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Page Title: CENTRIFUGAL PUMPS
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Two-Phase Fluid Flow Summary
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Thermodynamics Heat Transfer and Fluid Flow Volume 3 of 3
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Operating Characteristics of a Centrifugal Pump

Fluid Flow CENTRIFUGAL PUMPS CENTRIFUGAL PUMPS Centrifugal pumps are one of the most common components found in fluid systems.  In order to understand how a fluid system containing a centrifugal pump operates, it is necessary to understand the head and flow relationships for a centrifugal pump. EO 1.37 DEFINE the terms net positive suction head and cavitation. EO 1.38 CALCULATE the new volumetric flow rate, head, or power for a variable speed centrifugal pump using the pump laws. EO 1.39 DESCRIBE the effect on system flow and pump head for the following changes: a. Changing pump speeds b. Adding pumps in parallel c. Adding pumps in series Energy Conversion in a Centrifugal Pump Fluid entering a centrifugal pump is immediately directed to the low pressure area at the center or eye of the impeller.  As the impeller and blading rotate, they transfer momentum to incoming fluid.  A transfer of momentum to the moving fluid increases the fluid’s velocity.  As the fluid’s velocity increases its kinetic energy increases.   Fluid of high kinetic energy is forced out of the impeller area and enters the volute. The  volute  is  a  region  of  continuously  increasing  cross-sectional  area  designed  to  convert  the kinetic energy of the fluid into fluid pressure.   The mechanism of this energy conversion is the same  as  that  for  subsonic  flow  through  the  diverging  section  of  a  nozzle.   The  mathematical analysis  of  flow  through  the  volute  is  based  on  the  general  energy  equation,  the  continuity equation,  and  the  equation  relating  the  internal  properties  of  a  system.    The  key  parameters influencing the energy conversion are the expanding cross-sectional area of the volute, the higher system back pressure at the discharge of the volute, and the incompressible, subsonic flow of the fluid.  As a result of the interdependence of these parameters, the fluid flow in the volute, similar to subsonic flow in a diverging nozzle, experiences a velocity decrease and a pressure increase. Rev. 0 Page 47 HT-03

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