A high-performance centrifugal compressor depends on one frequently misunderstood component: the compressor seal assembly. Seal integrity is critical to optimal performance and reliability across the entire system. A failure isn't just a minor leak — a compromised compressor shaft seal can trigger unscheduled downtime, catastrophic equipment damage, hazardous gas emissions, and costly environmental fines.
At their core, every seal in this application serves distinct and critical functions:
Keeping lubricating oil inside the bearing housing and out of the process stream
Keeping atmospheric air out of a closed-loop gas system
Keeping valuable or hazardous process gas in the compressor and away from the atmosphere
Preventing cross-contamination between different process zones
This guide, built by an engineer with over 20 years of hands-on expertise, clarifies the roles of different seal types, from a separation seal to a dry gas seal. It explains how to spot the early signs of failure, provides a systematic approach to diagnosis and prevention for any brand or model, and addresses the latest API 692 compliance requirements that are reshaping industrial sealing standards in 2026.
Foundational Insight: The Core Functions of Compressor Seals
The terms "air seal," "oil seals," and "gas seal" are often used interchangeably, leading to critical misunderstandings. Each is a distinct technology designed for a specific purpose and configuration. We also see an evolution in sealing solutions like the separation seal, which provides a barrier between the bearing housing and the process gas environment.
Understanding these distinctions is the first step toward implementing an effective compressor seal maintenance strategy. Each seal type operates under different principles, requires specific support systems, and fails in characteristic ways. Misidentifying a seal type can lead to incorrect troubleshooting, inappropriate spare parts procurement, and extended downtime
Common Types of Compressor Seals and Their Roles
There are four primary types of compressor seals used across industrial applications:
Air Seals — Used in oil-free air compressors to keep lubricating oil out of the process airstream
Oil Seals (Wet Seals) — Used in gas compressors to prevent process gas leakage using pressurized oil barriers
Dry Gas Seals — Used in high-pressure gas applications as a non-contacting, low-emission alternative to wet seals
Separation Seals — Used as a secondary barrier between the bearing housing and the primary seal environment
Each of these common types operates on a different sealing principle and is suited to a specific pressure range, gas composition, and operational requirement. Choosing the wrong type — or maintaining it incorrectly — is one of the most common causes of premature compressor seal failure.
How the Compressor Shaft Seal Maintains System Integrity
The compressor shaft seal is the most mechanically demanding sealing point in the entire system. As the shaft rotates at speeds often exceeding 20,000 RPM, the seal must simultaneously:
Maintain a consistent barrier against pressure differentials across multiple zones
Accommodate thermal expansion and shaft deflection without losing sealing effectiveness
Prevent oil, gas, or air from migrating along the compressor shaft into adjacent zones
Operate continuously for years between planned maintenance intervals
A well-designed compressor shaft seal is engineered to handle these demands. However, any deviation in operating conditions — excessive vibration, lube oil contamination, surge events, or improper installation — can accelerate wear and eventually lead to seal failure.
What Is an Air Seal?
In a typical integrally geared air compressor (like a Cameron TA-series or Ingersoll Rand Centac), the air seal's primary job is to prevent lubricating oil from the high-speed pinion bearing from contaminating the process airstream. These are commonly used in air compressors where clean, oil-free air is essential for downstream processes.
Primary Purpose: Oil containment. This seal creates a barrier between the oil-lubricated bearing housing and the dry side of the compressor where the impeller operates. The seal must maintain this separation across a significant pressure differential while the shaft rotates at speeds often exceeding 20,000 RPM.
Common Technology: Labyrinth seals and carbon ring seals are the most common types. They work by creating a difficult path or a close-clearance carbon throttle bushing that limits air from migrating. Labyrinth seals use a series of knife-edge ridges and grooves to create a tortuous path that restricts oil migration through pressure drops and velocity changes.
Operating Principle: These are generally non-contacting seals. An "air buffer," supplied from the compressor's discharge, creates a pressure balance that keeps oil from the impeller. The main compressor shaft can rotate freely without friction, which is critical for high-speed applications. The buffer air typically flows in both directions: some flows back toward the bearing housing (preventing oil migration), while some flows into the process stream (acceptable in air compression applications).
Typical Applications: Integrally geared air compressors, turbochargers, and applications where small amounts of air ingress into the process are acceptable.
Non-Contacting Seal Design for High-Speed Compressors
These are generally non-contacting seals. An air buffer, supplied from the compressor's discharge, creates a pressure balance that keeps oil away from the impeller. The compressor shaft can rotate freely without friction — a critical advantage in high-speed applications where contact-based seals would generate excessive heat and wear.
The buffer air typically flows in both directions: some flows back toward the bearing housing (preventing oil migration), while some flows into the process stream — an acceptable outcome in air compression applications where trace air contamination does not affect product quality.
This non-contacting design provides several operational advantages over contact-based alternatives:
No seal face wear from continuous rubbing contact
Lower operating temperatures due to the absence of frictional heat
Extended maintenance intervals due to reduced component degradation
Lower parasitic power loss across the seal assembly
Labyrinth Seal Configuration and How It Works
The labyrinth seal is the most commonly used air seal technology in centrifugal air compressors. Its seal configuration consists of a series of knife-edge ridges — machined either into the rotating shaft or the stationary housing — that interlock with corresponding groove features to create a tortuous, high-resistance flow path.
As pressurized gas attempts to migrate through the labyrinth, it undergoes repeated expansion and velocity changes at each groove stage. Each successive stage reduces the driving pressure, so by the time gas reaches the final stage, its energy is insufficient to drive meaningful leakage through to the next zone.
Key design parameters for labyrinth seal performance include:
Clearance tolerance — Tighter clearances improve sealing but increase the risk of rub damage during transient events
Number of stages — More stages reduce leakage but add axial length to the seal assembly
Groove geometry — Stepped, straight, and interlocking profiles each offer different performance-to-cost tradeoffs
Material selection — Aluminum, steel, and PEEK are common choices, selected based on operating temperature and chemical compatibility
Labyrinth seals require no external support systems, making them simple to maintain and cost-effective over their service life.
What Is an Oil Seal (Wet Seal)?
When compressing valuable or flammable gases, a simple air seal is insufficient. An oil seal, also known as a wet or mechanical contact seal, provides a positive barrier against gas leakage. These are reliable systems for high-demand compressor applications where zero process gas emissions are required.
Primary Purpose: To prevent process gas leakage from the compressor casing. In some designs, a simple lip seal may be used for less critical functions, though these are typically relegated to low-pressure applications or as secondary barriers.
Common Technology: A mechanical seal assembly consisting of a rotating ring (mated to the shaft) and a stationary ring (in the housing). A thin, high-pressure film of oil is injected between these two faces. The seal faces are typically made from materials like silicon carbide, tungsten carbide, or carbon, selected based on the process gas composition and operating conditions.
Operating Principle: This system relies on differential pressure. The seal oil is supplied at a pressure slightly higher than the process gas reference pressure, which can be checked with a gauge. This means only a small amount of clean oil leaks inward, preventing process gas from escaping. These systems require a complex auxiliary oil console (pump, filters, coolers, accumulators) governed by API 614 standards. The "sour oil" (contaminated with process gas) is collected in a drain system and must be degassed before returning to the reservoir.
Typical Applications: Natural gas compression, hydrogen recycle compressors in refineries, and any application where the process gas cannot be allowed to escape to atmosphere due to safety, environmental, or economic reasons.
Oil Seals in Oil and Gas Industry Applications
In oil and gas processing facilities, oil seals remain the sealing solution of choice for legacy compressor installations across a wide range of gas compositions. From natural gas pipeline compression to ethylene production, oil seals have provided proven, reliable containment for decades.
In the oil and gas industries, these seals must handle:
Aggressive gas compositions — H₂S, CO₂, and heavy hydrocarbons that can degrade seal materials and contaminate the seal oil
High operating pressures — Often exceeding 3,000 PSI, requiring precisely maintained oil injection pressure
Continuous operation requirements — Refinery and pipeline compressors often run for years between planned outages
Regulatory compliance — EPA and local environmental regulations governing allowable hydrocarbon emissions
Oil seals in oil and gas facilities are governed primarily by API 614 (Lubrication, Shaft-Sealing, and Control-Oil Systems) and, increasingly, API 692 (Dry Gas Sealing Systems), as facilities evaluate the transition from wet to dry sealing technology.
How Oil Seals Prevent Process Gas Leakage
The wet seal operates on the principle of differential pressure. Seal oil is supplied at a pressure slightly higher (typically 25–50 PSI above) than the process gas reference pressure. This differential ensures that only a controlled film of clean oil leaks inward across the seal faces — preventing process gas leakage from escaping outward to atmosphere.
The key components governing this process include:
Seal oil console — Provides filtered, temperature-controlled oil at precise differential pressure
Differential pressure control valve — Maintains the critical oil-to-gas pressure differential automatically
Sour oil drain system — Collects oil contaminated with dissolved process gas and routes it to a degassing drum before returning to the reservoir
High differential pressure alarm — Alerts operators to conditions where excessive oil injection may be flooding the seal faces
Any disruption to the seal oil supply — pump failure, filter plugging, or console malfunction — directly threatens the differential pressure barrier and can allow process gas to escape through the seal assembly.
What Is a Gas Seal (Dry Gas Seal)?

The dry gas seal is a non-contacting, dry-running mechanical face seal that is now the industrial standard for centrifugal compressors in critical services. It offers high reliability and eliminates process contamination from seal oil, representing a significant advancement over wet seal technology.
Primary Purpose: To prevent process gas leakage without using oil. This eliminates the risk of oil contamination in the process stream and removes the need for complex seal oil systems.
Common Technology: A cartridge system featuring a rotating ring with spiral grooves and a stationary mating ring. Often, this configuration includes a separation seal to prevent oil migration from the bearing housing. The seal cartridge is a complete, pre-assembled unit that simplifies installation and reduces the risk of assembly errors.
Operating Principle: As the compressor shaft rotates, grooves on the rotating face scoop up gas (nitrogen or other inert gases) and pump it toward the center of the seal. This creates a pressurized "gas film" that separates the faces by a few microns (per John Crane specifications), preventing wear during operation. A sophisticated seal gas panel is required, as specified by standards like API 692. The seal operates on the principle of hydrodynamic lift, similar to how a bearing operates, but using gas instead of oil.
Key Components: Primary seal (process-side), secondary seal (atmosphere-side), separation seal (bearing-side), seal gas conditioning system, and vent system for monitoring seal performance.
Typical Applications: LNG facilities, offshore platforms, petrochemical plants, pipeline compressors, and any application where high reliability and zero emissions are required.
Dry Gas Seal Configuration for Centrifugal Compressors
In a centrifugal compressor, the dry gas seal is typically arranged in one of three standard configurations, each offering different levels of redundancy and emissions control:
Single Seal Configuration:
One primary seal per shaft end
Suitable for non-toxic, non-flammable gases where some controlled leakage to atmosphere is acceptable
Lowest cost and complexity
Tandem Seal Configuration:
Two seals arranged in series per shaft end (primary + secondary)
Primary seal contains process gas; secondary seal provides backup containment
Gas between primary and secondary seal is vented to a flare or recovery system
Most common configuration in oil and gas applications
Double (Back-to-Back) Seal Configuration:
Two seals arranged back-to-back with a buffer gas injected between them
Buffer gas pressure is maintained above process gas pressure, providing positive inward purge
Used for toxic, highly flammable, or extremely hazardous gas services
Highest cost and complexity but maximum containment assurance
In a centrifugal compressor with a tandem dry gas seal configuration, each shaft end will contain its own complete seal cartridge, totalling four individual seal rings in a typical two-stage machine.
How Seal Faces and Grooves Create a Non-Contacting Barrier
The operating principle of the dry gas seal is elegant in its simplicity. As the compressor shaft begins to rotate, the spiral groove pattern machined into the rotating face pumps a small volume of process or buffer gas inward toward the sealing dam — a smooth, ungrooved annular region between the spiral groove tips and the inner diameter of the rotating face.
This inward gas pumping action generates a hydrodynamic pressure that acts on the seal faces and pushes them apart against the closing force of the spring and process gas pressure. At operating speed, a precise equilibrium is established where the seal faces are separated by a gap of approximately 3–5 microns — about one-twentieth the diameter of a human hair.
This gap is stable across a wide range of operating conditions because it is self-regulating: if external forces push the faces closer together, the increased pumping action in the grooves generates higher separating force that restores the gap. If forces pull the faces apart, the reduced pumping action allows the spring and gas pressure to close the gap back to equilibrium.
Critical design features of the groove pattern include:
Spiral groove geometry — The angle, depth, and width of the spiral arms determine the pumping efficiency and the operating film stiffness
Groove depth — Typically 2–8 microns; shallower grooves run cooler but are more sensitive to contamination
Number of grooves — Usually 8–16 per face, balanced to provide uniform circumferential pressure distribution
Sealing dam width — Controls the balance between pumping force and leakage flow across the gap
Stationary Ring Function in a Dry Gas Seal Assembly
In a dry gas seal assembly, the stationary ring (also called the mating ring or seat) serves a critical but often underappreciated role. While the rotating ring drives the aerodynamic pumping action through its spiral groove pattern, the stationary ring must:
Provide a mirror-flat mating surface for the rotating face to run against
Respond to axial shaft movement and vibration through the spring-loaded mounting system
Maintain precise face flatness (typically less than 1 helium light band, or approximately 0.3 microns) under thermal and mechanical loading
Serve as the primary heat sink for any frictional energy generated during start-up and shutdown
The stationary ring is typically mounted in a flexible housing that allows it to follow axial shaft movements of up to several millimeters without breaking the seal. This axial compliance is what allows the dry gas seal to survive compressor surge events and other transient conditions that would destroy a rigid seal assembly.
Materials commonly used for the stationary ring include:
Silicon carbide (SiC) — Extremely hard, chemically inert, excellent for most hydrocarbon services
Tungsten carbide (WC) — High toughness, preferred where impact resistance is important
Carbon graphite — Self-lubricating, suitable for lower-pressure applications and as the rotating face material
Understanding Specialized Seal Types
Beyond the three primary categories, several specialized seal designs address specific operational challenges in modern compressor applications.
Separation Seals
Separation seals serve as a critical barrier between the bearing housing and the dry gas seal cavity. Their primary function is to prevent bearing oil from migrating into the dry gas seal area, where even trace amounts of liquid can cause catastrophic seal failure.
Design: Typically a labyrinth or simple carbon ring seal supplied with clean separation gas (usually nitrogen or filtered air) at a pressure slightly higher than the bearing housing pressure.
Critical Role: In dry gas seal systems, the separation seal is often the unsung hero. While the primary seal gets most of the attention, a failing separation seal can introduce oil mist into the seal gas, leading to coking on the primary seal faces and premature failure.
Lip Seals
Lip seals, also called radial shaft seals, are elastomeric seals with a flexible lip that contacts the shaft. While not suitable for high-pressure or high-speed applications, they find use in specific compressor applications.
Applications: Low-speed shaft penetrations, gearbox seals, and as secondary barriers in multi-seal arrangements. Common in screw compressors and reciprocating compressor rod.
Limitations: Maximum surface speed typically limited to 15-20 m/s, pressure limitations of 1-2 bar, and temperature constraints based on elastomer material (typically -40°C to 200°C depending on material selection).
Cartridge Seals
Cartridge seals represent a significant advancement in seal technology by providing a complete, pre-assembled sealing unit. These are increasingly popular in both mechanical seal and dry gas seal applications.
Advantages: Reduced installation time, elimination of assembly errors, simplified maintenance (entire cartridge replaced as a unit), and consistent performance. The cartridge includes all sealing elements, springs, and hardware pre-assembled to precise tolerances.
Cost Consideration: While cartridge seals have a higher initial cost, they often provide better total cost of ownership through reduced installation labor, fewer installation-related failures, and shorter downtime during maintenance.
Seal Selection Table: Matching Technology to Application
Selecting the appropriate seal compressor technology requires careful consideration of operating conditions, process requirements, and maintenance capabilities. The following table provides guidance for seal selection across common industrial applications.
Seal Type | Primary Application | Pressure Range | Speed Limit | Compatible Brands | Key Advantages | Typical Lifespan |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Labyrinth Air Seal | Oil-free air compressors | Up to 10 bar | 30,000+ RPM | Atlas Copco, Ingersoll Rand, Gardner Denver | No contact wear, simple design | 10+ years |
Carbon Ring Seal | Integrally geared compressors | Up to 15 bar | 25,000 RPM | Cameron, MAN, Siemens | Low maintenance, proven technology | 5-8 years |
Mechanical Oil Seal | Process gas compressors | Up to 350 bar | 15,000 RPM | Sullair, Dresser-Rand, Elliott | Positive sealing, handles high pressure | 3-5 years |
Dry Gas Seal (Single) | Natural gas, air separation | Up to 100 bar | 20,000 RPM | John Crane, EagleBurgmann, Flowserve | Zero emissions, low power loss | 3-4 years |
Dry Gas Seal (Tandem) | Sour gas, hydrogen, toxic gases | Up to 350 bar | 20,000 RPM | John Crane, EagleBurgmann, AES | Redundancy, maximum safety | 3-4 years |
Lip Seal | Gearbox shafts, low-speed applications | Up to 2 bar | 2,000 RPM | SKF, Freudenberg, NOK | Low cost, simple installation | 2-3 years |
Pusher Mechanical Seal | Centrifugal pumps, low-speed compressors | Up to 25 bar | 10,000 RPM | Flowserve, Chesterton, AESSEAL | Versatile, field-serviceable | 2-4 years |
Metal Bellows Seal | High-temperature, cryogenic applications | Up to 40 bar | 8,000 RPM | John Crane, Burgmann, Flexibox | Temperature extremes, no dynamic O-rings | 3-5 years |
Selection Criteria: When choosing a seal compressor system, consider shaft diameter, operating pressure and temperature, shaft speed, process gas composition (corrosive, abrasive, or polymerizing tendencies), emission requirements, and available support systems (seal gas, seal oil, cooling water).
Industrial Compliance: API 692 Standards for Dry Gas Sealing Systems
The American Petroleum Institute's API 692 standard has become the definitive specification for dry gas seal systems in the oil, gas, and petrochemical industries. Released to supersede the older API 614 standard, API 692 provides more stringent requirements for seal gas conditioning, system design, and performance monitoring.
Key API 692 Requirements
Filtration Standards: The standard mandates specific filtration requirements to protect seal faces from particulate contamination:
Primary and Separation Gas: 1 μm spherical particle rating with 99.9% removal efficiency (Beta=1000)
Secondary Seal Gas: 10 μm spherical particle rating with 99% removal efficiency (Beta=100)
Filter Differential Pressure: Must not exceed specified limits to avoid affecting compressor performance
Coalescer Performance: High-efficiency liquid/gas coalescers are required to remove liquid droplets from the seal gas supply. Even microscopic liquid droplets can cause seal face coking and catastrophic failure. Coalescers must achieve 99.97% removal of droplets larger than 0.3 μm.
Gas Quality Specifications: Seal gas must meet strict cleanliness standards:
Dewpoint at least 10°C below minimum seal temperature
Particulate content less than 1 mg/m³
No liquid carryover
Free of polymerizing or coking compounds
System Design Requirements: API 692 specifies comprehensive design criteria for the entire seal gas conditioning system, including redundant filtration, pressure control, flow monitoring, and alarm systems. The standard requires that the system can maintain seal gas supply during filter changeout without shutting down the compressor.
Compliance Benefits
Facilities that implement API 692-compliant systems report significant improvements in seal reliability. Industry data shows that properly conditioned seal gas can extend dry gas seal life by 200-300% compared to systems using inadequately filtered gas. The investment in compliant conditioning systems typically pays for itself within 18-24 months through reduced seal failures and extended maintenance intervals.
Documentation Requirements: API 692 mandates comprehensive documentation including seal gas flow diagrams, material specifications, and maintenance procedures. This documentation is essential for insurance compliance and regulatory audits.
Retrofit Considerations: Many facilities with older API 614 systems are upgrading to API 692 compliance. Turbo Airtech specializes in these retrofits, providing engineered approaches that meet the new standard while minimizing downtime and capital investment.
Early Warning Signs & Symptoms of Seal Failure
Recognizing the early symptoms of seal degradation is key to preventing catastrophic failure. Each seal type presents specific warning signs that, when identified early, allow for planned maintenance rather than emergency shutdowns.
Labyrinth & Air Seal Failure Symptoms
Oil in the System: The most obvious sign is visible oil at the compressed air discharge or fouling downstream equipment. This may appear as oil mist in the air stream, oil accumulation in aftercoolers, or oil carryover to air dryers and receivers. Even small amounts of oil contamination can damage pneumatic tools and contaminate products in food, pharmaceutical, or electronics manufacturing.
Increased Oil Consumption: An unexplained drop in the lube oil reservoir indicates oil is migrating past the air seal. Monitor makeup oil consumption rates and investigate any increase of more than 10% from baseline. This often precedes visible oil carryover by several weeks, providing an early warning opportunity.
Vibrations: A severely worn labyrinth seal can increase the radial clearance around the compressor shaft, contributing to higher rotational vibration. While vibration increases have many potential causes, seal wear should be considered if vibration increases coincide with changes in oil consumption or discharge air quality.
Pressure Imbalance: Changes in the buffer air pressure or flow rate can indicate seal degradation. Most systems include instrumentation to monitor buffer air consumption; increases of 20% or more warrant investigation.
Oil (Mechanical) Seal Failure Symptoms
High Sour Oil Flow: An increase in flow from the sour oil drain is a primary indicator the seal is failing. Normal sour oil flow rates are typically 0.5-2 liters per hour; rates exceeding 5 liters per hour indicate significant seal leakage. This "sour" oil is contaminated with process gas and must be degassed before reuse.
Inability to Maintain Differential Pressure: If the system struggles to maintain the required pressure and flow differential between seal oil supply and process gas reference pressure, it points to a significant leak at the seal faces. The seal oil system should maintain a differential pressure of 1.5-2.5 bar above process pressure; inability to maintain this differential despite increased pump output indicates seal failure.
Gas in the Oil Reservoir: Severe seal leakage can allow process gas to contaminate the seal oil, causing foaming, reduced lubrication effectiveness, and potential safety hazards if the process gas is flammable. Visual inspection of the seal oil reservoir for bubbling or foam is a simple but effective monitoring technique.
Temperature Increases: Failing seal faces generate additional friction, causing temperature increases in the seal housing. Most systems include temperature sensors; increases of 10-15°C above normal operating temperature warrant immediate investigation.
Vibration Changes: Like air seals, mechanical seal wear can contribute to increased shaft vibration, particularly if seal face damage allows the shaft to move radially within the seal housing.
Dry Gas Seal Failure Symptoms
High Primary Vent Leakage: A high-leakage alarm on the seal gas panel is the most direct indicator of a problem with the primary seal. Normal primary vent flow is typically 5-20 standard cubic feet per hour (SCFH); flows exceeding 50 SCFH indicate seal degradation. Flows above 100 SCFH require immediate shutdown to prevent catastrophic failure.
Contamination Alarms: A high differential pressure alarm across the seal gas filter indicates a contaminated supply, which will destroy the dry gas seal if not corrected. Filter DP should typically remain below 1.5 bar; higher values indicate particulate loading or liquid carryover that must be addressed.
Secondary Seal Pressure Increase: In a tandem seal arrangement, a rise in the intermediate chamber pressure indicates the primary seal is failing and passing excess gas to the secondary seal. This points to an issue with the primary sealing segment. These secondary seals are critical for safe operation and are designed as a backup, not for continuous duty with high leakage from the primary seal.
Seal Gas Temperature Rise: Increased friction from seal face contact causes temperature increases in the seal gas supply and vent lines. Temperature increases of 20°C or more above normal indicate potential seal face contact.
Acoustic Emissions: Some facilities use acoustic monitoring to detect seal face contact. The high-frequency sound generated by face contact is distinctive and can provide early warning before leakage increases become significant.
A Step-by-Step Diagnostic Process

When a compressor seal issue is suspected, a methodical approach is necessary. This diagnostic process helps pinpoint the root cause and prevents misdiagnosis that could lead to unnecessary repairs or continued problems.
Step 1: Data Collection & Analysis
Before touching the machinery, analyze operational data. Review trends for seal pressures, vent flows, and oil consumption rates over the past 30-90 days. A slow, steady increase in leakage points to gradual wear, while sudden changes suggest a specific event (process upset, contamination incident, or mechanical damage).
Compare current readings to the original commissioning data for that compressor model. Many facilities lose track of baseline performance data, making it difficult to assess whether current performance is acceptable. If commissioning data is unavailable, compare to sister units or manufacturer specifications.
Check maintenance logs for recent work. Seal problems often appear shortly after maintenance if installation was incorrect or if contamination was introduced during the work. Review any recent process changes, upsets, or unusual operating conditions that might have stressed the seal system.
Key Data Points to Review:
Seal gas supply pressure and flow rate (for dry gas seals)
Primary and secondary vent flow rates
Seal oil supply pressure and differential pressure (for mechanical seals)
Sour oil drain flow rate
Bearing housing pressure
Separation gas flow rate
Compressor discharge pressure and temperature
Shaft vibration trends
Any recent alarms or trips
Step 2: On-Site Inspection
Perform a physical walk-down of the equipment. For an oil seal, check the flow rate and temperature of the sour oil trap. Flow rates should be measured with a calibrated flow meter or by timing the fill rate of a graduated container. Temperature should be checked with a contact thermometer or infrared gun.
For a dry gas seal, observe the flow meter on the primary vent line. Many systems use rotameters that can be read visually; make sure the float is stable and not bouncing, which could indicate pulsating flow from seal face contact. Check the seal gas filter differential pressure gauge and note any discoloration or contamination visible in the filter bowl (if equipped with a sight glass).
Use an ultrasonic leak detector to pinpoint gas leaks around the seal housing. These instruments can detect leaks that are not visible or audible, particularly in noisy plant environments. Pay particular attention to the seal vent connections, seal housing flanges, and any penetrations in the seal housing.
Physical Inspection Checklist:
Visual inspection for oil leaks, gas leaks, or unusual discoloration
Check all instrumentation for proper operation
Verify seal gas supply pressure and temperature
Inspect filter housings for proper installation and condition
Check vent line routing for restrictions or blockages
Verify cooling water flow (if applicable)
Inspect seal housing for signs of overheating or vibration damage
Check shaft runout and alignment (if accessible)
Step 3: Analyze the Support System
Seal failures are often caused by a problem with their support system rather than the seal itself. For dry gas seals, verify that the seal gas conditioning system is operating correctly:
Filter Condition: Check differential pressure across all filters. Replace if DP exceeds manufacturer limits.
Coalescer Performance: Verify that coalescers are removing liquid droplets. Some systems include sight glasses that allow visual verification.
Gas Quality: If possible, sample the seal gas for particulate content, dewpoint, and hydrocarbon content.
Pressure Control: Verify that pressure control valves are maintaining correct seal gas supply pressure across all operating conditions.
For mechanical oil seals, verify the seal oil system:
Oil Quality: Sample and analyze seal oil for contamination, viscosity, and additive depletion.
Filter Condition: Check oil filter differential pressure and condition.
Pump Performance: Verify seal oil pump is delivering rated flow and pressure.
Cooler Performance: Check seal oil temperature and cooler performance.
Accumulator Charge: Verify accumulator (if equipped) has correct gas charge pressure.
Step 4: Root Cause Analysis
Once data has been collected, perform a systematic root cause analysis. Common root causes include:
Contamination: Particulate or liquid contamination in seal gas or seal oil
Improper Operating Procedures: Incorrect startup, shutdown, or operating procedures
Process Upsets: Pressure or temperature excursions beyond design limits
Mechanical Issues: Shaft misalignment, excessive vibration, or bearing problems
System Design Issues: Inadequate seal gas conditioning, undersized support systems
Normal Wear: End of useful life for seal components
Document your findings and develop a corrective action plan that addresses the root cause, not just the symptoms. Replacing a failed seal without correcting the underlying cause will result in repeated failures.
Compressor Seal Replacement: 5-Step Maintenance Checklist

Proper seal replacement is critical for reliable operation and maximizing seal life. This checklist provides a systematic approach to seal replacement that minimizes the risk of premature failure.
Step 1: Pre-Replacement Preparation
Before beginning seal replacement, make certain you have the correct replacement seal for your specific compressor model. Verify the seal part number against the compressor nameplate and maintenance records. Using an incorrect seal, even if it appears to fit, can result in immediate failure.
Preparation Tasks:
Obtain correct seal kit or cartridge (verify part number)
Review manufacturer's installation instructions
Gather required tools and equipment
Prepare clean workspace with adequate lighting
Obtain new gaskets, O-rings, and fasteners (never reuse)
Verify availability of seal gas or seal oil for commissioning
Review lockout/tagout procedures and obtain necessary permits
Notify operations of expected downtime
Critical: Never attempt to "make do" with an incorrect seal or reuse sealing elements. The cost of the correct parts is trivial compared to the cost of a premature failure.
Step 2: Removal and Inspection
Follow proper lockout/tagout procedures before beginning work. Depressurize the compressor and seal support systems completely. Drain seal oil systems and purge seal gas systems with nitrogen.
During removal, carefully inspect all components for signs of the failure mode. Take photographs of the failed seal for documentation and analysis. Look for:
Seal Face Condition: Scoring, heat checking, coking, or cracking
Secondary Seal Condition: O-ring damage, extrusion, or hardening
Hardware Condition: Corrosion, galling, or damage
Shaft Condition: Scoring, corrosion, or wear
Housing Condition: Erosion, corrosion, or damage
Document all findings. This information is critical for root cause analysis and preventing repeat failures.
Measurement and Documentation:
Measure shaft diameter and runout at seal location
Check seal housing bore for damage or wear
Verify seal housing face squareness
Document all findings with measurements and photographs
Step 3: Surface Preparation and Cleaning
Proper surface preparation is critical for seal performance. All mating surfaces must be clean, smooth, and free of damage.
Cleaning Procedures:
Clean shaft with appropriate solvent (avoid aggressive solvents that could damage shaft coatings)
Inspect shaft for scoring or damage; polish with fine emery cloth if necessary
Clean seal housing bore and faces
Remove all old gasket material from flanges
Verify all passages and ports are clear
Clean or replace seal gas or seal oil supply lines
Critical Areas:
Shaft surface at seal location (must be smooth and free of scoring)
Seal housing bore (check for corrosion or damage)
Seal housing face (must be flat and perpendicular to shaft)
All O-ring grooves (must be clean and undamaged)
Step 4: Installation
Follow the manufacturer's installation instructions exactly. Do not deviate from specified procedures, torque values, or installation sequences.
Installation Best Practices:
Use clean gloves to handle seal components (skin oils can damage seals)
Lubricate O-rings and seal faces with appropriate lubricant (specified by manufacturer)
Install seal cartridge or components in correct orientation
Verify all locating features are properly engaged
Torque all fasteners to specified values in correct sequence
Install new gaskets and O-rings (never reuse)
Verify seal is free to move axially (for mechanical seals with springs)
Check that seal faces are properly aligned and not cocked
Common Installation Errors to Avoid:
Incorrect seal orientation (primary seal facing wrong direction)
Over-torquing fasteners (can distort seal housing)
Under-torquing fasteners (can allow leakage or seal movement)
Damaged O-rings during installation
Contamination introduced during installation
Incorrect shaft end play or axial positioning
Step 5: Commissioning and Verification
Proper commissioning is critical for seal longevity. Never rush this process.
Commissioning Sequence:
Verify all support systems are operational (seal gas, seal oil, cooling water)
Pressurize seal gas or seal oil system slowly while monitoring for leaks
Verify correct pressures and flow rates before starting compressor
Perform slow roll (turning gear) for at least 30 minutes while monitoring seal parameters
Start compressor following manufacturer's procedures
Monitor seal parameters closely during initial operation
Verify vent flows, pressures, and temperatures are within normal ranges
Document baseline parameters for future reference
Post-Installation Monitoring:
Monitor seal parameters continuously for first 24 hours
Perform daily checks for first week
Document all parameters for comparison to baseline
Investigate any deviations from expected performance immediately
Acceptance Criteria:
Primary vent flow within manufacturer specifications
Seal gas or seal oil pressures and flows within normal ranges
No unusual vibration or noise
Temperatures within normal ranges
No visible leakage
Common Causes & Prevention Strategies
An effective reliability program moves beyond reactive repairs to proactive prevention to reduce maintenance costs. This includes having a plan for kit replacement and addressing root causes before failures occur.
Cause 1: Contaminated Sealing Medium
The Problem: For oil seals, particulate in the lube oil will score the faces, creating leak paths and accelerating wear. For a gas seal, liquids or dirt in the seal gas supply will lead to face contact, coking, and catastrophic failure. Even microscopic contamination can destroy a seal in hours. This impacts the entire compressor system and can lead to unplanned shutdowns costing hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Prevention Strategy: Implement a rigorous oil analysis program with quarterly sampling at minimum. Maintain oil cleanliness to ISO 16/14/11 or better for seal oil systems. For gas systems, make certain the conditioning system is properly sized with adequate filtration and coalescing capacity. Install differential pressure indicators on all filters with high-DP alarms. Replace filter elements before DP reaches maximum allowable limits. Verify coalescer performance annually by sampling downstream gas for liquid content. This is important maintenance that pays dividends in seal reliability.
"Contamination is the silent killer of seals. A single particle can initiate a cascade of failures that destroys a seal in hours. Prevention is always cheaper than replacement." - Industrial Sealing Technology Handbook
Monitoring Recommendations:
Monthly oil analysis for seal oil systems
Weekly filter DP checks
Quarterly coalescer performance verification
Annual seal gas quality testing (particulate, dewpoint, hydrocarbon content)
Cause 2: Incorrect Operating Procedures
The Problem: Rapid startups or process upsets can cause "reverse pressurization," where process pressure exceeds seal gas pressure, leading to catastrophic seal failure. Slow rolling a compressor with a dry gas seal without adequate barrier gas pressure can cause face contact and wear. Starting a compressor with contaminated seal gas can destroy seals in minutes. This applies to every application, from an industrial compressor to an air conditioning unit, though the consequences are far more severe in industrial applications.
Prevention Strategy: Strict adherence to the OEM's recommended operating procedures is non-negotiable. Develop detailed startup and shutdown procedures that include verification of seal system readiness. Train all operators on proper procedures and the consequences of deviations. Implement interlocks that prevent compressor startup if seal system parameters are not within acceptable ranges. Document all startups and shutdowns with seal system parameter logs.
Procedure Development:
Create detailed startup checklists
Implement pre-start verification of seal system parameters
Develop emergency shutdown procedures
Train operators on seal system operation
Implement interlocks to prevent improper operation
Cause 3: Normal Wear and Tear
The Problem: Secondary sealing elements like the O-ring and gasket have a finite life, typically 3-5 years depending on operating conditions. Primary seal faces gradually wear, though this wear should be minimal in properly operating dry gas seals. Springs lose tension, and hardware corrodes. Even in perfect operating conditions, seals eventually require replacement.
Prevention Strategy: Follow the manufacturer's service intervals without exception. This typically involves a complete cartridge replacement and overhaul using a proper seal kit during major turnarounds. Proactively replacing these "soft goods" with a compatible seal kit is far cheaper than dealing with an in-service failure. While principles are similar, note that an AC compressor shaft seal kit is very different from one for a centrifugal compressor. A full replacement is a key part of maintenance planning and should be scheduled during planned outages.
Lifecycle Management:
Track seal installation dates and operating hours
Schedule replacements based on manufacturer recommendations
Maintain adequate spare parts inventory
Plan seal replacements during scheduled outages
Consider condition-based monitoring to optimize replacement timing
Cause 4: Process Upsets and Excursions
The Problem: Compressor seals are designed for specific operating conditions. Excursions beyond design limits—whether pressure, temperature, or gas composition—can damage seals rapidly. Liquid slugging, pressure surges, temperature spikes, and composition changes can all cause seal failure.
Prevention Strategy: Implement strong process control to minimize upsets. Install pressure relief devices to prevent overpressure. Make certain adequate separation upstream of the compressor to prevent liquid carryover. Monitor process conditions continuously and investigate any deviations. Implement automatic shutdown systems to protect the compressor if process conditions exceed safe limits.
Process Monitoring:
Continuous monitoring of suction and discharge conditions
Automatic shutdown on high/low pressure or temperature
Liquid detection systems in suction lines
Regular calibration of process instrumentation
Investigation of all process upsets for potential seal impact
Cause 5: Mechanical Issues
The Problem: Shaft misalignment, bearing wear, excessive vibration, and shaft runout can all contribute to premature seal failure. Seals are designed to accommodate small amounts of shaft movement, but excessive movement causes seal face contact, uneven wear, and leakage.
Prevention Strategy: Implement a comprehensive vibration monitoring program. Perform regular alignment checks, particularly after any maintenance that requires coupling disconnection. Monitor bearing condition through oil analysis, vibration, and temperature. Address any mechanical issues promptly before they cause seal damage.
Mechanical Monitoring:
Quarterly vibration surveys
Annual alignment verification
Bearing condition monitoring
Shaft runout measurements during overhauls
Investigation of any vibration increases
Material Selection for Seal Components

The materials used in seal construction significantly impact performance, reliability, and service life. Understanding material properties and selection criteria is essential for maintenance professionals.
Seal Face Materials
Silicon Carbide (SiC): The most common seal face material for industrial applications. Excellent wear resistance, chemical compatibility, and thermal conductivity. Available in reaction-bonded (RB-SiC) and sintered (SSiC) grades. Sintered silicon carbide offers superior performance but at higher cost.
Carbon Graphite: Used for softer seal faces, typically paired with harder materials like silicon carbide. Good thermal conductivity and self-lubricating properties. Resin-impregnated grades offer better chemical resistance.
Tungsten Carbide (WC): Extremely hard material used in abrasive services. Excellent wear resistance but lower thermal shock resistance than silicon carbide. Typically used in slurry applications or where extreme hardness is required.
Ceramic (Alumina): Lower cost alternative to silicon carbide with good wear resistance. Used in less demanding applications or where cost is a primary concern.
Elastomer Selection
Fluoroelastomer (FKM/Viton): General-purpose elastomer with good chemical resistance and temperature capability (-20°C to 200°C). Suitable for most hydrocarbon services.
Perfluoroelastomer (FFKM/Kalrez): Exceptional chemical resistance and temperature capability (-15°C to 325°C). Used in aggressive chemical services or high-temperature applications. Significantly more expensive than FKM.
Ethylene Propylene (EPDM): Excellent resistance to steam, hot water, and caustic services. Not compatible with hydrocarbon services.
Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE): Exceptional chemical resistance but limited elasticity. Used for backup rings and static seals rather than dynamic O-rings.
Hardware Materials
Stainless Steel 316 (SS-316): Standard material for seal hardware. Good corrosion resistance and mechanical properties. Suitable for most industrial applications.
Hastelloy C-276: Superior corrosion resistance for aggressive chemical services. Used in sour gas, chlorine, and other highly corrosive applications.
Duplex Stainless Steel: High strength and excellent corrosion resistance, particularly to chloride stress corrosion cracking. Used in offshore and marine applications.
Seal Gas Conditioning System Design

For dry gas seal applications, the seal gas conditioning system is as critical as the seal itself. A properly designed conditioning system removes contaminants, controls pressure and temperature, and provides monitoring capabilities.
System Components
Primary Filtration: Removes particulate contamination to API 692 standards (1 μm, Beta=1000). Typically uses pleated filter elements with large surface area for extended service life. Should include differential pressure indication and high-DP alarm.
Coalescing: Removes liquid droplets from the seal gas supply. High-efficiency coalescers achieve 99.97% removal of droplets larger than 0.3 μm. Critical for preventing seal face coking and catastrophic failure.
Pressure Control: Maintains seal gas supply pressure at correct differential above process pressure. Typically uses pressure-reducing regulators with fail-safe design. Should include pressure indication and low-pressure alarm.
Flow Control: Some systems include flow control to maintain constant seal gas flow regardless of seal condition. This can provide early warning of seal degradation through flow rate changes.
Monitoring and Alarming: Comprehensive monitoring of seal gas supply pressure, vent flow rates, filter differential pressure, and temperatures. Alarms for out-of-range conditions with automatic shutdown capability for critical parameters.
Design Considerations
Capacity: System must provide adequate seal gas flow for all operating conditions, including startup and shutdown transients. Typical sizing is 150-200% of maximum expected seal gas consumption.
Redundancy: Critical applications should include redundant filtration with automatic switchover capability. This allows filter changeout without compressor shutdown.
Gas Source: Seal gas can be supplied from compressor discharge (filtered and conditioned), external nitrogen supply, or dedicated seal gas compressor. Source selection depends on process requirements and economics.
Dewpoint Control: Seal gas dewpoint must be maintained well below minimum seal temperature to prevent condensation. This may require heating or desiccant drying depending on gas source and ambient conditions.
Troubleshooting Guide: Common Seal Problems and Solutions
This troubleshooting guide provides systematic approaches to diagnosing and resolving common seal compressor issues.
Problem: High Primary Vent Flow (Dry Gas Seals)
Symptoms: Primary vent flow exceeds normal range (typically >50 SCFH), high-leakage alarm, possible visible gas leakage at vent.
Possible Causes:
Contaminated seal gas (particulate or liquid)
Seal face damage or wear
Incorrect seal gas pressure
Process pressure excursion
Shaft vibration or misalignment
Diagnostic Steps:
Check seal gas filter DP (high DP indicates contamination)
Verify seal gas supply pressure is correct
Review process pressure history for upsets
Check vibration levels
Inspect seal gas for liquid contamination
Solutions:
Replace contaminated filters
Correct seal gas pressure
Address process control issues
Resolve mechanical problems
Replace seal if damaged
Problem: Oil in Compressed Air (Air Seals)
Symptoms: Visible oil mist in discharge air, oil accumulation in aftercoolers, oil consumption increase, downstream equipment fouling.
Possible Causes:
Worn labyrinth seal
Insufficient buffer air pressure
Bearing housing overpressure
Damaged carbon ring seal
Incorrect oil viscosity
Diagnostic Steps:
Check buffer air pressure and flow
Measure bearing housing pressure
Inspect oil consumption rate
Check oil viscosity
Review maintenance history
Solutions:
Adjust buffer air pressure
Repair bearing housing vent system
Replace worn seals
Correct oil specification
Implement oil removal equipment downstream
Problem: High Sour Oil Flow (Mechanical Seals)
Symptoms: Sour oil drain flow exceeds normal (>5 L/hr), inability to maintain seal oil differential pressure, gas in seal oil reservoir.
Possible Causes:
Worn seal faces
Contaminated seal oil
Seal oil system malfunction
Process pressure excursion
Incorrect installation
Diagnostic Steps:
Measure sour oil flow rate accurately
Check seal oil differential pressure
Sample and analyze seal oil
Verify seal oil system operation
Review process pressure history
Solutions:
Replace worn seal
Change contaminated seal oil
Repair seal oil system
Address process control issues
Verify correct installation
Key Takeaways
Know Your Seal: Clearly distinguish between an air seal, an oil seal, a gas seal, and a separation seal. Each serves a distinct purpose and requires different support systems and maintenance approaches.
Trust the Data: Changes in vent flows and differential pressures are your earliest indicators of a developing compressor seal problem. Implement comprehensive monitoring and trending to catch issues early.
The Support System Is Critical: A seal is only as reliable as the oil or gas supplied to it. Invest in proper conditioning systems and maintain them rigorously.
Cleanliness Is Non-Negotiable: Contamination is the primary enemy of any high-performance seal. Implement API 692 standards for filtration and coalescing.
Follow Procedures: Proper startup, shutdown, and operating procedures are essential for seal longevity. Train operators thoroughly and implement interlocks to prevent improper operation.
Plan for Replacement: All seals have finite life. Schedule replacements during planned outages rather than waiting for failure.
Root Cause Analysis: When failures occur, identify and correct the root cause. Replacing a seal without addressing the underlying problem guarantees repeat failures.
The Turbo Airtech Advantage
Diagnosing a stubborn compressor seal issue or considering a system upgrade requires deep, OEM-agnostic expertise. The symptoms of a failing labyrinth seal on a Cameron TA-2000 are different from those of a failing tandem gas seal on a high-pressure compressor. Understanding these nuances requires years of field experience across multiple platforms and applications.
The team at Turbo Airtech brings two decades of field experience across all major OEM platforms including Atlas Copco, Ingersoll Rand, Sullair, Cameron, Elliott, Dresser-Rand, and others. We specialize in complex diagnostics and providing engineered sealing approaches that improve performance and reliability. We are a leading source for compressor parts and seal products, offering both OEM and high-quality aftermarket options.
Our services include:
Technical Consultation: Expert diagnosis of seal problems with root cause analysis
Seal Selection: Engineering support for selecting the optimal seal technology for your application
API 692 Compliance: Design and supply of compliant seal gas conditioning systems
Installation Support: On-site technical support for seal installation and commissioning
Training: Operator and maintenance training on seal systems and proper procedures
Spare Parts: Comprehensive inventory of seal components and kits for all major brands
If you are facing a seal-related challenge, contact us for a technical consultation. We can provide the right approach and seal kit for your needs, backed by the expertise to guarantee successful implementation.
References
API Standard 692 : Dry Gas Seal Systems for Axial, Centrifugal, and Rotary Screw Compressors
API Standard 614 : Lubrication, Shaft-Sealing, and Oil-Control Systems and Auxiliaries
API Standard 682 : Pumps—Shaft Sealing Systems for Centrifugal and Rotary Pumps
John Crane Technical Publications on Dry Gas Seal Technology
ISO 16/14/11 : Cleanliness Code for Hydraulic Fluids
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