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Pump System N.P.S.H.A Calculation Example (Imperial Units) : J. Chaurette June 2016

This document provides an example calculation for determining Net Positive Suction Head Available (NPSHA) for a pump system using imperial units. It includes steps for calculating flow rate, velocity, pipe friction loss, fittings loss, atmospheric pressure, vapor pressure, and determining if the system NPSHA is sufficient. The document also notes that the user should verify all calculations and formulas used.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
77 views

Pump System N.P.S.H.A Calculation Example (Imperial Units) : J. Chaurette June 2016

This document provides an example calculation for determining Net Positive Suction Head Available (NPSHA) for a pump system using imperial units. It includes steps for calculating flow rate, velocity, pipe friction loss, fittings loss, atmospheric pressure, vapor pressure, and determining if the system NPSHA is sufficient. The document also notes that the user should verify all calculations and formulas used.

Uploaded by

Mirso
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as XLSX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Pump system N.P.S.H.

A calculation example (Imperial units)


J. Chaurette June 2016
www.pumpfundamentals.com

Flow Dia. velocity viscosity Reynolds no. pipe rough. relative rough. SG
(gpm) (in) (ft/s) (cSt) (ft)

100 3 4.54 1 1.05E+05 0.00015 0.00060 1.00

Note: don't trust anyone, do your own calculations to verify these results,
verify the source of the formulas or develop them for yourself from basic principles,
secure yourself with a belt and suspenders, don't get caught with your pants down,
always sketch a flow schematic of your system including all the input data.
Yellow cells are inputs
The data used for the liquid are typical for water at 20 C
STEPS
1. determine flow rate
2. select pipe internal diameter
3. calculate velocity, determine if appropriate i.e between 3 and 6 ft/s, for new system adjust diameter
4. Calculate Reynolds number, determine if turbulent (i.e. above 4000)
5. input data: viscosity, specific gravity, pipe length, ilquid surface and suction centerline heights
inlet pressure head, inlet velocity, equipment head loss
6. input atmospheric pressure according to elevation (see tab below for chart)
7. input vapor pressure of liquid according to temperature (se tab below)
8. calculate the friction parameter with Swamee-Jain, check the value with the Moody diagram (see 5th tab)
9. calculate friction factor and pipe friction loss
10. calculate fittings (i.e. elbow, tees, reducers, etc.) using the Crane tech. paper 410 (neglected here)
to calculate use Cameron book data, Hydraulic Institute or other reliable source
or the Crane technical paper 410 http://www.pumpfundamentals.com/help16.html

Formulas are located here:


http://www.pumpfundamentals.com/formula%20grab-bag.htm
V1 (ft/s)
acc. gravity 32.17 atmosph. press. (psia)
(ft/s^2) elevation (ft)

frict. parameter frict. factor pipe length pipe frict. loss fittings loss
(ft) (ft) (ft)

0.0207 2.65 15 0.40 0.00

st diameter

ram (see 5th tab)


0 H1 (psi) 0
14.7 Vapor press. (psia) 1

liquid surf. to ref. suction cent. to ref. vel. head 1 press. head 1 Equip. head loss
(ft) (ft) v1^2/2g (ft) (ft)
(ft)

5.00 10.00 0 0 0
N.P.S.H.A.
(ft)

26.25
Pump system N.P.S.H.A calculation example (Imperial units)
J. Chaurette June 2016
www.pumpfundamentals.com

Flow Dia. velocity viscosity Reynolds no. pipe rough. relative rough. SG
(l/min) (mm) (m/s) (cSt) (mm)

378.5 76.2 1.38 1 1.05E+05 0.04573 0.00060 1.00

Note: don't trust anyone, do your own calculations to verify these results,
verify the source of the formulas or develop them for yourself from basic principles,
secure yourself with a belt and suspenders, don't get caught with your pants down,
always sketch a flow schematic of your system including all the input data.
Yellow cells are inputs
The data used for the liquid are typical for water at 20 C
STEPS
1. determine flow rate
2. select pipe internal diameter
3. calculate velocity, determine if appropriate i.e between 3 and 6 ft/s, for new system adjust diameter
4. Calculate Reynolds number, determine if turbulent (i.e. above 4000)
5. input data: viscosity, specific gravity, pipe length, ilquid surface and suction centerline heights
inlet pressure head, inlet velocity, equipment head loss
6. calculate the friction parameter with Swamee-Jain, check the value with the Moody diagram (see 5th tab)
6. input atmospheric pressure according to elevation (see tab below for chart)
7. input vapor pressure of liquid according to temperature (se tab below)
7. calculate friction factor and pipe friction loss
8. calculate fittings (i.e. elbow, tees, reducers, etc.) using the Crane tech. paper 410 (neglected here)
to calculate use Cameron book data, Hydraulic Institute or other reliable source
or the Crane technical paper 410 http://www.pumpfundamentals.com/help16.html

Formulas are located here:


http://www.pumpfundamentals.com/formula%20grab-bag.htm
V1 (m/s)
acc. gravity 9.81 atmosph. press. (kPaa)
(m/s^2) elevation (ft)

frict. parameter frict. factor pipe length pipe frict. loss fittings loss
(m) (m) (m)

0.0207 2.65 4.6 0.12 0.00

(see 5th tab)


0 H1 (kPa) 0
101 Vapor press. (kPaa) 7

liquid surf. to ref. suction cent. to ref. vel. head 1 press. head 1 Equip. head loss
(m) (m) v1^2/2g (m) (m)
(m)

1.52 3.05 0 0 0
N.P.S.H.A.
(m)

7.94
Moody diagram based on the Colebrook equation
equation

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