ENote-Slurry Pump Fundamentals
ENote-Slurry Pump Fundamentals
ENote-Slurry Pump Fundamentals
An easy-to-understand introduction to
slurry pumps and systems
Readers Guide
Copyright 2006
GIW Industries Inc./KSB Mining
Group
Meet Digsby. He
appears
whenever we want
to give you a
mountain of
information
but only
have room for
a mole hill. He tells you where to dig
deeper in other sources and in the
textbook, Slurry Transport Using
Centrifugal Pumps, written by Drs.
Kenneth C. Wilson, Anders Sellgren
Roland Clift and GIWs VP of
Engineering Graeme Addie. The
textbook is available from Kluwer
Publishing (www.wkap.nl).
giwindustries.com
Does your slurry have an attitude? Is it
caustic? Corrosive? Abrasive? Erosive?
(Or some combination thereof?) If so,
talk to us. We can make the biggest,
baddest, meanest, nastiest slurry
behave. We are the experts in slurry
transport, so challenge us to solve your
production delays or to improve your
slurry pumping systems.
A KSB Company
1.888.TECH.GIW (832.4449)
[email protected]
Contents
Chapter 1: What Is Slurry? .......................................................... 9
Slurry Pumps vs. Water Pumps ....................................................................... 9
Flow Limitations ....................................................................................... 10
Solids Limitations ...................................................................................... 11
Head ...................................................................................................... 32
NET POSITIVE SUCTION HEAD (NPSH) .................................................................................... 32
Pumping Froth.......................................................................................... 36
Viscosity ................................................................................................. 42
NEWTONIAN AND NON-NEWTONIAN LIQUIDS ........................................................................... 42
OTHER NON-NEWTONIAN FLUIDS ......................................................................................... 43
Slysel ..................................................................................................... 45
103
103
104
104
106
106
106
106
106
Chapter 1:
What Is Slurry?
Slurry is a mixture of something solid and a liquid.
The solids in a slurry can be anything from gold to gravel,
copper to coal, sand to cement. They can also be crystalline,
sharp, flaky, fibrous or frothy.
Almost any solid can be transported hydraulically via a slurry
pipeline using a slurry pump.
Clear water is the primary liquid for slurry transport,
but other liquids such as acids, alcohol and light
petroleum have been used.
In the mining industry, slurry pumps are used to transport
slurries. The production of fertilizer, for example, involves
massive slurry transport operations. To make the fertilizer,
phosphate matrix is recovered by draglines in open-pit mining
operations. (Draglines are huge electrically powered excavating
machines with buckets that hold as much as 150 tons.) The
matrix is then slurried (mixed with water) and pumped to the
wash plant through pipelines with a typical length of six to 10
miles.
10
Flow Limitations
The flow limitations for a slurry pump installation are from 35 - 132,000 gpm
(8 - 30000 m3/hour).
These limits are determined by the pumps ability to withstand the forces
associated with operating the pump, such as pressure, vibration, axial thrust
and the stability of the pump at various flows.
See Basic Relations for Flow of Simple Fluids in Slurry Transport Using
Centrifugal Pumps.
Solids Limitations
Theoretically, there are no limits on what can be hydrotransported. In practice, however, the size and shape of the solids limit what can be pumped
because of the risk of
the solids blocking
passage through the
pump.
The maximum
particle size of
material that can be
transported in a
slurry pump is
approximately 12
inches (300 mm).
However, sphere
passage in large
dredge pumps can
be up to 18 inches
(450 mm).
11