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Analyzing The Performance of Pump Networks Part 1 Basic Theory - CEP Magazine

Analyzing the Performance of Pump Networks Part 1 Basic Theory - CEP Magazine

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Muhammad Imran
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
178 views

Analyzing The Performance of Pump Networks Part 1 Basic Theory - CEP Magazine

Analyzing the Performance of Pump Networks Part 1 Basic Theory - CEP Magazine

Uploaded by

Muhammad Imran
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Analyzing the Performance of Pump


Networks Part 1: Basic Theory

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Jimmy D. Kumana, Manuel R. Suarez
January
,
2018

This article demonstrates how to construct a pump’s system curve and explains the four
most common mistakes encountered when operating centrifugal pump networks.

Centrifugal pumps are among the most ubiquitous items of process equipment in the chemical
process industries (CPI) (Figure 1).
▲Figure 1. Centrifugal pump installations are very common in the chemical process industries (CPI).

The fraction of electrical power consumed by pumps at typical plant sites in the U.S. and Canada
has been reported in the literature to be between 70% and 90%. However, pumps and compressors
that are driven by steam turbines or other non-electric prime movers consume much less electrical
energy. Although there are many different types of pumps, the vast majority (around 90%) of
installed pumps in the CPI are centrifugal pumps.

The dominant 20-yr lifecycle costs associated with the average pumping application in the U.S. are
electric power and maintenance, with power accounting for 55% of the total and maintenance
making up 25%. Initial capital costs typically account for about 20% of the total; the purchase cost of
the pump/motor assembly accounts for around one-fourth of that, or only 5% of the total.

The lifecycle costs for larger installations in the CPI that run continuously are even more heavily
weighted toward energy. Therefore, it makes sense to choose a pumping system for high efficiency,
reliability, and ease of maintenance. Nonetheless, the prevailing industry practice is to make the
purchasing decision on the basis of lowest first cost. Hopefully that will change if companies
modernize their procurement procedures.

This is the first of a three-part series that reviews the basic theory of pump hydraulics and gives
practical tips from the authors’ collective experience from a wide range of industries on how to
design, operate, control, and troubleshoot pumping systems in complex applications.
The series addresses four main topics:

 construction of the system curve from plant data

 construction of composite curves for pump networks

 proper operation and control of pumps in parallel to avoid surging and cavitation

 use of variable-frequency drives (VFDs) and load management techniques to save energy.

This article, Part 1, focuses on the first three bullet points. Parts 2 and 3 will address the issue of
energy efficiency improvement through the use of better control methods and VFDs. The lessons
highlighted in the articles apply equally to all pumping applications regardless of the industry.

Basic theory
The relationship between head and flowrate for a single pump is called its characteristic curve or
performance curve (Figure 2). The manufacturer or vendor will provide the pump’s performance,
efficiency, and power curves at the time of purchase, and the original copy should be maintained
securely in the company library or archives (not in the control room). Because it is common for pump
models to be discontinued or for vendors to go out of business, pump curves are very difficult to
retrieve if they are lost.

▲Figure 2. The principal curves that define a pump’s operating characteristics are the performance curve (blue), the
power curve (green), and the efficiency curve (red).

Power tends to increase monotonically (quasi-linearly) with flowrate. As illustrated in Figure 3, part-
load operation at fixed speed is very expensive.
▲Figure 3. Part-load operation (i.e., operation below design capacity) reduces the efficiency and increases the energy
cost of a fixed-speed centrifugal pump. It also has a hidden long-term cost — the extra cost incurred from buying
oversized equipment.

The relationship between required flow and required head is called the system curve (Figure 4). The
total pressure drop includes static head (i.e., the sum of the change in pressure plus elevation) and
dynamic head (i.e., primarily frictional losses in piping, equipment, and the control valve [CV]). The
control valve loss is incurred during throttling control, and is the difference between the head
delivered by the pump and the head required to overcome friction in the piping and equipment. So,
to calculate the minimum head (and power) that must be supplied to the fluid, first calculate static
and dynamic head.

▲Figure 4. The relationship between required flow and required head is called the system curve. During throttling control,
the control valve (CV) incurs a pressure loss. The system curve can be plotted without the CV pressure drop (red line).
The system curve with the CV pressure drop can be plotted separately (green dashed line). The maximum flow that can
be attained is at the intersection of the system curve and the performance curve when the CV pressure drop is zero.

Static head (Hs) in ft of liquid is:


where P2 is the pressure in the final destination vessel, P1 is the pressure in the fluid supply tank, ρ is
the density of the liquid, h2 is the highest elevation to which the liquid must be pumped, and h1 is the
height of the liquid in the suction tank.

Dynamic head (Hd) in ft of liquid is:

where α2 is the flow area of the discharge pipe, α1 is the flow area of the suction pipe, V2 is the
velocity in the discharge pipe, V1 is the velocity in the suction pipe, g is the gravitational constant,
and ΔPf is the frictional pressure drop in the piping system, including fittings, equipment, and
instruments (1). In normal industrial piping systems, the kinetic energy component (V2/2g) is
generally small and can be safely neglected.

Equations 1 and 2 are both special cases of the Bernoulli equation, which is a fundamental
generalized energy balance for any fluid transport system. The frictional term in the Bernoulli
equation includes pressure losses in the piping, equipment, instruments, and the pump itself
(bearings, seals, etc.). It is common practice, however, to separate internal pump losses from
piping/equipment losses. Internal losses within the pump are accounted for as pump efficiency, and
only the piping, equipment, and instrument losses are included in the dynamic head component of
the system (ΔPf).

The generic equation for estimating frictional pressure drop (in consistent units) in every section of
pipe with an inside diameter D and equivalent length L is:

where V is the velocity in the relevant section of relevant pipe and f is the Fanning friction factor,
which can be reasonably approximated for turbulent flow in standard industrial steel pipes
(roughness factor ε = 0.00017 ft) as:

where μ is the viscosity. If the pipe consists of multiple sections with different diameters and lengths,
you must add the individual values for ΔPf for all of the sections.

Notice that the right-hand sides of Eq. 3 and Eq. 4 both have only one flow parameter — velocity —
that varies significantly during normal plant operation. All of the other relatively constant variables
can be combined into a single “constant” for the pipe as a whole:
where Kf is an empirical parameter that can be extracted from plant data and Q is flowrate.

Rewriting the system curve in simplified form gives:

where H is the head in ft and the subscript d refers to an actual operating datapoint at the desired
normal condition (or design specification if plant data are not available). Equation 6 is simplified by
using the variable k to represent (ΔPf)d/(ρQd1.8).

This formulation is important because it provides an easy and sufficiently accurate way to estimate
the entire system curve from just four pieces of plant data — Hs, (ΔPf)d, Qd, and ρ, which are usually
known.

An important point to keep in mind is that the static head (Hs) seldom remains constant; in reality it
fluctuates due to variations in vessel pressure at the suction and discharge ends, as well as
fluctuations in liquid level in the supply or destination tanks. If frictional losses dominate the system,
then for simplicity the static head may be considered approximately constant; otherwise, variations in
static head must also be taken into account in the analysis.

Pump power consumption (brake horsepower, or BHP) is obtained from:

where Q is the flowrate in gpm, ΔPT is the total pressure drop including the static and dynamic head
in psi, SG is specific gravity, H is head in ft liquid, and η is efficiency.

Keep in mind that the Q-H-η performance curves provided by the vendor at the time of purchase are
invariably based on tests with water. If the actual fluid being pumped has a different specific gravity,
the head must be adjusted by dividing Hw (the head of water, found on the performance curve) by the
specific gravity of the actual fluid.

The difference between the energy supplied to the pump (the performance curve) and the pressure-
volume (PV) energy absorbed by the fluid to overcome system head goes primarily into heating the
fluid, with minor amounts going to valve noise and to heating the lubricating oil. For the system
shown in Figure 4, the fate of energy supplied to the pump can be calculated, as in Table 1, and
displayed graphically as in Figure 5.

Table 1. Of the power supplied to the pump, only a portion is useful for raising pressure and
overcoming piping system friction....

Author Bios:
Jimmy D. Kumana
Mr. Kumana holds a masters degree in chem eng from the Univ of Cincinnati, and has more than 35
years of experience in process design and energy/water optimization, working for both
manufacturing and engineering design companies before establishing K&A in 1997, specializing in
Process Integration (Pinch Analysis). He has been a consultant to major corporations world-wide
including Shell, Amoco (BP), Dupont, Monsanto (Solutia), Union Carbide (Dow), Enron, Saudi
Aramco, SABIC, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, and SASOL, as well as to US Dept of Energy and
EPRI. He has authored or co-authored...Read more

Manuel R. Suarez
Manuel R. Suarez (Email: [email protected]) has more than 30 years of experience in
process engineering, process documentation, process control and automation, plant operations,
logistics of oil storage and transportation, project management, and technical training. His wide
experience covers polymers, oil and gas, petrochemicals, food and beverage, and process
equipment fabrication for companies in Europe, the Americas, and the Middle East. He has authored
or co-authored numerous papers, articles, presentations, and training courses...Read more

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