Rputvin
Mechanical
- Oct 31, 2017
- 188
I've got an interesting situation on a customer installation. The system uses a roof-installed cooling tower, being supplied with 1400-1500gpm of warm water (90-105°F). The return is a 12" gravity drain, which terminates slightly above the water level of the 3500gallon sump tank (approx 70-85°F).
The main issue is that the customer located that drain near a pump suction (one of five) and the velocity of the return water combined with the entrained air in the partially-flooded line is pushing air directly into the pump suction. As a result that one pump is cavitating as the case fills with air and it can't make pressure to push open its check valve. Everything else is operating as it should. These are end-suction, top-discharge, centrifugal Bell & Gossett e1510 5GB & 6BD pumps and happen to have an air trap in the case as the discharge volute comes from the side/bottom
We attempted to counteract this scenario during design with baffling and a suggested setup for the return pipe. The customer/installation contractor didn't get the memo and here we are with the return in a bad spot that bypasses the internal baffles, and dumping the full force at the surface of the water in the tank and creating a big, agitated mess. We'll address this with some small rework changes to put that baffling in the right spot.
During the process of talking with the customer we had a contractor rep from the pump manufacturer do an independent evaluation. He concluded it was entrained air. The curious part of his report was his continued issue with air being in the gravity return line. His suggested fixes include moving the tower drain from the side of the basin to the center of the bottom (cannot physically happen without changing towers), or staying with the side outlet and installing a vortex breaker as well as a cap of sorts to prevent air from entering the outlet from siphoning. I don't believe air can be removed from the drain line and have it still function, though I may be wrong, and the tower basin must drain to empty during normal operation- so there's no way to ensure the return is flooded regardless. But it got us talking about maybe making changes to this setup to help ensure success on future systems, as this is not the first time issues have arisen from improper installation of the gravity return.
So on to my actual questions;
Does anyone have experience with similar gravity draining setups that might have a good approach? I'd love to hear thoughts on possible changes to equipment or practices, or information related to the topic. Are breathers or vents of some kind advisable? Would a diffuser at the end of the return line remove a lot of the agitation/air being introduced into the tank? Do you use a stillwell or build more containment into the tank to handle the messy return water?
Process diagram with some information removed is attached.
The main issue is that the customer located that drain near a pump suction (one of five) and the velocity of the return water combined with the entrained air in the partially-flooded line is pushing air directly into the pump suction. As a result that one pump is cavitating as the case fills with air and it can't make pressure to push open its check valve. Everything else is operating as it should. These are end-suction, top-discharge, centrifugal Bell & Gossett e1510 5GB & 6BD pumps and happen to have an air trap in the case as the discharge volute comes from the side/bottom
We attempted to counteract this scenario during design with baffling and a suggested setup for the return pipe. The customer/installation contractor didn't get the memo and here we are with the return in a bad spot that bypasses the internal baffles, and dumping the full force at the surface of the water in the tank and creating a big, agitated mess. We'll address this with some small rework changes to put that baffling in the right spot.
During the process of talking with the customer we had a contractor rep from the pump manufacturer do an independent evaluation. He concluded it was entrained air. The curious part of his report was his continued issue with air being in the gravity return line. His suggested fixes include moving the tower drain from the side of the basin to the center of the bottom (cannot physically happen without changing towers), or staying with the side outlet and installing a vortex breaker as well as a cap of sorts to prevent air from entering the outlet from siphoning. I don't believe air can be removed from the drain line and have it still function, though I may be wrong, and the tower basin must drain to empty during normal operation- so there's no way to ensure the return is flooded regardless. But it got us talking about maybe making changes to this setup to help ensure success on future systems, as this is not the first time issues have arisen from improper installation of the gravity return.
So on to my actual questions;
Does anyone have experience with similar gravity draining setups that might have a good approach? I'd love to hear thoughts on possible changes to equipment or practices, or information related to the topic. Are breathers or vents of some kind advisable? Would a diffuser at the end of the return line remove a lot of the agitation/air being introduced into the tank? Do you use a stillwell or build more containment into the tank to handle the messy return water?
Process diagram with some information removed is attached.