Monday, September 7, 2009

How a Centrifugal Pump works

This is the basic requirement for chemical engineers to know about centrifugal pump operation and its principles, This will be even useful when you go for interview.

A centrifugal pump is a kinetic device. Liquid entering the pump receives kinetic energy from the rotating impeller. The centrifugal action of the impeller accelerates the liquid to a high velocity, transferring mechanical (rotational) energy to the liquid. That kinetic energy is available to the fluid to accomplish work. In most cases, the work consists of the liquid moving at some velocity through a system by overcoming resistance to flow due to friction from pipes, and physical restrictions from valves, heat exchangers and other in-line devices, as well as elevation changes between the liquid's starting location and final destination. When velocity is reduced due to resistance encountered in the system, pressure (P) increases. As resistance is encountered, the liquid expends some its energy in the form of heat, noise, and vibration in overcoming that resistance. The result is that the available energy in the liquid decreases as the distance from the pump increases. The actual energy available for work at any point in a system is a combination of the available velocity and pressure energy at that point.
Head
Image of a static columns of liquid (H) supported by a system pressure (P)Head (H) is the term that is used to define the energy supplied to the liquid by the pump. It is independent of the type of liquid being pumped. Head is expressed in Feet or Meters. In the absence of any velocity, it is equal to the height of a static column of liquid that could be supported by the pressure (P) at a given point in the system. In practice, pressure is usually measured by a pressure sensing device such as a gage or pressure transducer. Head (H) is the ratio of pressure to the Density (Specific weight) of a liquid. For water at 60oF, head (H) may be calculated, from a pressure reading, using the following equation:
Equation for converting pressure to head using water density
This may be simplified to H = P * 2. 31. The units cancel out so that only feet remain. For a liquid with a Density other than water, divide by the specific gravity of the liquid.
Because specific gravity is an index number (dimensionless) the units remain as feet of head.
Flow Rate
Impeller showing meridional velocity pathFlow rate is determined by the impeller geometry and its rotational speed. Pump designers manipulate the impeller vane design to achieve an optimum throughput velocity for an impeller. The throughput velocity (ft/sec) multiplied by the usable area of the impeller inlet (ft2) yields the flow rate (ft3/sec). Every impeller has one optimum design flow rate for a given speed and diameter. This is the best efficiency point of the pump. At other flow rates there will be a mismatch between the vane angle at the pump inlet and the flow rate, resulting in increased turbulence and loss of efficiency within the pump.
Total Dynamic Head
Total Dynamic Head (TDH) is the difference in head between the pump outlet and inlet. In actual practice, readings must be corrected for piping losses, gauge location and differences in pipe diameters between the pump inlet and outlet; all unique to the specific pump/system setup.
Pump Efficiency
Pump efficiency is the ratio of hydraulic horsepower to the brake horsepower required to drive the pump. Hydraulic horsepower is the kinetic power available at the pump discharge. It is calculated by the following equation.
Equation for hydraulic Horsepower
Brake horsepower is measured at the pump input shaft by a torque-meter coupling or similar device. The difference between brake horsepower and hydraulic horsepower is the amount of power consumed by mechanical losses, noise, heat, viscous drag, and internal recirculation.
Characteristic Curves
Centrifugal pump characteristic curve showing flow, head, efficiency, and horsepowerCurves are available from pump manufacturers that depict the ‘as new’ performance characteristics for any given pump model. These may be either generic catalog curves that represent typical values, or they may be test curves that show the actual performance of a customer’s particular pump unit. Performance curves show plots of TDH, Efficiency, BHP and, when specified, NPSHR as functions of flow rate.
The shape of a pump curve is primarily determined by the geometry of the impeller. High flow - low head pumps typically have steeper curves than low flow - high head units.
The performance of a pump when placed in a system is a function of the interaction between the pump and system as defined by their relative characteristics.

No comments:

Post a Comment