Diagnosing Pump Cavitation - The Informative Brief

Diagnosing Pump Cavitation - The Informative Brief

Cavitation normally creates random, higher frequency vibration or “noise”.

It is often observed as a “hump” in the vibration spectrum raising the floor from about 15X to 35X.

Cavitation normally indicates insufficient suction pressure or starvation - i.e., low inlet pressure.

The liquid tends to vaporize while coming off the impeller creating vacuum bubbles that implode. The waveform can often sound like gravel in the pump.

Diagnosing Cavitation :

  • High frequency, random vibration. 

  • Sounds like the pump is pumping gravel.

  • cavitation causes excessive wear on the impeller and other internal components.

  • May come and go from one collection to the next as the load varies.

Recommended Actions:

  • Assess operational parameters (flow rates and pressure).

    Actual flow and pressure should be compared to the pump curve and design point of the pump.

    Insufficient flows and/or pressures lead to cavitation.

  • Inspection of the internal components (impeller vanes) for excessive wear.

 

Dr. Ranjan Pal, Ph.D. IIT Kharagpur

Academician, Researcher, Mentor, and Consultant || AI/ML || Real Time Fault Diagnosis and Prognosis || Smart Manufacturing|| Cyber Physical Systems || Gold Medalist - NIT Durgapur 2018

1y

Thanks for sharing Aly Attia

Padmanabhan Gopala Krishna

VA CAT III, MLA II, CMRP- Rotating Equipment Vibration & Condition Monitoring & Reliability Engineer Kuwait Oil Company

1y

Very good article 👍

Agus Salim

technician of technical specialist at medco E&P Indonesia south sumatera block western (tpc)

1y

Thanks sir. this is very useful

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