PECM Issue 29 2017 | Page 10

Contributing editor Chikezie Nwaoha (AMIMechE) interviews Robert Perez (He has more than 30 years of rotating equipment experience in the petrochemical industry and has numerous machinery reliability articles to his credit. Mr. Perez holds a BSME degree from Texas A&M University at College Station, a MSME degree from the University of Texas at Austin, and a Texas PE license). The author of a new book entitled, “Operator’s Guide to Centrifugal Pumps” and co-creator of the PumpCalcs.com website on Centrifugal Pumps in a Nutshell. Q: H OW HAS CENTRIFUGAL PUMP TECHNOLOGY EVOLVED OVER THE PAST DECADE ? A: In the past decade I’ve seen several major trends. The first is a trend to lower and lower fugitive emission requirement for mechanical seals. This has been a real challenge to machinery engineers. Luckily mechanical seal manufacturers have come to rescue with design improvements, such as reduced face loading designs and dry gas seals. Another solution to this problem has been mag-drive and canned motor pumps, which address the issue in a different fashion. The hydraulic range of sealless pumps has expanded significantly in the last decade. The second trend has been the offering of low-cost pump monitoring solutions, which include wireless systems that can monitor pump vibration and temperatures remotely. 10 PECM Issue 29 The prices of these systems continue to drop while their capabilities are expanding. Some of these systems are now viable options for monitoring critical process pumps. inches, is often used to define shaft flexibility. An upper limit of 60 for English units (2 in metric units) is recommended for L3/D4 to limit shaft deflection. Q: H OW IS THE CENTRIFUGAL PUMP In the 80’s, multistage and double suction overhung designs were outlawed in the API 610 Standard. These overhung designs were found to be highly unreliable and even dangerous in flammable services. TECHNOLOGY OF TODAY MORE EFFECTIVE / EFFICIENT THAN THE TECHNOLOGY OF PREVIOUS GENERATIONS ? A: In the 70’s and 80’s, 3600 rpm (or 3000 rpm in 50 Hz countries) pumps became the norm in process pump applications due to pricing pressures. This led to more vibration problems that were caused by rotordynamic and hydraulic stability issues. Thanks to a lot of smart people most of the common problems were solved by the end of the 80’s. Many of hydraulic stability issues were solved by limiting suction specific speeds (Nss) to less than 11,000 in English units (9460 in metric units, i.e. m3/h) and limiting operation to the 80% to 110% of the best efficiency flow. Aftermarket companies also began to offer “hydraulic rerates” for poorly applied pumps. (Rerating a pump means redesigning the pump internals and fitting them to an existing pump casing.) A lot of the rotordynamic issues were resolved by 1) limiting shaft flexibility, 2) improving balancing best practices, and 3) discouraging the use of certain overhung rotor designs. For overhung impellers, the term L3/D4, where L is the overhung length and D is the shaft diameter are both given in Another huge improvement in the 80’s was the development and acceptance of the mechanical cartridge seal. This dramatically improved seal reliability by reducing early failures and allowing seal testing before their i nstallation. Q: W HEN SELECTING CENTRIFUGAL PUMP , WHAT ARE SOME KEY CONSIDERATIONS AN END - USER SHOULD MAKE TO ENSURE SUCCESS ? A: Here are 10 tips to help you select efficient and reliable centrifugal pumps: Only select pumps with suction specific speeds (Nss) less than 11,000—an Nss of less than 9000 is even better. Never select a pump that will have to operate below 70% to 80% of its best efficiency point. Remember that 1800 rpm and slower pumps are usually more reliable that 3600 rpm pumps. Hydraulic efficiency peaks at specific speeds (Ns) between 2000 and 3000 and drops dramatically below 500. If efficiency