"What size nitrogen generator do I need?" is the most common question buyers ask — and the answer depends on three variables: flow rate, purity, and usage pattern. This guide walks you through the sizing process step by step.
Step 1: Calculate Your Flow Rate
Start by estimating your total nitrogen consumption. For continuous processes, add up the flow required by each consumption point:
| Application | Typical Flow Range | Purity Required |
|---|---|---|
| Single laser welding station | 5–15 Nm³/h | 99.99–99.999% |
| 2–3 laser welding stations | 20–40 Nm³/h | 99.99–99.999% |
| MAP food packaging line | 10–50 Nm³/h | 99.9% |
| Heat treatment furnace atmosphere | 20–100 Nm³/h | 99.5–99.99% |
| Lithium battery dry room | 50–200 Nm³/h | 99.99% |
| Oil & gas pipeline purging | 100–500 Nm³/h | 99.5% |
| Chemical tank blanketing | 5–50 Nm³/h | 97–99.5% |
| Pharmaceutical inerting | 10–100 Nm³/h | 99.9–99.99% |
Rule of thumb: Always add 20–30% capacity margin to account for future expansion, peak demand, and system degradation over time.
Step 2: Determine Required Purity
Purity is the biggest cost driver. Higher purity requires more CMS, longer cycle times, and more energy. Purity selection should match your application without over-specifying:
| Purity | Applications | Relative Cost |
|---|---|---|
| 95–99.5% | Blanketing, fire suppression, tire inflation | Baseline |
| 99.5–99.9% | Food packaging, general welding, heat treatment | +10–15% |
| 99.9–99.99% | Laser welding, lithium battery, pharma | +25–35% |
| 99.99–99.999% | High-end laser, semiconductor, UHP applications | +50–80% |
Over-specifying purity by one grade (e.g., 99.99% instead of 99.9%) can increase both capital and operating costs by 15–30%. Use the lowest acceptable purity for your application.
Step 3: Match Compressor Size
Your air compressor must supply enough air to produce the required nitrogen flow. The formula is simple:
Required compressor FAD (m³/min) = N₂ flow (Nm³/h) ÷ N₂ recovery rate (%) × 0.06
Example: For 50 Nm³/h of N₂ with a PSA recovery rate of 40%:
50 ÷ 0.40 × 0.06 = 7.5 m³/min compressor FAD
For membrane systems with 25% recovery: 50 ÷ 0.25 × 0.06 = 12 m³/min — meaning you need a significantly larger compressor for the same nitrogen output.
Step 4: Consider Usage Patterns
| Usage Pattern | Description | Sizing Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Continuous 24/7 | Always running at consistent flow | Size to average flow + 20% margin |
| Batch/Shift-based | High flow for limited hours | Size to peak flow; consider buffer tank |
| Variable demand | Flow fluctuates throughout day | Size to peak flow + buffer tank |
| Future expansion | Planning to add more lines | Buy larger now; run at part load |
Sizing Examples
Example 1: Small Workshop (2 laser welders)
Flow: 20 Nm³/h × 1.3 margin = 26 Nm³/h → Select 30 Nm³/h PSA unit
Purity: 99.99% | Compressor: 30 ÷ 0.40 × 0.06 = 4.5 m³/min | Estimated cost: $30,000–42,000
Example 2: Food Packaging Facility (MAP + blanketing)
Flow: 40 Nm³/h × 1.3 margin = 52 Nm³/h → Select 60 Nm³/h PSA unit
Purity: 99.9% | Compressor: 6.5 m³/min | Estimated cost: $48,000–68,000
Example 3: Oil & Gas Pipeline (intermittent purging)
Flow: 200 Nm³/h peak, 50 Nm³/h average → Use 60 Nm³/h + 10 m³ buffer tank
Purity: 99.5% | Membrane may be cost-effective here | Estimated cost: $40,000–75,000
Need help sizing your system? Submit your requirements → — we'll provide a customized sizing recommendation and supplier quote within 24 hours.