Gas Treater:
The answer to your basic question is: Yes.
However, the terse answer deserves and requires an explanation.
We are discussing centrifugal compressors and, as such, this type of compressor has a more liberal tolerance for liquid inclusion in the feed gas stream than its counterpart, the reciprocating, positive displacement compressor. Nevertheless, the basic requirement for both types of compressors is that NO liquid particles should be allowed to enter the suction stream. However, practical and real-life situations dictate that some minute and small droplets will somehow always be present in most process streams due to entrainment or other physical effects. Some droplets will, undoubtedly, enter both types of compressors. Our goal then, is to limit the size and quantity of the particles. The reasons that liquid particles are not supposed to enter compressors are:
1. Liquids are incompressible in nature; compressors are designed to compress gases, not liquids. A compressor that attempts to compress a liquid will be acting much as an automobile trying to drive through a concrete column – the concrete column is going to win.
2. Liquids have a propensity for stripping lubrication from bearing and sealing surfaces. When this happens in a compressor, the compressor loses again.
3. Liquids are a high concentration of mass as compared to gases. When liquids hit the impeller of a centrifugal compressor they can not only do a lot of mechanical damage but they also cause an imbalance in a high rpm machine. This imbalance will damage the bearings and other critical components in the same machine due to vibrations being set up.
Compressor manufacturers have determined - through experiment and empirical field knowledge - that liquid particles of a certain diameter (approx. 10 microns) will not cause any harm to their machines. And due to this finding, they insist on suction separators on their machines to ensure that only liquid particles of a maximum size will not enter their machine. That's why your statement “the demister pad's typical limitation for liquid droplet removal is 10 micron or larger” is wrong. It should say “……10 micron or smaller”.