Tommyasdf
Mechanical
- Dec 25, 2012
- 7
Hi everyone, I'm trying to figure out the feasibility of addressing this particular problem. I am far from an expert when it comes to pumps so thank you in advance for putting up with any stupid questions.
The simplified version is that there is a triplex pump taking fluid from one storage tank and pumping it through several thousand feet of pipe into another storage tank (which is actually located very close to the first tank). The majority of this 'pipeline' is essentially inaccessible, the beginning and end of the line are the only parts open to modification. The triplex pump is limited to 4,000 psi regardless of liner size. The flowrate is limited to 200 GPM because at higher flowrates, the pressure drop across the entire system exceeds that 4,000 psi limit.
I'd like to be able to increase the flowrate to at least 250 GPM but at a bare minimum cost (surprise!). I haven't done the math but let's assume this would increase the pressure drop by 800-1,000 psi. This spawned the idea of adding a smaller pump in series with the existing triplex. I only have the beginning and end of the line to play with but any additional pump would have to be downstream of the triplex due to inlet pressure restrictions.
My initial thought was to use a rotary PDP immediately downstream of the triplex (with some sort of buffer in between) but this additional pump would need to be capable of an internal pressure of up to 5,000 psi even though the actual differential across it would only be 1,000 psi right? Is there any other obvious solution that I'm missing here? Thanks for the help everyone.
-Tommy
The simplified version is that there is a triplex pump taking fluid from one storage tank and pumping it through several thousand feet of pipe into another storage tank (which is actually located very close to the first tank). The majority of this 'pipeline' is essentially inaccessible, the beginning and end of the line are the only parts open to modification. The triplex pump is limited to 4,000 psi regardless of liner size. The flowrate is limited to 200 GPM because at higher flowrates, the pressure drop across the entire system exceeds that 4,000 psi limit.
I'd like to be able to increase the flowrate to at least 250 GPM but at a bare minimum cost (surprise!). I haven't done the math but let's assume this would increase the pressure drop by 800-1,000 psi. This spawned the idea of adding a smaller pump in series with the existing triplex. I only have the beginning and end of the line to play with but any additional pump would have to be downstream of the triplex due to inlet pressure restrictions.
My initial thought was to use a rotary PDP immediately downstream of the triplex (with some sort of buffer in between) but this additional pump would need to be capable of an internal pressure of up to 5,000 psi even though the actual differential across it would only be 1,000 psi right? Is there any other obvious solution that I'm missing here? Thanks for the help everyone.
-Tommy