A General Guide to Positive Displacement Pumps - WittyWriter

A General Guide to Positive Displacement Pumps

1.0 Introduction

This guide provides general principles for the selection and application of positive displacement (PD) pumps. It covers pump types, characteristics, accessories, and critical overpressure protection requirements. For heavy-duty refinery or petrochemical services, pumps should typically comply with standards such as API-676 for rotary positive displacement pumps.

2.0 Pump Selection

Centrifugal vs. Positive Displacement Pumps

The choice between a centrifugal and a positive displacement pump depends on the application. PD pumps are often the better choice in the following scenarios:

Key Application Drivers for PD Pumps

Types of Positive Displacement Pumps

PD pumps are broadly classified into two main types:

1. Rotary Pumps

2. Reciprocating Pumps

3.0 Pump Characteristics

Characteristic Curve

A positive displacement pump moves a fixed volume of fluid with each rotation or stroke. As a result, its flow rate is directly proportional to its speed and is nearly constant, regardless of the discharge pressure. This is why a PD pump's characteristic curve is a near-vertical line, whereas a centrifugal pump's curve slopes downward. This behavior is also what creates a significant hazard: if the discharge is blocked, the pump will continue to try to move the fluid, increasing pressure indefinitely until the motor stalls, the piping ruptures, or the pump itself fails.

Net Positive Suction Head (NPSH)

NPSH Available (NPSHA) for a PD pump is calculated similarly to a centrifugal pump, but with one critical addition: Acceleration Head ($H_a$).

Reciprocating pumps create a pulsating flow, which means the entire column of liquid in the suction pipe must be constantly accelerated and decelerated. The energy required for this acceleration is the "acceleration head," which reduces the available NPSH at the pump inlet. This value must be subtracted from the steady-state NPSHA.

Estimating Acceleration Head Loss

A common formula for acceleration head is:

H_a = K Γ— L Γ— V Γ— N Γ— C

Where:

If the effective NPSHA (NPSHA - $H_a$) is insufficient, the pump will cavitate, leading to loss of efficiency and potential damage.

4.0 Pump Accessories and Control

Common Accessories

Flow Control Methods

Since a PD pump's flow is not controlled by a discharge throttle valve, one of these methods is used:

  1. Variation of Stroke Length: The most common method for metering pumps. The length of the plunger's stroke is adjusted (manually or automatically) to change the displaced volume.
  2. Variation of Pump Speed: Using a variable speed drive (VSD) to change the pump's RPM, which directly changes the flow rate. Common for rotary pumps.
  3. Back Pressure Control: A back-pressure control valve on a bypass line routes excess flow back to the pump's suction or source tank. This is common in ring-main systems (e.g., fuel oil supply) that need constant pressure.

5.0 Critical Safety: Overpressure Protection

Because a PD pump will deliver its rated flow regardless of pressure, it must be protected from a blocked discharge. This is the most critical safety consideration for any PD pump installation.

Warning: Do Not Rely on Internal Relief Valves

Many pumps are offered with small, *internal* relief valves. These valves are not designed for process safety and are intended only for brief, momentary protection.

They must not be used as the primary overpressure protection device because they typically do not meet process safety standards:

An external, full-flow relief device is always required.

External Overpressure Protection Methods

The external relief system must be capable of relieving the full rated capacity of the pump.

  1. Relief Valve (RV) to Pump Suction: The most common method. The RV discharge is piped back to the pump's suction line.
    Caution: If the fluid is near its vapor pressure, this loop can heat up and cause the liquid to flash. A cooler or temperature detector may be needed.
  2. Relief Valve (RV) to Source: A safer alternative. The RV discharges back to the main source vessel (tank). This allows the heat to dissipate and prevents overheating the fluid at the pump suction.
  3. Rupture Discs: Can be used for slurries that would clog a standard relief valve.
  4. Hydraulic Circuit Relief (Diaphragm Pumps): A relief valve in the hydraulic drive fluid protects the pump by stopping the diaphragm's stroke.
  5. Pressure Switch Interlock: A high-pressure switch on the discharge that is interlocked to shut down the pump motor. This is less reliable than an RV and should be backed up by one.
  6. Torque Limiting Device: A device like a shear pin that mechanically disconnects the drive if the pump seizes or overpressures.

Best Practices for Relief Devices

6.0 Modifying Pumping Systems

Debottlenecking

Unlike centrifugal pumps, modifying a PD pump's performance is limited. Changing the pump's speed directly changes its capacity but has no effect on its pressure capability (which is set by the system resistance and relief valve). Doubling a PD pump's speed will double its flow and roughly double its power requirement.

Parallel and Series Operation

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