Cavitation 1-3
The
McNally Institute
Cavitation means that cavities are forming in the liquid that
we are pumping. When these cavities form at the suction of
the pump several things happen all at once.
- We experience a loss in capacity.
- We can no longer build the same head (pressure)
- The efficiency drops.
- The cavities or bubbles will collapse when they pass into
the higher regions of pressure causing noise, vibration,
and damage to many of the components.
The cavities form for five basic reasons and it is common
practice to lump all of them into the general classification
of cavitation. This is an error because we will learn that
to correct each of these conditions we must understand why
they occur and how to fix them. Here they are in no particular
order:
- Vaporization
- Air ingestion
- Internal recirculation
- Flow turbulence
- The Vane Passing Syndrome
Vaporization
A fluid vaporizes when its pressure gets too low, or its
temperature too high. All centrifugal pumps have a required
head (pressure) at the suction side of the pump to prevent
this vaporization. This head requirement is supplied to us
by the pump manufacturer and is calculated with the assumption
that fresh water at 68 degrees Fahrenheit (20 degrees Centigrade)
is the fluid being pumped.
Since there are losses in the piping leading from the source
to the suction of the pump we must determine the head after
these losses are calculated. Another way to say this is that
a Net Positive Suction Head is Required (N.P.S.H.R.) to prevent
the fluid from vaporizing.
We take the Net Positive Suction Head Available (N.P.S.H.A.)
subtract the Vapor Pressure of the product we are pumping,
and this number must be equal to or greater than the Net Positive
Suction Head Required.
To cure vaporization problems you must either increase the
suction head, lower the fluid temperature, or decrease the
N.P.S.H. Required. We shall look at each possibility:
Increase the suction head
- Raise the liquid level in the tank
- Raise the tank
- Put the pump in a pit
- Reduce the piping losses. These losses occur for a variety
of reasons that include:
- The system was designed incorrectly. There are too
many fittings and/or the piping is too small in diameter.
- A pipe liner has collapsed.
- Solids have built up on the inside of the pipe.
- The suction pipe collapsed when it was run over by
a heavy vehicle.
- A suction strainer is clogged.
- Be sure the tank vent is open and not obstructed.
Vents can freeze in cold weather
- Something is stuck in the pipe, It either grew there
or was left during the last time the system was opened
. Maybe a check valve is broken and the seat is stuck
in the pipe.
- The inside of the pipe, or a fitting has corroded.
- A bigger pump has been installed and the existing
system has too much loss for the increased capacity.
- A globe valve was used to replace a gate valve.
- A heating jacket has frozen and collapsed the pipe.
- A gasket is protruding into the piping.
- The pump speed has increased.
- Install a booster pump
- Pressurize the tank
Lower the fluid temperature
- Injecting a small amount of cooler fluid at the suction
is often practical.
- Insulate the piping from the sun's rays.
- Be careful of discharge recirculation lines, they can heat
up the suction fluid.
Reduce the N.P.S.H. Required
- Use a double suction pump. This can reduce the N.P.S.H.R.
by as much as 27% or in some cases it will allow you to raise
the pump speed by 41%
- Use a lower speed pump
- Use a pump with a larger impeller eye opening.
- If possible install an Inducer. These inducers can cut
N.P.S.H.R. by almost 50%.
- Use several smaller pumps. Three half capacity pumps can
be cheaper than one large pump plus a spare. This will also
conserve energy at lighter loads.
- It is a general rule of thumb that hot water and gas free
hydrocarbons can use up to 50% of normal cold water N.P.S.H.
requirements, or 10 feet (3 meters), whichever is smaller.
I would suggest you use this as a safety margin rather than
design for it.
Air ingestion
A centrifugal pump can handle 0.5% air by volume. At 6% air
the results can be disastrous. Air gets into as system in several
ways that include:
- Through the stuffing box. This occurs in any packed pump
that lifts liquid, pumps from a condenser, evaporator or
any piece of equipment that runs in vacuum.
- Valves above the water line.
- Through leaking flanges
- Vortexing fluid.
- A bypass line has been installed too close to the suction.
- The suction inlet pipe is out of fluid. This can occur
when the level gets too low or there is a false reading on
the gauge because the float is stuck on a corroded rod.
Both vaporization and air ingestion have an affect on the
pump. The bubbles collapse as they pass from the eye of the
pump to the higher pressure side of the impeller. Air ingestion
seldom causes damage to the impeller or casing. The main effect
of air ingestion is loss of capacity.
Although air ingestion and vaporization both occur they have
separate solutions. Air ingestion is not as severe as vaporization
and seldom causes damage, but it does lower the capacity of
the pump.
Internal Recirculation
This condition is visible on the leading edge of the impeller,
and will usually be found at the discharge tip working its
way back to the suction. It can also be found at the suction
eye of the pump.
As the name implies the fluid recirculates increasing its
velocity until it vaporizes and then collapses in the surrounding
higher pressure. This has always been a problem with low NPSH
pumps and the term SPECIFIC SUCTION SPEED was coined to give
you a guide in determining how close you have to operate to
the B.E.P. of a pump to prevent the problem.
The higher the number the smaller the window in which you
have to operate. The numbers range between 3,000 and 20,000.
Water pumps should stay between 3,000 and 12,000. Here is the
formula to determine the suction specific speed number of your
pump:
rpm = Pump speed
gpm = Gallons per minute or liters per second of the largest impeller at its
BEP
Head= Net positive suction head required at that rpm
- For a double suction pump the flow is divided by 2 since
there are 2 impeller eyes
- Try to buy pumps lower than 8500.(5200 metric ) forget
those over 12000 (8000 metric) except for extreme circumstances.
- Mixed hydrocarbons and hot water at 9000 to 12000 (5500
to 7300 metric) or higher, can probably operate satisfactorily.
- High specific speed indicates the impeller eye is larger
than normal, and efficiency may be compromised to obtain
a low NPSH required.
- Higher values of specific speed may require special designs,
and operate with some cavitation.
- Normally a pump operating 50% below its best efficiency
point (B.E.P.) is less reliable.
With an open impeller pump you can usually correct the problem
by adjusting the impeller clearance to the manufacturers specifications.
Closed impeller pumps present a bigger problem and the most
practical solution seems to be to contact the manufacturer
for an evaluation of the impeller design and a possible change
in the design of the impeller or the wear ring clearances.
Turbulence
We would prefer to have liquid flowing through the piping
at a constant velocity. Corrosion or obstructions can change
the velocity of the liquid and any time you change the velocity
of a liquid you change its pressure. Good piping layouts would
include:
- Ten diameters of pipe between the pump suction and the
first elbow.
- In multiple pump arrangements we would prefer to have the
suction bells in separate bays so that one pump suction will
not interfere with another. If this is not practical a number
of units can be installed in a single large sump provided
that :
- The pumps are located in a line perpendicular to the approaching
flow.
- There must be a minimum spacing of at least two suction
diameters between pump center lines.
- All pumps are running.
- The upstream conditions should have a minimum straight
run of ten pipe diameters to provide uniform flow to the
suction bells.
- Each pump capacity must be less than 15,000 gpm..
- Back wall clearance distance to the centerline of the pump
must be at least 0.75 of the suction diameter.
- Bottom clearance should be approximately 0.30 (30%) of
the suction diameter
- The minimum submergence should be as follows:
| FLOW MINIMUM |
SUBMERGENCE |
| 20,000 GPM |
4 FEET |
| 100,000 GPM |
8 FEET |
| 180,000 GPM |
10 FEET |
| 200,000 GPM |
11 FEET |
| 250,000 GPM |
12 FEET |
The metric numbers are:
| FLOW MINIMUM |
SUBMERGENCE |
| 4,500 M3/HR |
1.2 METERS |
| 22,500 M3/HR |
2.5 METERS |
| 40,000 M3/HR |
3.0 METERS |
| 45,000 M3/HR |
3.4 METERS |
| 55,000 M3/HR |
3.7 METERS |
The Vane Passing Syndrome
You will notice damage to the tip of the impeller caused
by its passing too close to the pump cutwater. The velocity
of the liquid increases if the clearance is too small lowering
the pressure and causing local vaporization. The bubbles collapse
just beyond the cutwater and there is where you should look
for volute damage. You will need a flashlight and mirror to
see the damage unless it has penetrated to the outside of the
volute.
The damage is limited to the center of the impeller and does
not extend into the shrouds. You can prevent this problem if
you keep a minimum impeller tip to cutwater clearance of 4
% of the impeller diameter in the smaller impeller sizes (less
than 14' or 355 mm.) and 6% in the larger impeller sizes (greater
than 14" or 355 mm.).
To prevent excessive shaft movement bulkhead rings can be
installed in the suction eye. At the discharge rings can be
manufactured to extend from the walls to the impeller shrouds. |