Boiler1
Mechanical
- Jun 3, 2004
- 40
Hi All,
I’ve got a set of liquid ring vacuum pumps operating on 24/7/365 basis with periodic duty/stand by rotations. There is a dedicated separator tank looped with each pump to maintain the water seal during operation. These separator tanks are vented through the common exhaust header with the fan. We recently noticed a large amount of seal water accumulated in the exhaust header.
Its unclear how did the seal water find its way from the separator tank into exhaust ?
The system is designed as follows:
The separator tank exhaust intake is at the top of the tank
The exhaust suction pressure is 4-5 “Water at the intake, whilst the top water level in the tank is 20 “Water below exhaust intake. The high water level is alarmed and the over flow pipe is in place to insure the max water level ( no alarms, no overflow detected)
As there was no way for the water in the tank to reach the exhaust intake – is it possible that pump starts/stops have been trickle splashing water into the exhaust that eventually accumulated in the duct?
Could evaporation ( + condensation in the exhaust ) be the cause ? The water temperature is relatively low – around 55 degF.
Has anybody got similar experiences?
Regards
I’ve got a set of liquid ring vacuum pumps operating on 24/7/365 basis with periodic duty/stand by rotations. There is a dedicated separator tank looped with each pump to maintain the water seal during operation. These separator tanks are vented through the common exhaust header with the fan. We recently noticed a large amount of seal water accumulated in the exhaust header.
Its unclear how did the seal water find its way from the separator tank into exhaust ?
The system is designed as follows:
The separator tank exhaust intake is at the top of the tank
The exhaust suction pressure is 4-5 “Water at the intake, whilst the top water level in the tank is 20 “Water below exhaust intake. The high water level is alarmed and the over flow pipe is in place to insure the max water level ( no alarms, no overflow detected)
As there was no way for the water in the tank to reach the exhaust intake – is it possible that pump starts/stops have been trickle splashing water into the exhaust that eventually accumulated in the duct?
Could evaporation ( + condensation in the exhaust ) be the cause ? The water temperature is relatively low – around 55 degF.
Has anybody got similar experiences?
Regards