load operation. Rotary vane machines tolerate moist and contaminated gas well, deliver consistent performance over long service intervals, and offer predictable operating costs. A strong fit for plants where uptime and lifecycle cost matter most.

Liquid ring compressors The preferred choice when gas quality is poor, saturated, or highly variable. The liquid ring principle is intrinsically safe and mechanically robust, making it well suited to challenging process conditions and safety-critical environments. Efficiency trade-offs apply at higher pressure ratios.

Screw compressors Compact and capable of high flow rates, screw compressors suit flexible or load-following operation and projects where installation space is limited. Gas quality sensitivity and condition-dependent maintenance intervals are key considerations for biogas applications.

Closing line: Selecting the right technology requires evaluating all three against the same criteria — not defaulting to the most familiar option.

About Ingersoll Rand Engineered Solutions

Ingersoll Rand Engineered Solutions brings together multiple specialist brands and technologies — including NASH, Garo, Wittig, Elmo Rietschle, Gieffe, Transvac, Emco Wheaton, Hibon, Roots, and Robuschi — to solve complex compression and vacuum challenges across energy, industrial, and environmental applications.

Rather than recommending from a single product line, Ingersoll Rand Engineered Solutions applies a technology-neutral advisory approach: evaluating multiple compression principles against the same criteria and recommending the solution that fits the application — not the catalogue.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

There is no single best technology. The right choice depends on gas composition, required pressure ratio, operating hours, and maintenance philosophy. This whitepaper provides a structured framework to evaluate the main options — rotary vane, liquid ring, and screw — against your specific application requirements.

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