Cavitation
Cavitation
Cavitation
Cavitation
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.
Cavitation
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
Cavitation
Cavitation
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
Cavitation
1. Vaporization
A fluid vaporizes when its pressure gets too low, or its
temperature too high.
often practical.
Where:
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
Cavitation
3. Internal Recirculation
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.
Cavitation
3. Internal Recirculation
With an open impeller pump you can usually correct the
problem by adjusting the impeller clearance to the
manufacturers specifications.
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.
Cavitation
5. The Vane Passing Syndrome
The damage is limited to the center of the impeller and
does not extend into the shrouds.