Title: Pumps and Pumping Stations
1Pumps and Pumping Stations
- Pumps add energy to fluids and therefore are
accounted for in the energy equation - Energy required by the pump depends on
- Discharge rate
- Resistance to flow (head that the pump must
overcome) - Pump efficiency (ratio of power entering fluid to
power supplied to the pump) - Efficiency of the drive (usually an electric
motor)
2Pump Jargon
- (Total) Static head difference in head between
suction and discharge sides of pump in the
absence of flow equals difference in elevation
of free surfaces of the fluid source and
destination - Static suction head head on suction side of
pump in absence of flow, if pressure at that
point is gt0 - Static discharge head head on discharge side of
pump in absence of flow
Total static head
3Pump Jargon
- (Total) Static head difference in head between
suction and discharge sides of pump in the
absence of flow equals difference in elevation
of free surfaces of the fluid source and
destination - Static suction lift negative head on suction
side of pump in absence of flow, if pressure at
that point is lt0 - Static discharge head head on discharge side of
pump in absence of flow
Total static head
4Pump Jargon
Total static head (both)
Note Suction and discharge head / lift measured
from pump centerline
5Pump Jargon
- (Total) Dynamic head, dynamic suction head or
lift, and dynamic discharge head same as
corresponding static heads, but for a given
pumping scenario includes frictional and minor
headlosses
Energy Line
Dynamic discharge head
Total dynamic head
Dynamic suction lift
6- Example. Determine the static head, total dynamic
head (TDH), and total headloss in the system
shown below.
El 730 ft
ps ?6 psig
El 640 ft
pd 48 psig
El 630 ft
7- Example. A booster pumping station is being
designed to transport water from an aqueduct to a
water supply reservoir, as shown below. The
maximum design flow is 25 mgd (38.68 ft3/s).
Determine the required TDH, given the following - H-W C values are 120 on suction side and 145
on discharge side - Minor loss coefficients are
- 0.50 for pipe entrance
- 0.18 for 45o bend in a 48-in pipe
- 0.30 for 90o bend in a 36-in pipe
- 0.16 and 0.35 for 30-in and 36-in butterfly
valves, respectively - Minor loss for an expansion is 0.25(v22 ? v12)/2g
8- Determine pipeline velocities from v Q/A..
- v30 7.88 ft/s, v36 5.47 ft/s, v48
3.08 ft/s - Minor losses, suction side
9- Minor losses, discharge side
10- Pipe friction losses
11- Loss of velocity head at exit
- Total static head under worst-case scenario
(lowest water level in aqueduct, highest in
reservoir)
- Total dynamic head required
12Pump Power
- P Power supplied to the pump from the shaft
also called brake power (kW or hp) - Q Flow (m3/s or ft3/s)
- TDH Total dynamic head
- ? Specific wt. of fluid (9800 N/m3 or 62.4
lb/ft3 at 20oC) - CF conversion factor 1000 W/kW for SI, 550
(ft-lb/s)/hp for US - Ep pump efficiency, dimensionless accounts
only for pump, not the drive unit
(electric motor)
Useful conversion 0.746 kW/hp
13- Example. Water is pumped 10 miles from a lake at
elevation 100 ft to a reservoir at 230 ft. What
is the monthly power cost at 0.08/kW-hr,
assuming continuous pumping and given the
following info - Diameter D 48 in Roughness e 0.003 ft,
Efficiency Pe 80 - Flow 25 mgd 38.68 ft3/s
- T 60o F
- Ignore minor losses
14Find f from Moody diagram
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17Pump Selection
- System curve indicates TDH required as a
function of Q for the given system - For a given static head, TDH depends only on HL,
which is approximately proportional to v2/2g - Q is proportion to v, so HL is approximately
proportional to Q2 (or Q1.85 if H-W eqn is used
to model hf) - System curve is therefore approximately parabolic
18- Example. Generate the system curve for the
pumping scenario shown below. The pump is close
enough to the source reservoir that suction pipe
friction can be ignored, but valves, fittings,
and other sources of minor losses should be
considered. On the discharge side, the 1000 ft of
16-in pipe connects the pump to the receiving
reservoir. The flow is fully turbulent with D-W
friction factor of 0.02. Coefficients for minor
losses are shown below.
K values K values
Suction Discharge
1 _at_ 0.10 1 _at_ 0.12
1 _at_ 0.12 1 _at_ 0.20
1 _at_ 0.30 1 _at_ 0.60
2 _at_ 1.00 4 _at_ 1.00
19- The sum of the K values for minor losses is 2.52
on the suction side and 5.52 on the discharge
side. The total of minor headlosses is therefore
8.04 v2/2g. - An additional 1.0 v2/2g of velocity head is lost
when the water enters the receiving reservoir. - The frictional headloss is
Total headloss is therefore (8.041.015.0)v2/2g
24.04 v2/2g. v can be written as Q/A, and A
pD2/ 4 1.40 ft2. The static head is 34 ft. So
20System curve
Static head
21Pump Selection
- Pump curve indicates TDH provided by the pump
as a function of Q - Depends on particular pump info usually provided
by manufacturer - TDH at zero flow is called the shutoff head
- Pump efficiency
- Can be plotted as fcn(Q), along with pump curve,
on a single graph - Typically drops fairly rapidly on either side of
an optimum flow at optimum efficiency known as
normal or rated capacity - Ideally, pump should be chosen so that operating
point corresponds to nearly peak pump efficiency
(BEP, best efficiency point)
22Pump Performance and Efficiency Curves
23Pump Selection
24Pump Efficiency
- Pump curves depend on pump geometry (impeller D)
and speed
25Pump Selection
- At any instant, a system has a single Q and a
single TDH, so both curves must pass through that
point ? operating point is intersection of
system and pump curves
26Pump System Curve
- System curve may change over time, due to
fluctuating reservoir levels, gradual changes in
friction coefficients, or changed valve settings.
27Pump Selection Multiple Pumps
- Pumps often used in series or parallel to achieve
desired pumping scenario - In most cases, a backup pump must be provided to
meet maximum flow conditions if one of the
operating (duty) pumps is out of service. - Pumps in series have the same Q, so if they are
identical, they each impart the same TDH, and the
total TDH is additive - Pumps in parallel must operate against the same
TDH, so if they are identical, they contribute
equal Q, and the total Q is additive
Adding a second pump moves the operating point
up the system curve, but in different ways for
series and parallel operation
28- Example. A pump station is to be designed for an
ultimate Q of 1200 gpm at a TDH of 80 ft. At
present, it must deliver 750 gpm at 60 ft. Two
types of pump are available, with pump curves as
shown. Select appropriate pumps and describe the
operating strategy. How will the system operate
under an interim condition when the requirement
is for 600 gpm and 80-ft TDH?
29- Either type of pump can meet current needs (750
gpm at 60 ft) pump B will supply slightly more
flow and head than needed, so a valve could be
partially closed. Pump B has higher efficiency
under these conditions, and so would be preferred.
30- The pump characteristic curve for two type-B
pumps in parallel can be drawn by taking the
curve for one type-B pump, and doubling Q at each
value of TDH. Such a scenario would meet the
ultimate need (1200 gpm at 80 ft), as shown below.
31- A pump characteristic curve for one type-A and
one type-B pump in parallel can be drawn in the
same way. This arrangement would also meet the
ultimate demand. Note that the type-B pump
provides no flow at TDHgt113 ft, so at higher TDH,
the composite curve is identical to that for just
one type-A pump. (A check valve would prevent
reverse flow through pump B.) Again, since type B
is more efficient, two type-B pumps would be
preferred over one type-A and one type-B.
32- At the interim conditions, a single type B pump
would suffice. - A third type B pump would be required as backup.