Just a tip for getting air out of your bottles, methane/natural gas is lighter than air, if you turn your container upside down and start to fill it the methane will rise to the top and push any air/oxygen out the bottom. Quick - simple
Just stumbled across this video. I am looking forward to seeing more on this. Compressed storage has been my reason for not doing bio gas so far. Looks like problem solved.
@@andrewrobinson2869 Not everyone wants to run a compressor off the air-mattress or bladder storage. I have not ventured into biogas yet for that reason: I just do not want the hassle of storing biogas at atmospheric pressure, THEN having to pressurise it for use. I like the idea of using a air-compressor to at least partially fill an LPG cylinder, then use it like LPG.
Since being in lockdown because of covid 19 I have stumbled across biogas and my first thought was storage of the gas will be an issue. This is awesome! Thanks.
Nice build. A little concern on the safety side of thing. the lack of flashpoints and flash arresters on a build like this coupled with a nuffy could make for a bad mix.
Dealing with less than 1m3 of biogas here and roughly compressing to 700kPa (110psi), is a fire arrester necessary? When compared to liquid propane cylinders, it is compressed at 2MPa, which is much higher, but our stove burners don’t really have a fire arrester or flashpoints either.
@@jimmypchacko I'm a bit new myself but here's my best example. think of a tube going into the bottom of a pipe filled with water, the gas going through it rises to the top of the pipe leading into another tube, and there's a fire at the end of the tube at the top. If the fire moves backwards into the tube then it goes in to water instead of a bottle of gas that will explode due to all the gas igniting at once.
I suggest compressing the gas when the bladder is cold. This will reduce the kinetic energy in the gas compression and increase storage by 10-15%> if its freezing cold you may get an extra 15% as the compressor has more volume per unit ratio. Also there should be less thermal energy at the compression stage. I also recommend some mineral salt at the interstage between gas and stove. This will retain any excess moisture and also add color to the flame ..yellowish so it can be more visible at the burner. Rock salt should suffice.
I'm late to the party, but like the video. A couple things: sodium hydroxide is NAOH (Caustic Soda) , Bleach is NaClO (Sodium HypoChlorite Soln). Not sure which you prefer. Also, I was concerned about the combustion point of biogas under pressure, and would like to suggest cooling your compressor with water while compressing the gas. Thank you for sharing!
@@ss-sq1hn No to get the gas in to a liquid would require you lower the temperature down to fare lower then your freezer could get it and a regular take could not hold the pressure ones it was there.
@@marcrogelnagales2400 Yes and if you can pole a vacuum on it even better. Don't let your compressor get to hot or it may cause an explosion. Good luck.
Its compressed gas so it wont be a huge amount of volume. If it was super cooled to a liquid like propane it would hold more. Should stick the tank in dry ice or something to see if that works.
Safe as houses. Id suggest adding a cold bath(ice and salt) to chill the bottle. Get a lot more into it, gas pressure drops to 0kpa at -42°C. Maybe even go so far as to cool the pump head of the compressor for longer filling time before overheating.
The biogas must be dried and cleaned of H2S to store it like that. The pressure needs to be regulated as propane liquefies at a lower pressure than methane will. Also the coefficient of expansion is higher so you will want more head in the bottle. It's better to use the bigger size bottles. At 500 liters at stp of propane you will want about 70^ of that for a safe fill of methane in the tank.❤
Dude DONT EVER use quick disconnect fittings with any fuel as they leak over time, and if they start allowing air to enter the system during pressurization you are making a B O M B. The very best storage vessels I have used are inner tubes used on 18 wheeler tires, and they are easily joined together with tubing or hoses for long lasting gas storage.
Few questions here: 1. What was the total volume of the gas filled into cylinder? 2. At what pressure was it filled? 3. how much time did it take to empty the gas by burning continuously?
For smal, simple, home use, couldn't a person just put a weight on top the air mattress, so it's pressurized? Or do the same for any other pillow type pods? I would think that even an elastic band around it may work? Something that gives constant pressure on the bag?
great video and interesting. Just one thing. Sodium Hydroxide is not bleach its Caustic soda - like in drain cleaner. I have seen steel wool in a tube used to get rid of the unwanted component.
I love this! I see problems with the wood gas not burning hot enough.I’m very curious to see if you attached an oxygen bottle with the wood gas (like you would a propane torch to cut metal) would allow to combination to burn hotter more efficient/effectively and allow you to use stock size fittings and decrease the gas use and allow your utilities to work at normal operating ranges like they did with lng, or lp.
The reason as to why the gas isn't burning hot enough might be due to the percentage of carbon monoxide present. If that carbon monoxide were to weigh heavier than the usefull methane, for example, perhaps there's a way of separating both, without having to go through that much effort
Energy density of liquid propane is 270X it’s gaseous form. This video @120 psi is roughly energy density of 6.6x. Going further a regular propane tank has 440,000 btu while this would only have 29,000 btu compressed at @120psi. My math might be off a bit but those are rough numbers.
I skipped all this gaseation process by just shitting directly to my barbeque grill and then lighting the turd up! What a delighted natural smell over the sirloins it gaves to the barbeque audiences with their exclusive wines and ties with!
Center Enamel offers anaerobic digesters and biogas storage tanks for biogas project. We design, manufacture and install biogas tanks for more than 30 years.
I've been thinking about how to compress bio gas for a while and I envisaged a problem with using an air compressor like you have, that being the heat generated by the compression, but using a heat exchanger would solve that, however I thought about another potentially serious problem that might occur, especially as the gas volume drops in the primary storage (the air bed), this would be that outside air could potentially be drawn into the compressor cylinder past the piston rings from the crankcase via the crankcase breather. Any ingress of air in this way could lead to spontaneous ignition like a diesel engine, resulting in catastrophic failure, so I'm wondering could a diaphragm type pump be better suited to do the same job.
@@midnightblue69 yeah I came across a video last week showing how to make a refilling kit using a fridge pump, and a few other bits and pieces, fairly straightforward
Isn’t it possible to just run a hose from the air mattress, and go right to the propane stove? (I think the orifice needs to be enlarged, though, for the gas stove to work properly, eh?!?) Good video, as usual! Thanks, brother!
Great video, love your experimenting spirit! I am thinking if I can use a diving compressor to get the gas on 200bars bottled.. How you think the compressor designed for air will take the gas? Maybe I can build a temperature safety switch, add cooling and build a condensation section before entering the tank.. Any thoughts? Thanks !
I'm trying to heat my garden house on CNG. Scored a 126 liter CNG tank. But to bring the gas to the correct pressure for standard natural gas equipment (30 mbar), pressure reduction is necessary: CNG in a tank can have a pressure of around 200 bar! How to resolve that?
Unless you are replenishing the same material (air, chemicals or combustibles) you MUST purge the tank, vacuum works best, if your container can take it.
IF you can keep the temp of the bottle under 50 degrees then, "in theory" you could get about 280 litres of gas into that bottle just keep in mind that propane has a vapour pressure of about 130psi at 25 degrees C but methane is about 670psi but the bottle will vent at about 250psi, so you will never get it to a liquid state, but it is still a lot more than the propane in liquid form. Dont blow yourself up. putting the bottle in ice water may help, just a thought. Other than my concerns for your safety this looks great You may want to look at using liquid thread seal instead of the tape. you can get it at bunnings. The other thing limiting you may be the compressor itself just not strong enough to get higher
Any chance you could make a video about removing the hydrogen sulfide, CO2, and moisture from the biogas, showing how to create the items needed to remove them?
Bubbling and wire wool not stainless steel, packed into a 3 foot 2 inch diameter pipe feed in from bottom and out from top. This should remove all moisture . The hydrogen sulphide can be scrubbed out using activated charcoal filters. These also prevent blowback from the outlet pipe if the flame propagates back.
To clean up the bio gas use a filter that has some steel wool and some NaOH bleach solution to destroy the SO2. Then filter through some charcoal to remove some unwanted compounds. Next compress to a tank that can purge moisture and have the gas flow through a dryer and CO2 scrubber made of MgSO4 and dry NaOH. Then have a fine filter and compress into the tank. You will be left with clean methane of about 95% purity about 5% CO2.❤
You are very brave man 😅 i think compressors life will be quite short, in plant that i was building, controlling the quality of gas was one of the problems. You need to measure % quite often. Most likely your compressor will be eaten by corrosion quite fast. But cool experiment.
I seem to recall that an iron sponge filter will scrub out that hydrogen sulfide. That and a carbon filter should eliminate odor. Correct me if I'm wrong.
my guy just rolled the dice pumping a flamible gas through an aircompressor.. lucky you diddnt blow yourself up dude, you need a CMEP-OL to do this the right way
Hi, is there any risk of explosion using that type of compressor? It has a piston right? For example if you forget to change or add new oil, is it a risk? Or does the absence of oxygen minimize it?
absence of oxygen will. just keep everything cool. I would use a oxygen meter to make sure there is no outside air being compressed with a flammable gas..
take that one way check valve off the side of the air tank and add it before the gauge and you will be able to get more than 125psi in the tank and gas wont run back into the compessor
By chilling the Lp tank. Say nestling it in ice. Could the biogas condense . To get more volume into the tank. Would the pressure increase once filled to your systems capacity or reached it maximum ability . And removing it from the ice crib. To warm to ambient temp?
you are only getting 120 psi because that is what the compressor is set to produce i was thinking you could set up a sealed scrubber before the tank to act as a spark arrestor i would be concerned about getting blown up and would place a spark arrestor on both sides of the compressor head thankyou for vid and be safe
Main thing I'd be concerned over is the hydrogen content. On the highlander side of say 15%-20% by volume, your best bet is to not compress it beyond 50psi. At around 150psi, it can autoignite: that's how an experimental plant was turned into a crater in NM or NV, I dont remember which. They were trying to find new ways of storing pure H2. Best way to do it is similar to acetylene using carbon (graphite), but that poses a different issue altogether. If memory serves me right, NASA had a substance they discovered that enabled H2 storage in smaller tanks, but you basically had to irradiate the source material to create it, and good luck not having the feds show up on that one haha.
Are you using the lp fittings or did you have to change those to work with the biogas? I was wondering if getting this into a bottle was possible! Great video!
It's not very much. You can't liquefy methane at these pressures like you can propane, so the weight is something like 1-2% of if propane had been in the cylinder.
Hi I just wanted to know what the biogas hot water system in the background at 13.29min into your video was? Also is it Australian use approved? Where did you get it? Great video by the way!
You’re correct, in fact if you run a bubbler tank before the storage tank it will scrub the gas of hydrogen sulfide and it will burn blue flame like LP
You are using normal propan grill? And compressing biogas into the bottle is little bit dangerous 😬 but it works, thanks. Your bottle is about 15kg? And you commpress 500 liters in it?
Just a tip for getting air out of your bottles, methane/natural gas is lighter than air, if you turn your container upside down and start to fill it the methane will rise to the top and push any air/oxygen out the bottom.
Quick - simple
perhaps once partially filled turn upside down and open the tap to let air out then continue filling, Do you think that would work?
You can chill /freeze the bottles as well.
@@Dragonfiregum that’s what I was going to say . Put the bottle in ice water .
This is how they power the Thunder-Dome...These Aussies know their biogas.!
Bust a deal, face the wheel...
Just stumbled across this video. I am looking forward to seeing more on this. Compressed storage has been my reason for not doing bio gas so far. Looks like problem solved.
Why are you not just putting the gas into the aircompressor instead of gas bottle ?
Agreed
@@andrewrobinson2869 Not everyone wants to run a compressor off the air-mattress or bladder storage.
I have not ventured into biogas yet for that reason: I just do not want the hassle of storing biogas at atmospheric pressure, THEN having to pressurise it for use.
I like the idea of using a air-compressor to at least partially fill an LPG cylinder, then use it like LPG.
@@Tassie-Devil same
@@Tassie-Devil Try using a fridge/freezer compressor, far more efficient.
Beautiful. This process solves all the tar and mobility issues. The next step would be to use a high-pack compressor to a scuba tank.
The air compressor is also a vacuum pump. Vacuum your tanks and keep them cool prior to filling.
When filling, the outlet of the compressor should go through a metal coil, cooled by water. Tank should be in ice water.
Since being in lockdown because of covid 19 I have stumbled across biogas and my first thought was storage of the gas will be an issue. This is awesome! Thanks.
You might find a trompe to be interesting then. It uses flowing water to compress air, and in some cases it would work to also filter woodgas.
🏳🏳
This looks dangerous as hell. Your not supposed to over fill them tanks?
@@Mr0rris0 im pretty sure he knows how to look at a pressure gauge man.
Also LPG can run bike and cars! think about that! Build your Own LPG 4 wheel push bike or cart!
If you use an old fridge compressor you can get much more pressure and possibly get the gas to liquify.
Methane has to be at least -26 F before it would liquify. Not too hard compared to liquifying nitrogen. Definitely more approachable than LP
we need a biogas revolution!
Power our stoves with biogas
Run generators off grid with biogas
If you can run a generator can you also run a car?
Great to see someone with the same idea . Cheers!
Very smart, dude. I love your video. Thank you for your share. I appreciate a video well done. Cheers mate.
Nice build. A little concern on the safety side of thing. the lack of flashpoints and flash arresters on a build like this coupled with a nuffy could make for a bad mix.
Can you explain further for a newbie
Dealing with less than 1m3 of biogas here and roughly compressing to 700kPa (110psi), is a fire arrester necessary? When compared to liquid propane cylinders, it is compressed at 2MPa, which is much higher, but our stove burners don’t really have a fire arrester or flashpoints either.
@@jimmypchacko I'm a bit new myself but here's my best example. think of a tube going into the bottom of a pipe filled with water, the gas going through it rises to the top of the pipe leading into another tube, and there's a fire at the end of the tube at the top. If the fire moves backwards into the tube then it goes in to water instead of a bottle of gas that will explode due to all the gas igniting at once.
Flash arresters are easy and always a good idea. Commercial ones aren't very expensive and easy to make homemade ones
Flexi biogas an African start-up have a less intricate set up.
Enjoyed your video thanks.
Great internet. Giving solutions to all our dreams.
LOL of Course! An air mattress. I never thought of that. Like the vid bro, off to watch your other vids
Got to be creative haha 👍
Though I do like the air mattress, the Hindenburg comes to mind...
@@OkAtEverything-ProAtNothing When is the bouncy castle going up?
I suggest compressing the gas when the bladder is cold. This will reduce the kinetic energy in the gas compression and increase storage by 10-15%> if its freezing cold you may get an extra 15% as the compressor has more volume per unit ratio. Also there should be less thermal energy at the compression stage. I also recommend some mineral salt at the interstage between gas and stove. This will retain any excess moisture and also add color to the flame ..yellowish so it can be more visible at the burner. Rock salt should suffice.
Not bad thinking, it’s soon to get pretty cold here as we move into winter, so yer is imagine I would be a bit more in with cold gas.
I'm late to the party, but like the video.
A couple things:
sodium hydroxide is NAOH (Caustic Soda) ,
Bleach is NaClO (Sodium HypoChlorite Soln). Not sure which you prefer.
Also, I was concerned about the combustion point of biogas under pressure, and would like to suggest cooling your compressor with water while compressing the gas.
Thank you for sharing!
If you put the take in the freezer to get it cold then put it in ice to keep it cold. You should be able to get more gas in the tank.
Like that can i get liquid gas in my storage?
@@ss-sq1hn No to get the gas in to a liquid would require you lower the temperature down to fare lower then your freezer could get it and a regular take could not hold the pressure ones it was there.
So for example, after putting an empty tank in a freezer, the tank should be dipped in ice cold water while gas is being compressed? Am i right?
@@marcrogelnagales2400 If you evacuate the tank with vacuum then sucking some gas in it helps even more.
@@marcrogelnagales2400 Yes and if you can pole a vacuum on it even better. Don't let your compressor get to hot or it may cause an explosion. Good luck.
U should have weighed the can empty then show us the weight of the can wen full so we can see the weight in millilitres or kg
Its compressed gas so it wont be a huge amount of volume. If it was super cooled to a liquid like propane it would hold more. Should stick the tank in dry ice or something to see if that works.
@@shawn2789 enough pressure/low temperature would convert gas to liquid….
Yes I would love to know the weight of the gas able to be contained within the tank.
@@jessewilson8676that pressure is not attainable. There is as reason propane is supercooled.
Your compressing a gas not a liquid. The weight should be nothing .
Safe as houses. Id suggest adding a cold bath(ice and salt) to chill the bottle. Get a lot more into it, gas pressure drops to 0kpa at -42°C. Maybe even go so far as to cool the pump head of the compressor for longer filling time before overheating.
Nice job thank you! I.am getting it, just need to see what pieces of valve to buy!
The biogas must be dried and cleaned of H2S to store it like that. The pressure needs to be regulated as propane liquefies at a lower pressure than methane will. Also the coefficient of expansion is higher so you will want more head in the bottle. It's better to use the bigger size bottles. At 500 liters at stp of propane you will want about 70^ of that for a safe fill of methane in the tank.❤
Thank you for your video. Could you show us how you filter your biogas? We would love it!!! Thank you
He might not filter it, you can burn it without doing so .
Pass it through a radiator to cool it down before it enter the tank or else you might experience condensation in the tank after the gas is cool down.
Does metan condensation makes tank more dangerous, less useful or both ? Thank you.
@@adderalkebap4204 that's what I want to know
Dude DONT EVER use quick disconnect fittings with any fuel as they leak over time, and if they start allowing air to enter the system during pressurization
you are making a B O M B. The very best storage vessels I have used are inner tubes used on 18 wheeler tires, and they are easily joined together with
tubing or hoses for long lasting gas storage.
Thanks for confirming my thoughts.
This is very interesting. more videos needed. what if you use hard plastic containers to counter the corrosion issue?
So nice. Clear and simple. Tks sir
Few questions here:
1. What was the total volume of the gas filled into cylinder?
2. At what pressure was it filled?
3. how much time did it take to empty the gas by burning continuously?
any answer for this?
@@vincentlucero8367 200- 300 litres of gas, at 110 PSI, took an hour it was all in the vid bro
@@jadewilliams2846 hi sir can i reach you in WhatsApp?
@@jadewilliams2846 It was not a accurate measurement of time . This as he had a gas leak.
For smal, simple, home use, couldn't a person just put a weight on top the air mattress, so it's pressurized? Or do the same for any other pillow type pods? I would think that even an elastic band around it may work? Something that gives constant pressure on the bag?
great video and interesting. Just one thing. Sodium Hydroxide is not bleach its Caustic soda - like in drain cleaner. I have seen steel wool in a tube used to get rid of the unwanted component.
I love this! I see problems with the wood gas not burning hot enough.I’m very curious to see if you attached an oxygen bottle with the wood gas (like you would a propane torch to cut metal) would allow to combination to burn hotter more efficient/effectively and allow you to use stock size fittings and decrease the gas use and allow your utilities to work at normal operating ranges like they did with lng, or lp.
The reason as to why the gas isn't burning hot enough might be due to the percentage of carbon monoxide present. If that carbon monoxide were to weigh heavier than the usefull methane, for example, perhaps there's a way of separating both, without having to go through that much effort
Brilliant! Can you hook one of these bottles up to your car next please?
Energy density of liquid propane is 270X it’s gaseous form. This video @120 psi is roughly energy density of 6.6x. Going further a regular propane tank has 440,000 btu while this would only have 29,000 btu compressed at @120psi. My math might be off a bit but those are rough numbers.
Exactly what I was thinking about doing.
I skipped all this gaseation process by just shitting directly to my barbeque grill and then lighting the turd up! What a delighted natural smell over the sirloins it gaves to the barbeque audiences with their exclusive wines and ties with!
Center Enamel offers anaerobic digesters and biogas storage tanks for biogas project. We design, manufacture and install biogas tanks for more than 30 years.
your contacts please am interested
@@rogerslema4199 - www.cectank.com/anaerobic-digesters-and-biogas-tanks/
Center Enamel do you make septic tanks that double as anaerobic digesters? That seems like the best solution for homeowners
Great stuff pioneering
I've been thinking about how to compress bio gas for a while and I envisaged a problem with using an air compressor like you have, that being the heat generated by the compression, but using a heat exchanger would solve that, however I thought about another potentially serious problem that might occur, especially as the gas volume drops in the primary storage (the air bed), this would be that outside air could potentially be drawn into the compressor cylinder past the piston rings from the crankcase via the crankcase breather. Any ingress of air in this way could lead to spontaneous ignition like a diesel engine, resulting in catastrophic failure, so I'm wondering could a diaphragm type pump be better suited to do the same job.
Refrigerator or sealed compressor
@@midnightblue69 yeah I came across a video last week showing how to make a refilling kit using a fridge pump, and a few other bits and pieces, fairly straightforward
Ive been waiting to see if anyone came uo with a good way to store bio gas. Look's you have the answer
whats the explosive risk with using a combustible gas in a conventional commpressor? Would a diphram pump be better? (Albeit more expensive)
Not enough oxygen. No risk
Isn’t it possible to just run a hose from the air mattress, and go right to the propane stove? (I think the orifice needs to be enlarged, though, for the gas stove to work properly, eh?!?) Good video, as usual! Thanks, brother!
Great video, love your experimenting spirit!
I am thinking if I can use a diving compressor to get the gas on 200bars bottled..
How you think the compressor designed for air will take the gas?
Maybe I can build a temperature safety switch, add cooling and build a condensation section before entering the tank..
Any thoughts? Thanks !
I'm trying to heat my garden house on CNG. Scored a 126 liter CNG tank. But to bring the gas to the correct pressure for standard natural gas equipment (30 mbar), pressure reduction is necessary: CNG in a tank can have a pressure of around 200 bar! How to resolve that?
I wonder if putting the tank into a vacuum prior to filling it would help
Unless you are replenishing the same material (air, chemicals or combustibles) you MUST purge the tank, vacuum works best, if your container can take it.
@@arenotdiy would you use a cleaning agent like AC line set flush prior to putting it under vacuum? Thanks for the help
"ish" - A precise unit of measure used when working with high pressure
Maybe it would be good to put a condenser on the output to cool the gas.
Any experience using damp wood ash to upgrade the biogas / filter out the CO2?
Cool setup tho!
I need more videos on this about biogas as light.Thank you.
IF you can keep the temp of the bottle under 50 degrees then, "in theory" you could get about 280 litres of gas into that bottle
just keep in mind that propane has a vapour pressure of about 130psi at 25 degrees C but methane is about 670psi but the bottle will vent at about 250psi, so you will never get it to a liquid state, but it is still a lot more than the propane in liquid form. Dont blow yourself up. putting the bottle in ice water may help, just a thought. Other than my concerns for your safety this looks great You may want to look at using liquid thread seal instead of the tape. you can get it at bunnings. The other thing limiting you may be the compressor itself just not strong enough to get higher
Please tell me for how many hours can we use the gas filled according to you.approx
Any chance you could make a video about removing the hydrogen sulfide, CO2, and moisture from the biogas, showing how to create the items needed to remove them?
Moisture could be removed using a refrigeration system
Your light
Bubbling through water before compressing removes the CO2
Bubbling and wire wool not stainless steel, packed into a 3 foot 2 inch diameter pipe feed in from bottom and out from top. This should remove all moisture . The hydrogen sulphide can be scrubbed out using activated charcoal filters. These also prevent blowback from the outlet pipe if the flame propagates back.
GOOD info
dont you have to remove sulfur from the gas, or how are these metal particles looking ling like after 2 years of usage?
Thanks for the video! I have to say that your facial hair looks like a very good ratio of oxygen and fuel.
If that works with an air mattress it should work with a waterbed mattress. Thanks man
To clean up the bio gas use a filter that has some steel wool and some NaOH bleach solution to destroy the SO2. Then filter through some charcoal to remove some unwanted compounds. Next compress to a tank that can purge moisture and have the gas flow through a dryer and CO2 scrubber made of MgSO4 and dry NaOH. Then have a fine filter and compress into the tank. You will be left with clean methane of about 95% purity about 5% CO2.❤
Could this gas be used in a car engine? And could you compress the gas enough at home to compress it into a liquid?
Good job
We put nose weaner rings on cattle to stop them from suckling on the cows.
need an air conditioner vacuum pump to put a vacuum on the tank before filling.and let a little gas out of line to purge then fill.
You can use iron filing or steel wool as a scrubber.
Love this. Any updates about how it has gone using over time?
You are very brave man 😅 i think compressors life will be quite short, in plant that i was building, controlling the quality of gas was one of the problems. You need to measure % quite often. Most likely your compressor will be eaten by corrosion quite fast. But cool experiment.
Thank you so much for the video !
Maybe a fan ontop ofnyhe compressor heat fins to help disapate heat quicker.
I seem to recall that an iron sponge filter will scrub out that hydrogen sulfide. That and a carbon filter should eliminate odor. Correct me if I'm wrong.
Yes, this looks dangerous, without removing the sulfur the tank will corrode.
my guy just rolled the dice pumping a flamible gas through an aircompressor.. lucky you diddnt blow yourself up dude, you need a CMEP-OL to do this the right way
I think it's much easier to compress gas if you freeze the cylinder.
Why not use bicycle pump or use a tank that slips into another tank that holds water as a seal this way you loose none
Put the bottle in the coldest freezer you can get. If you manage -80C, you could get the gas to condense, under pressure.
Maybe I'm just dreaming. Lol
saludos desde argentina mi amigo muy bueno
Hi, is there any risk of explosion using that type of compressor? It has a piston right? For example if you forget to change or add new oil, is it a risk? Or does the absence of oxygen minimize it?
absence of oxygen will. just keep everything cool. I would use a oxygen meter to make sure there is no outside air being compressed with a flammable gas..
biggest risk if there's oxygen being compressed and using the gas with a stove and it back firing and exploding the tank..
I will like to have a direct contact to the biogas expert
Probably worth getting a large stainless steel gas holding tank.
take that one way check valve off the side of the air tank and add it before the gauge and you will be able to get more than 125psi in the tank and gas wont run back into the compessor
Do you scrub the gas at all before you compress it? To remove H2O, CO2, H2S, NH4?
Nice vid. Thumbs up.
If you addressed gas jetting I missed it. Did you have to modify the gas orifice, or just use either a propane or NG nozzle?
muy bueno mi amigo saludos desde argentina
Brother you are asking for a explosion 💥 electrical spark is all it would take you might want to think about using a air operated Haskell pump.
Been considering doing this with pcp air rifle compressor. Capable of 4000 psi.
By chilling the Lp tank. Say nestling it in ice. Could the biogas condense .
To get more volume into the tank. Would the pressure increase once filled to your systems capacity or reached it maximum ability .
And removing it from the ice crib. To warm to ambient temp?
you are only getting 120 psi because that is what the compressor is set to produce i was thinking you could set up a sealed scrubber before the tank to act as a spark arrestor i would be concerned about getting blown up and would place a spark arrestor on both sides of the compressor head thankyou for vid and be safe
Main thing I'd be concerned over is the hydrogen content. On the highlander side of say 15%-20% by volume, your best bet is to not compress it beyond 50psi. At around 150psi, it can autoignite: that's how an experimental plant was turned into a crater in NM or NV, I dont remember which. They were trying to find new ways of storing pure H2. Best way to do it is similar to acetylene using carbon (graphite), but that poses a different issue altogether.
If memory serves me right, NASA had a substance they discovered that enabled H2 storage in smaller tanks, but you basically had to irradiate the source material to create it, and good luck not having the feds show up on that one haha.
How much hydrogen do you think is in that tank that flowed for an hour.
How many psi does the compressor hold. You could use that as the bio gas tank I guess
Are you using the lp fittings or did you have to change those to work with the biogas? I was wondering if getting this into a bottle was possible! Great video!
Try vacuuming the tank down with a vacuum pump and it will suck most the gas in when u connect it to gas bag
Some valid info /Thank you.
Also that leak is probably coming out of your cheap gauge... probably want to get something with fluid in it to keep gas leaking out the gauge.
Am I the only one concerned about the spark from the compressor igniting the gas? Or am I over thinking it?
No oxygen
Smart answer👌
All I am saying is even a small leak in that threading could really mess up your day.
No. A small leak would still not do anything, you need optimal gas to O2 ratio.
Hello, I want to know what is the most appropriate amount of gas pressure inside an empty tube, please respond
So how are you purging the air from the propane tank before charging it with methane?
Did you weigh the tank and see how much gas you pumped in, in pounds ? Also you can use teflon tape for the threads.
It's not very much. You can't liquefy methane at these pressures like you can propane, so the weight is something like 1-2% of if propane had been in the cylinder.
@@Uejji that means it will more or less equivalent to propane or lpg gas is it.,?
You need an explotion proof pump and drain the air from the tank.
Hi I just wanted to know what the biogas hot water system in the background at 13.29min into your video was? Also is it Australian use approved? Where did you get it? Great video by the way!
Very informative and helpful, but boy do you need to sort out the sound. The mic is constantly picking up bangs and knocks.
I would think a refrigeration compressor would be safer. Refrigeration compressors compressed flammable gas everyday they're kind of made for it.
@Lucky Hill Farm i will be waiting for your response how I can compress pig Biogas
Did you check your audio quality sir?
To remove the hydrogen sulfide, you could put the gas through multiple aerators I think. I haven't done it myself, but it makes sense I think.
You’re correct, in fact if you run a bubbler tank before the storage tank it will scrub the gas of hydrogen sulfide and it will burn blue flame like LP
When you are compressing gas if you put a condenser coil before it goes into the tank wouldn't that lower the pressure so you can get more in?
How come your not using a water separator between the mattress and the compressor ???
time to test it on the BBQ, aims camera at the poeltry :P
You shouldn't fill any propane cylinder past 80 % to allow for expansion
Don't use lock tight use Rector seal for gas.
Would like to see if one could use that to run a engine similar to a Hyster motor which can run on LP gas
You are using normal propan grill? And compressing biogas into the bottle is little bit dangerous 😬 but it works, thanks. Your bottle is about 15kg? And you commpress 500 liters in it?