Pump Glossary

on . Posted in Pump

A

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  • Affinity Laws  -   The mathematical relationship between the several variables involved in pump performance.  They apply to all types of centrifugal and axial flow pumps.
  • Alignment  -  The centerline of the pump is perfectly aligned with the centerline of the driver.
  • Anti-friction Bearing  -  Usually referring to a ball or roller bearing.
  • Anti-rotation Device  -  A device that prevents one rotating piece from rotating with respect to a second adjacent part. Usually designed as a pin or key.
  • Anti vortex Plate  -  It prevents the formation of a vortex at intake suction points by increasing the path length.  Vortexes can cause disturbances at vertical intakes by allowing air to enter the system along with the fluid being pumped.
  • Atmospheric Pressure  -  The pressure exerted upon the earth's surface by the air because of the gravitational attraction of the earth.
  • Axial Split Casing  -  A casing for a pump that is manufactured in two halves and joined. The join runs along the axis of the pump.
  • Axial Thrust  -  The resultant of all axial forces, in direction of the pump shaft, acting in the pump rotor.
  • Axial Thrust Balancing  -  An impeller wants to move in an axial direction with a lot of force.  This is a method by which the axial thrust is balanced to minimize bearing loads.

B

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  • Back Plate  -  Used in some centrifugal pumps to position the stuffing box and provide an impeller wear surface.
  • Back Vane  -  A radial narrow vane located on the back shroud of an impeller and is designed to balance axial thrust.
  • Balance Holes  -  Holes in the back shroud of an impeller designed to balance axial thrust.
  • Balance Seal  -  A design in which the seal face closing area is reduced to lower the closing force, and reduce the heat generation between the faces.
  • Base Plate  -  The plate on which the pump and motor are mounted.
  • Bearing  -  Supports the rotating shaft and allows it to turn with a minimum amount of friction.
  • Bernoulli's Equation  -  A way of describing the conservation of energy principle in an incompressible fluid.
  • Bowl  -  In multi-stage vertical turbine pumps, the bowl is the casing of one of the stages.
  • Buffer Fluid  -  The fluid used between the two mechanical seals of a double seal (see barrier fluid).
  • Buffer Seal  -  The low pressure fluid that is circulated between dual mechanical seals.
  • Bushing  -  A close fitting support device is used to restrict flow between two liquids, thermally isolate a hot liquid, support the rotating shaft, break down pressure, etc.

C

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  • Cartridge Seal  -  A self contained assembly containing the seal, gland, sleeve, and both stationary and rotating seal faces.  Usually needs no installation measurement.  Must be used in a pump with impeller clearance adjustments are made.
  • Cavitation  -  The creation and collapse of bubbles in a liquid.  Localized cavities of vapor form on the low pressure side of the pump (suction) and collapse on themselves as energy is added to the fluid.
  • Cavitation Number  -  The relationship between the difference of a local absolute pressure from the vapor pressure and the kinetic energy per volume.
  • Cavitation Number Vapor Pressure  -
  • Centrifugal Force  -  When a force pushes away from the center of a circle, but this does not really exist.  When an object travels in a circle, the object always wants to go straight, but the centripetal force keeps the object traveling along an axis of rotation.
  • Closed Impeller  -  An impeller whose vanes are completely enclosed by two shrouds, one on the front and one on the back.
  • Composite  -  In the context of mechanical seals, it refers to either a non-metallic material or a combination of a non-metallic face inserted into a metallic base material.
  • Concentricity  -  The motor shaft and the pump shaft share the same centerline they are concentric to each other.

D

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  • Discharge Pipe  -  The pipe that exits the wet well or valve box.
  • Drawdown  -  The distance that the water level in the well is lowered by pumping.  It is the difference between the static water level and the pumping level.
  • Dry Running  -  In the absence of liquid, flow parts running.
  • Dual Seal  -  Two seals running in various configurations: back to back, tandem, face to face, or concentric.
  • Dynamic Elastomer  -  The elastic components of the seal that must compensate for seal face wear or shaft movement. Usually made of rubber or other elastic polymer.
  • Dynamic Head  -  The dynamic head is the component of the total dynamic head caused by friction in the system, due to interaction of the process fluid with the pipe walls.
  • Dynamic Unbalance  -  A situation where the axis of inertia of a rotor or impeller, is not coincident with its geometric axis.

E

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  • Elevation  -  A vertical distance up or down from a fixed point.
  • Enthalpy  -  The sum of internal energy changes in heat under constant pressure of the system.
  • Expeller  -  A type of gland seal that reduces the bypass pressure from the pump into the gland or rotary sealing area of the pump.
  • Eye of the Impeller  -  The center of the impeller, where the fluid enters.

F

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  • Face-to-face Seals  -  Two seals running against a common seal face.  The barrier fluid pressure is always lower than stuffing box pressure.
  • Face Lubrication  -  The fluid or vapor that exists between lapped mechanical seal faces.
  • Flooded Suction  -  The liquid flows to the pump inlet from an elevated source by means of gravity.  This is generally recommended for centrifugal pumps.
  • Flow Rate  -  The amount of fluid that flows in a given time past a specific point if the temperature and pressure were at standard conditions.
  • Friction  -  The mechanical resistance to the relative movement of two surfaces.  The frictional force on each body is in an opposite direcrion to the motion of the other body.
  • Friction Loss  -  How much loss of flow through a pipe is due to the viscosity, the measure of the internal friction/resistance to the flow of a liquid near the surface of the pipe.   

G

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  • Galling  -  A situation where two moving parts that are in close contact, seize and are bonded together.
  • Gland  -  A component of a mechanical seal that attaches to the stuffing box.
  • Gland Packing  -  A dynamic sealing device that generates a compression force between the packing and the rotating part and the fixed part through the self-tightening effect of pre-tightening or medium pressure.

H

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  • Head  -  Used to express pressure or pressure energy.
  • Head Loss  -  A pressure loss due to the resistance of the fluid and obstructions along the way in a pipe.
  • Head Pressure  -  The pressure at a specific point to the vertical distance at another specific point.
  • Heating Jacket  -  Used to maintain a constant product temperature or temperature range while the fluid flows through the pump.
  • Hydraulics  -  The force or motion applied on a confined liquid.
  • Hydraulic Balance  -  A method of reducing mechanical seal face loading by reducing the seal face closing area.
  • Hydraulic Gradient Flow Rate  -  Measure the amount of fluid that flows in a given time past a specific.

I

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  • Impeller  -  The portion of a centrifugal pump that does the work.  Water enters the impeller and is accelerated across the vanes.
  • Impeller Eye  -  The centre of the impeller or the point where fluid enters the impeller.
  • Impeller Shroud  -  The plates located on one or both sides of the impeller vanes.  Prevents solids from penetrating behind the vanes.
  • Impeller Vane  -  Located between the eye and the discharge side of the impeller.  Directs the flow of the liquid to the outside diameter of the impeller.
  • Internal Energy  -  The total of all energies associated with the motion of the molecules in the system.

J

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  • Journal  -  The proportion of the main shaft that is supported by a plain bearing.
  • Journal Bearing  -  A plain, sleeve or sleeve-shaped bearing used to support a shaft.
  • Journal Box  -  A casing or housing that contains the journal and the journal bearing.

K

L

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  • Lag Pump  -  A succeeding or backup pump in a pump system.
  • Laminar Flow  -  Generally happens when dealing with low Reynolds numbers in pipes. This could be due to low velocities, large diameters or high viscosities.
  • Lead Pump  -  The first pump to start in a pump cycle.
  • Liquid End  -  A term referring to the side or parts of the pump that come into contact with the process fluid.  This applies to any air operated pump including air operated diaphragm pumps, air operated piston pumps and air operated drum pumps.

M

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  • Magnetic Drive  -  This is a method of connecting the motive force to the pump which uses a series of magnets coupled together, with a containment chamber separating them. Magnetic drives keep the fluid sealed from atmosphere and other environmental factors and eliminate the need for seals and seal maintenance.
  • Mechanical Efficiency  -  The ratio of theoretical power the pump needs to operate to the actual power delivered to the pump itself.
  • Mechanical Seal  -  Mechanical assembly that forms a leak proof barrier between flat, rotating surfaces to prevent high-pressure leakage.

N

O

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  • Open Impeller  -  Impellers designed without front, outer, shrouds.
  • Operating Box  -  Measured after the seal has been compressed the proper amount.  The measurement is usually made from the face of the stuffing box.
  • Overall Efficiency  -  The ratio of the output of actual power to the input of actual power.  It determines the amount of energy lost overall.
  • Overload Protection  -  The effect of a device operative on excessive current, but not necessarily on short circuit, to cause and maintain the interruption of current flow to the device being governed.
  • Overload Relay  -  A relay that responds to electric load and operates at a preset value of overload. The unit senses the current in each line to the motor and is either bimetallic, melting alloy or solid state actuated. It may be of the non-compensated or ambient-compensated type, and of a standard or fast-trip design.

P

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  • Peak Factor  -  A variable multiplier used with average flow to determine required pump capacity for wastewater lift stations or potable water booster stations.  Variation is determined by the size and type of facility.
  • Performance Curve  -  A graph depicting the plot of total head vs flow rate for a specific pump, with a specific impeller and set of characteristics
  • Plunger Pump  -  Plunger pump and piston pumps operate in much the same way.  They’re both reciprocating displacement pumps that pull fluid through a one-way intake valve, pressurize it and discharge it through a one-way outtake valve.  Unlike a piston that fits tightly inside the cylinder, a plunger fits loosely.
  • Potential Energy  -  The possessed energy by a body due to its relative position in a gravitational field.  As the elevation of the body decreases the less potential energy.
  • Power Factor  -  The ratio between the amount of consumed power and the amount of absorbed or returned power.
  • Pressure  -  The force exerted perpendicular to the surface of an object and is expressed as force per unit area.
  • Pulsation  -  In principle, every diaphragm pump generates a continuous sequence of individual pump pulses.  The pressure fluctuations in the pumped medium caused by these cyclical diaphragm movements.
  • Pump Control  -  Systems and devices used to manage and regulate the operation of pumps.
  • Pump Static Efficiency  -  Efficiency under steady state or static conditions when pumping a fluid.  It is a measure of how effectively the pump converts input power into hydraulic energy in the fluid.

Q

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  • Quill Shaft  -  A shaft that is hollow, containing another shaft inside of it.

R

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  • Reynolds Number  -  The ratio of inertial forces (forces that remain at rest or in uniform motion) to viscosity forces (the resistance to flow).

S

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  • Scum  -  Floating matter which rises to the surface of a liquid and forms a layer or film.
  • Sealing Flange  -  The connection between the pump discharge and force main when used with guide rail systems.
  • Shaft Packing  -  Shaft packing is a kind of friction seal or stuffing box to prevent leakage between the pump shaft and the casing.  Commonly used shaft seal types include packing seal, mechanical seal, and power seal.
  • Shut-off Head  -  The total head corresponding to zero flow on the pump performance curve.
  • Specific Gravity  -  The density or ratio of any substance to another substance.
  • Static Discharge Head  -  The highest liquid surface in the discharge system above the centerline of the pump.
  • Strain  -  The deformation, stretched or compressed, of a material compared to its original length.
  • Stress  -  The force per unit area of cross-section.
  • Stroke  -  The stroke of a pump describes the length of the distance that is necessary for the complete deflection of the diaphragm ,top dead center to bottom dead center.  With our eccentric diaphragm pumps, the stroke is defined by the size of the rotating eccentric.
  • Stuffing Box  -  That portion of the pump that held the packing and now holds the mechanical seal.
  • Submergence  -  The vertical distance between pumping level and the bottom of the pump or jet assembly.  Submergence must be sufficient to insure that the suction opening of the pump or jet assembly is always covered with water, while maintaining enough clearance from the bottom of the well to keep it out of sediment.
  • Suction Head Coefficient  -  The angular velocity of the turbomachine shaft and the turbomachine impeller diameter.
  • Surge Arrestor  -  A protective device typically connected to the input power for limiting surge voltages on equipment by discharging or bypassing surge current.

T

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  • Total Discharge Head  -  The total of the friction, pressure, and static discharge.
  • Total Pump Efficency  -  The conversion of one form of energy into another form of energy.
  • Total Suction Head  -  The total of the friction, pressure, and static discharge.

U

V

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  • Vane  - The vanes, rotary vanes or vane cell plates, are part of the pump head of a rotary vane pump.  The vanes move in the guide slots of the revolving rotor and are responsible for transporting the medium.
  • Vapor Pressure  -  The pressure at a certain temperature when the liquid and vapor are in equilibrium.
  • Viscosity  -  The measure of the internal friction/resistance to the flow of a liquid.  Lower viscosity fluids flow easily in pipes where high viscosity fluids have a have a higher pressure drop
  • Viscosity of a Slurry  -  A mixture of liquids and solids, is comparitive to the viscosity of the liquid phase.
  • Volumetric Efficiency  -  This is for the volumetric efficiency for an internal combustion engine.  For a thermal engine, the combustion process depends on the air-fuel ratio inside the cylinder.  The more air inside the combustion chamber, the more fuel that can be burned and the higher the output engine torque and power.
  • Volute  -  The casing of a centrifugal pump made in the form of a spiral or volute as an aid to the partial conversion of the velocity energy into pressure head as the water leaves the impeller.

W

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  • Water Hammer  -  It occurs when a valve is suddenly opened or closed.  This can creates a repeating pressure wave of the liquid in the pipe that could cause a rupture to the pipe or even damage equipment.
  • Work  -  The action done or applied force on an object that displaces the object.

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Tags: Pump Glossary