Interested in linking to "Find the real cause of pump gas up"?
You may use the Headline, Deck, Byline and URL of this article on your Web site. To link to this article, select and copy the HTML code below and paste it on your own Web site.
By Andrew Sloley, contributing editor
Centrifugal pump suction problems usually are blamed on lack of available net positive suction head, NPSHavailable. While the head may indeed be too low, misunderstanding and plant mythology often obscure the exact source of the problem and, thus, its solution. In particular, many mechanical engineers and nearly all plant maintenance personnel believe that “high” temperature of the feed stream compared to normal operation causes the NPSH problem. Under these conditions, the pump commonly is said to “gas up.”
Figure 1 shows a pump that draws liquid from a flash drum. This is an extremely common configuration, occurring with phase separators, tower bottoms and reflux drums, to give just a few examples. In flash drums, the temperature of the liquid itself is never the problem.
The head available is found via: <graphic of equation at end but written out version follows
NPSHavailable = Psurface - Pvapor + ΔZ - hf - hv
where Psurface is the pressure at the surface of the liquid, Pvapor is the vapor pressure of the liquid at the pump suction, ΔZ is the elevation change from the liquid surface to the centerline of the pump suction, hf is the frictional head loss through the system and hv is the velocity head loss through the system.
ADVERTISEMENT
For a system where the velocity of the liquid in the upstream equipment is low compared to the pump suction velocity, the velocity head is: hv = V2/2g where V is the velocity at the pump suction and g is the acceleration due to gravity (32.2 ft/sec2).
The NPSH is evaluated as height of flowing fluid at actual conditions.
NPSHrequireddepends upon the pump characteristics and flow rate. The Hydraulic Institute defines NPSHrequired as the NPSH at the pump suction that causes the total head developed across the pump to be reduced by 3% compared to a “no cavitation” operation (For multiple-stage pumps, this test is applied to the first stage only). This is not the point at which cavitation starts, that is, the incipient cavitation point. Incipient cavitation may begin at NPSHavailable heights between 2 and 20 times the NPSHrequired level defined by the Hydraulic Institute.
For an equilibrium liquid in a single phase with no heat gain or loss, the pressure at the surface and the vapor pressure of the liquid are the same. Therefore, those two terms cancel each other. As long as the liquid stays at equilibrium conditions, changes in operation that alter the pressure or temperature of the drum do not affect NPSH.
If a check of the hydraulic evaluation of the system does not identify an NPSH problem and the pump definitely isn’t providing sufficient suction, immediately check:
To troubleshoot the pump, start by investigating common causes of gas up:
This is only a partial list, but it includes the most common situations and is a good starting point.
Andrew Sloley, contributing editor
Asloley@putman.net
ChemicalProcessing.com focuses exclusively on serving professionals designing and operating plants in the chemical industry. The unique content helps you make your sites as efficient, safe, environmentally friendly and economically competitive as possible.