- Title : Main Part Centrifugal Pump [ pdf ] by Igor J Karassik and CC Heald
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CLASSIFICATION AND NOMENCLATURE
A centrifugal pump consists of a set of rotating vanes enclosed within a housing or casing that is used to impart energy to a fluid through centrifugal force. Thus, stripped of all refinements, a centrifugal pump has two main parts: (1) a rotating element, including an impeller and a shaft, and (2) a stationary element made up of a casing, casing cover, and bearings. In a centrifugal pump, the liquid is forced by atmospheric or other pressure into a set of rotating vanes. These vanes constitute an impeller that discharges the liquid at its periphery at a higher velocity. This velocity is converted to pressure energy by means of a volute (see Figure 1) or by a set of stationary diffusion vanes (see Figure 2) surrounding the impeller periphery. Pumps with volute casings are generally called volute pumps, while those with diffusion vanes are called diffuser pumps. Diffuser pumps were once quite commonly called turbine pumps, but this term has become more selectively applied to the vertical deep-well centrifugal diffuser pumps usually referred to as vertical turbine pumps. Figure 1 shows the path of the liquid passing through an end-suction volute pump operating at rated capacity (the capacity at which best efficiency is obtained). Impellers are classified according to the major direction of flow in reference to the axis of rotation. Thus, centrifugal pumps may have the following:
A centrifugal pump consists of a set of rotating vanes enclosed within a housing or casing that is used to impart energy to a fluid through centrifugal force. Thus, stripped of all refinements, a centrifugal pump has two main parts: (1) a rotating element, including an impeller and a shaft, and (2) a stationary element made up of a casing, casing cover, and bearings. In a centrifugal pump, the liquid is forced by atmospheric or other pressure into a set of rotating vanes. These vanes constitute an impeller that discharges the liquid at its periphery at a higher velocity. This velocity is converted to pressure energy by means of a volute (see Figure 1) or by a set of stationary diffusion vanes (see Figure 2) surrounding the impeller periphery. Pumps with volute casings are generally called volute pumps, while those with diffusion vanes are called diffuser pumps. Diffuser pumps were once quite commonly called turbine pumps, but this term has become more selectively applied to the vertical deep-well centrifugal diffuser pumps usually referred to as vertical turbine pumps. Figure 1 shows the path of the liquid passing through an end-suction volute pump operating at rated capacity (the capacity at which best efficiency is obtained). Impellers are classified according to the major direction of flow in reference to the axis of rotation. Thus, centrifugal pumps may have the following:
- Radial-flow impellers (see Figures 25, 34, 35, 36, and 37)
- Axial-flow impellers (see Figure 29)
- Mixed-flow impellers, which combine radial- and axial-flow principles (see Figures 27 and 28)
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