A Complete Guide to Scroll Compressors

A Complete Guide to Scroll Compressors Mar. 05, 2025

A Complete Guide to Scroll Compressors 

To understand the different types and technologies of compressors, we first need to understand the two basic principles of compressing air. These are dynamic and displacement compression. In this article, we talk about the scroll compressor. This is a type of displacement compressor with wide applications in air-conditioning and refrigeration systems, heat pumps, and cars. 

Scroll compressors consist of two spiral-shaped scroll elements that are bolted together: a stationary scroll and an orbiting scroll driven by a motor. The process of compressing air in a scroll compressor involves several steps:

Oscillation: The scrolls oscillate in a continuous motion without metal-to-metal contact, compressing air in crescent-shaped pockets.

Orbiting Scroll Motion: The orbiting scroll, driven by a short-stroke crankshaft, moves eccentrically around the fixed scroll, creating suction that draws air in from the inlet at the top of the housing.

Compression: Air captured in pockets between the scrolls is gradually compressed as it moves toward the center.

Discharge: Compressed air is discharged from the outlet port at the center, where a non-return valve prevents backflow.

Stability: The 180° phase displacement provides radial stability, and the internal compression minimizes leakage due to lower pressure differences between air pockets.

By following these steps, scroll compressors achieve efficient and reliable air compression.

When most people think of air compressors, they probably imagine a bulky and loud machine. Scroll compressors are pretty much the opposite of that. They are oil-free, compact and relatively silent compared to other types of compressors.

Thanks to the simple design of the scroll compressor with only one moving part, this type of compressor is highly reliable and quieter compared to the piston and rotary screw compressor. This makes them perfect for sensitive working environments, like a dentist’s office. Another advantage of scroll compressors is energy efficiency. 

Similar to internal compression in a screw compressor, the amount of internal compression is determined by the discharge port. Due to the unique design of the discharge port, the scroll air compressor can compress more air or gas while using minimal power.

Compared to other compressors, these machines attain the highest efficiency level by volume. This is because there are no pistons to compress the gas.

The noise emission of a scroll air compressor is significantly lower than other compressors. The complete compression cycle takes 2.5 turns, including the suction, compression, and discharge revolution phases. These occur simultaneously while providing a constant flow of pulsation-free air.

The scroll air compressor offers smooth and vibration-free operations thanks to its scroll element. It hardly has any torque variation compared to a piston compressor. The simple design of the scroll air compressor contains only one moving part. This makes it highly reliable and quieter than equivalent piston and rotary screw compressors.

Scroll compressors are widely used in various industrial applications due to their efficiency and reliability. They meet the basic requirements of a general-purpose compressor and are commonly used in the food, refrigeration, air-conditioning, and transportation industries. For larger volume demands, oil-injected screw compressors may be more efficient.

There is an abundance of applications for quiet and energy-efficient compressors that produce absolutely clean air. Take the SF scroll compressor series from Atlas Copco, which has been a leader in this field for more than 60 years. Its unique characteristics make it ideal for many manufacturing processes for which clean, oil-free compressed air is a prerequisite. That is why the SF is the preferred choice for sensitive indoor environments, like hospitals but also labs, breweries, bakeries, dairy farms, electronics manufacturing, and even lens production.

The SF series features a capacity range of 1.9 to 7.6 l/s (4.03 to 16.10 cfm), a maximum working pressure of 10 bar (145 psi), and a dew point performance as low as 2°C/36°F. Its air-cooled scroll element ensures efficiency, reliability, and durability, while the premium efficiency IE3 class motor lowers energy consumption. Most importantly, the SF series produces absolutely clean air.

We hope this guide provides a good overview of whether or not a scroll compressor makes sense for your needs. If you'd like more information, feel free to get in touch. Our team is happy to point you in the right direction.

Scroll Compressors

Scroll to the bottom to watch the YouTube tutorial.

Scroll compressors look something like this. They come in many shapes and sizes depending on their capacity and also the technology used inside. They convert electrical energy into mechanical energy.

We call them scroll compressors because inside we find two metal spiral shaped scrolls which causes the compression.

We can find them used in equipment like air compressors, but we will be focusing on the refrigeration versions for this video. We commonly find them used in air conditioning systems, heat pumps, rooftop units, CRAC units, walk in coolers, and we also find them grouped together for larger commercial cooling applications.

Compressors are the heart of the refrigeration system, pushing the refrigerant between all the components. The refrigerant is a special fluid which can easily change between a liquid and gas.

The compressor pushes this around the entire refrigeration system, through the condenser, expansion valve and evaporator and then back to the compressor.

Compressors simply trap a quantity of refrigerant and then compact this into a smaller volume to increase the pressure. The molecules are tightly packed together so they collide more, the pressure and temperature increases.

We send this high temperature, high pressure (superheated vapour) refrigerant outside to the condenser, which is a simple heat exchanger. The hot refrigerant flows through the tube while cooler ambient air is blown over the outside of this tube. The refrigerant is a much higher temperature so the heat flows from the refrigerant, through the tube wall and into the air.

The removal of heat causes the refrigerant to condense into a liquid. It leaves the condenser as a high pressure, medium temperature, liquid and flows to the expansion valve. These are either mechanical or electronic design. You can watch our detailed videos on how they work.

But they basically use a sensor to monitor the superheat at the exit of the evaporator. Then open and close the valve in small amounts to control how much refrigerant can flow through the evaporator, which controls the superheat value.

Superheat basically means the refrigerant has been boiled to a point where it is completely gas, no liquid can exist at that point.

The nozzle of the expansion valve holds back the liquid refrigerant, as it passes through it will expand into the empty.

Just like a spray bottle, we force liquid through a nozzle which vaporises it, and it expands into a liquid vapour mixture.

With more space, we have a drop in pressure, the molecules can move around more so the temperature drops.

This then flows into the evaporator which is another heat exchanger inside the property.

The refrigerant again flows through the tube, with the air of the room flowing over the tube,

But this time the thermal energy of the air is going to flow through the tube wall and into the low pressure refrigerant.

 The low pressure allows the refrigerant to boil very easily.

Just like this vessel filled with low pressure refrigerant. My hand has enough thermal energy to cause it to boil.

The heat of the room is enough to boil the refrigerant, because it has a very low boiling point.

The refrigerant turns into a gas and carries the unwanted heat of the room away. 

It exits as a low pressure, low temperature slightly superheated vapour. The refrigerant is then sucked into the compressor.

When we look at the compressor we have the main protective shell, we also find the low-pressure suction inlet and the high-pressure discharge outlet. There is also an electrical connection for the power supply and controls.

This is hermetically sealed, meaning all the components are sealed inside, so we can’t access them but dirt also can’t enter and the refrigerant can’t escape . 

When we remove the shell, we see there is a mechanical section and an electrical section.

At the bottom we usually find some type of support with a bearing built into this. The shaft will sit within this bearing and rises up through the compressor. Connected to the shaft is the rotor.

Surrounding the rotor is the motor stator. There is a small gap between the stator and rotor. The stator remains stationary but the rotor rotates. The stator has a number of coils of wire, these are energised and create an electromagnetic field. The magnetic field interacts with the rotor, causing it to rotate. The rotor is attached to the shaft, so this also rotates.

Attached to the coils is a temperature sensor, typically this is a PTC type sensor. As the coil temperature increases, the PTC resistance increases. At a certain temperature the sensor will cut the power to protect the motor. Otherwise the heat of the coil will melt the enamel insulation causing a short circuit and the stator would burn out.

Coming back to the shaft. We can notice the top of the shaft is offset from the centre. The scroll will attach to this. But because the scroll is offset, we have an imbalance on the shaft, so we find some counterweights attached at the top and bottom of the rotor to correct this.

At the top of the shaft we find the compressor housing. We usually find a bearing within this to support the shaft during rotation.

The housing has some grooves cut into it. Another component, called the Oldham ring, has some ridges which will sit within these grooves, allowing it to slide back and forth. The orbiting scroll also has some grooves cut into it, these will interlock with the ridges on top of the Oldham ring, allowing the scroll to slide back and forth perpendicular to the housing and Oldham ring.

The offset of the shaft, combined with the restrictions of the oldham ring, allows the scroll to orbit without rotating on its axis.

The orbiting scroll will sit within a fixed scroll. This is connected to the shell and also the housing, so it is locked into position. When the shaft rotates, the orbiting scroll will now move within the fixed scroll. This causes compression, we will see how that works in just a moment.

The compressed refrigerant is then ejected from the centre. We typically then find a non-return valve here, this design is a simple disc valve that is pushed open to vent the refrigerant, and it drops down when the compressor turns off to stop backflow. We might also find reed valves used, these are basically thin sheets which bend to open and vent the refrigerant but will also drop down when the compressor turns off. Above this we usually find a heat shield. The refrigerant leaving the compression chamber is high temperature, so this helps prevent heat transfer back into the compression chamber.

Notice there is a void between the heat shield and  the shell, this stores some refrigerant. The refrigerant will exit the compression chamber in pulses and so this storage chamber removes these pulses allowing a constant stream to exit the compressor.

Some compressors will have a check valve at the compressor outlet instead of the compression chamber. But It works in a similar way. 

We might also find some sort of pressure relief valve built into the housing. if the discharge temperature exceeds the design limit, it will discharge the hot refrigerant gas down into the casing, the motor winding temperature sensor will detect this rapid increase in temperature and cut power to the motor.

In the bottom of the housing we find a reservoir of oil and residual liquid refrigerant. Some compressors will have a sight glass where you can inspect the oil level. Inside the shaft there is a small channel with various exits points and an opening at the lower section. As the shaft rotates, oil is sucked into this opening and the centrifugal force causes it to rise up the channel. It will exit at various points to lubricate the bearings and surfaces.

The refrigerant is sucked into the shell from the evaporator. It will typically hit some sort of shield plate because the refrigerant will be a mixture of liquid and gas. The liquid will then drop down to the reservoir while the gas can continue to flow.

The refrigerant will then flow inside the casing, through and around the motor. It seems strange, but remember the motor is sealed within the shell. A standard electrical motor uses a fan to blow ambient air over its casing and remove the unwanted heat from the stator. Electrical motors produce a lot of heat which needs to be removed or it will destroy the motor.

So, we use the refrigerant to collect and remove the heat. The refrigerant will then flow upwards and into an opening on the side of the fixed scroll.

As the scroll orbits, the walls will separate and a gap opens to allow some refrigerant inside. The scrolls then continue to orbit and the gap closes, a pocket of refrigerant is now trapped inside. The walls will continue to orbit and this forces the refrigerant to move deeper into the compression chamber towards the centre, gradually the volume decreases which increases the pressure.

Eventually the refrigerant will reach the centre where it has reached maximum compression, the scrolls then separate at the very centre allowing the refrigerant to escape, the scroll continues to orbit and the central gap closes which forces any remaining refrigerant to exit and it then collects in the dome at the top.

During compression, several pockets of refrigerant will be compressed simultaneously. Which gives a continuous output.

Scroll compressors can handle small amounts of liquid. It will pass through without damaging the scroll plates.

The refrigerant exits the compression chamber as a high pressure, high temperature superheated vapour and flows to the condenser. A crankcase heater is sometimes fitted, this keeps the shell warm in cold climates to prevent the refrigerant condensing inside, prevents backflow and also stops the lubricating oil from diluting.

Traditionally scroll compressors would just be turned on and off to control the cooling capacity. The system is either completely on or completely off, no in-between.

On larger systems with a group of compressors, they would simply be turned on or off at different stages to try and meet the cooling demand. This gives some modulation of capacity but it isn’t perfect.

Turning the system on and off causes pressure surges, bad thermal control and also causes electrical surges.

The electrical motor has a fixed speed so the only way to modulate the cooling capacity was to turn it on and off.

The diameter of the scroll, the height of the scroll wall and the motors rotational speed controls the capacity. These were all fixed properties of the design.

One method developed, known as a hot gas bypass, which uses a solenoid valve to recirculate some hot refrigerant back into the evaporator, . This creates a false cooling load on the system. It’s very inefficient but it keeps the compressor running.

Another common design is the digital compressor. A solenoid valve recirculates refrigerant back into the suction. The fixed scroll can move up and down. The pressure within the dome holds it down. But a solenoid can open to release this pressure back into the suction line. The scrolls disengage a tiny amount, so no refrigerant is compressed in this time but the motor keeps running, the valve then closes, pressure forces the scroll down and compression continues. We control this in 15 second intervals so If you need 50% capacity, then the scroll will engage for 7.5 seconds and disengage for 7.5 seconds.

Newer designs use a variable frequency drive to control the speed of the motor, so that the volume of refrigerant flowing around the system changes to match the current cooling demand. This uses an electronic expansion valve to achieve precise control. Giving us great energy efficiency and also optimal thermal control.

A Complete Guide to Scroll Air Compressors

What Are Scroll Compressors?

A scroll compressor, also called a spiral compressor or scroll pump, is a type of positive-displacement compressor designed for compressing air or gas. It operates by using a spiral mechanism for internal compression. Scroll compressors are available in both oil-lubricated and oil-free models. Oil-free scroll compressors are ideal for applications requiring clean, dry air without any risk of oil contamination in the compression chamber.

How Do Scroll Air Compressors Work?

A scroll air compressor is a type of compressor that uses two interlocking, spiral-shaped scrolls to compress air or gas. It consists of a stationary scroll and an orbiting scroll. The orbiting scroll moves in a circular motion around the stationary scroll, creating pockets of air or gas between the two. These pockets are gradually compressed as they are pushed toward the center of the spiral, where the space between the scrolls is smallest.

As the pockets move inward, the pressure increases, and the compressed air or gas is discharged from the center. The compressed output can then be stored in a tank or used directly for various applications.

Scroll air compressors offer several advantages. Their design eliminates the need for pistons, minimizing vibration and noise during operation. With fewer moving parts than traditional compressors, they are also less prone to mechanical failure. Additionally, their energy-efficient design ensures minimal energy loss during compression, making them a cost-effective option for producing compressed air or gas.

Scroll compressors utilize two interlocking spiral-shaped elements: a stationary scroll and an orbiting scroll driven by a motor. The air compression process in a scroll compressor unfolds as follows:

1. Oscillation: The scrolls move in a continuous, oscillating motion without metal-to-metal contact, compressing air within crescent-shaped pockets.

2. Orbiting Motion: The orbiting scroll, powered by a short-stroke crankshaft, moves eccentrically around the fixed scroll, creating suction that draws air from the inlet at the top of the housing.

3. Compression: As air is captured in the pockets between the scrolls, it is progressively compressed toward the center.

4. Discharge: The compressed air exits through the outlet port at the center, where a non-return valve prevents backflow.

5. Stability: A 180° phase displacement ensures radial stability, while internal compression reduces leakage by minimizing pressure differences between the air pockets.

Thanks to these features, scroll air compressors are ideal for applications in industries such as manufacturing, construction, and automotive, where reliable and efficient performance is essential.

Explanation of Parts

- Cooling Fan: Dissipates heat generated during compression, ensuring efficient operation and preventing overheating.

- Suction Chamber: The section where air or gas is initially drawn into the compressor.

- Suction Opening: The inlet through which air or gas enters the suction chamber.

- Delivery Opening: The outlet from which compressed air or gas is discharged.

- Fixed Scroll: The stationary spiral component that helps form the compression chamber.

- Orbiting Scroll: The moving spiral component driven by a motor, responsible for compressing air through its orbital motion around the fixed scroll.

- Fail-Safe Temperature Sensor: A protective feature that monitors the compressor's temperature to prevent overheating and potential damage.

- Compression Chamber: The space between the fixed and orbiting scrolls where air is compressed as the orbiting scroll moves.

Scroll Compressors: Advantages and Disadvantages

Scroll compressors stand out for their simple design, featuring only one moving part, which enhances reliability and reduces noise levels compared to piston and rotary screw compressors. This makes them an excellent choice for noise-sensitive environments, such as dental offices. Additionally, scroll compressors are known for their energy efficiency.

Advantages:

- High Efficiency: Consumes less energy, reducing operational costs.

- Quiet Operation: Produces minimal noise, ideal for quiet environments.

- Compact Design: Space-efficient and easy to install in tight spaces.

Disadvantages:

- Higher Initial Cost: More expensive upfront compared to other compressor types.

- Capacity Limitations: Unsuitable for applications requiring high output or capacity.

Efficiency

Scroll compressors achieve exceptional efficiency, comparable to internal compression in screw compressors, with the level of compression determined by the discharge port's design. The unique design of the discharge port allows the scroll compressor to compress more air or gas with minimal energy consumption.

Unlike compressors with pistons, scroll compressors operate without these additional moving parts, achieving the highest efficiency levels by volume.

Noise

Scroll compressors are remarkably quieter than other compressor types. The complete compression cycle—encompassing suction, compression, and discharge—takes just 2.5 turns, with all phases occurring simultaneously. This ensures a constant, pulsation-free flow of air.

Thanks to the scroll element, these compressors deliver smooth, vibration-free performance. With minimal torque variation compared to piston compressors and only one moving part in their design, scroll compressors are not only quieter but also highly reliable and low-maintenance.

Scroll Compressor Applications and Uses

Scroll compressors are valued for their efficiency and reliability, making them a versatile choice across various industries. They meet the requirements of general-purpose compressors and excel in sectors such as food processing, refrigeration, air conditioning, and transportation. For higher-volume applications, however, oil-injected screw compressors may offer greater efficiency.

Typical Applications:

- Laboratories & Research:

Used for instrument calibration, sample analysis, and maintaining environmental control in cleanrooms.

- Medical & Healthcare:

Provide clean, oil-free air for ventilators, incubators, surgical tools, and patient breathing support during surgeries.

- Food & Beverage:

Support food packaging, vacuum sealing, meat processing, and beverage carbonation processes.

- Electronics:

Essential for precision assembly by cleaning parts, maintaining cleanroom conditions, and preventing moisture and corrosion.

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