mechem03
Mechanical
- Oct 31, 2007
- 8
Hi everyone,
I am wondering if anyone has had any experience with a piping system becoming overpressurized when the pump is shut off. Here is my scenario:
Fluid: No. 2 diesel fuel
Pump: 2 hp, 1800 rpm gear pump
Flow: 30 gpm
Design pressure: 30 psi
There is a 12 ft negative suction lift at the pump. Downstream of the pump we have: internal pressure relief valve set to 50 psi, pressure gage, butterfly & check valves, 420 micron strainer, oscillating piston flow meter (which requires the 420 micron strainer), and an automatic solenoid valve. After this point, the fuel is discharged into a storage tank. A float switch in the tank shuts off the solenoid valve when fuel is no longer needed which then sends a signal to the PLC to shut off the pump.
When the pump is operating at steady state, the discharge pressure gage reads at 15-20 psi. When the pump is shut off, the pressure gage initially reads 5 psi, but after several minutes, it creeps up until it reaches 50 psi. After draining some of the fluid out of the line, the pressure falls back down to 5 psi, but then creeps back up to 50 psi. After draining the system again, the gage stays around 5 psi.
I've been puzzled by this all afternoon. Anyone have any opinions or advice? I'd appreciate any thoughts on this. I don't think it's due to thermal expansion, but if anyone disagrees, let me know!
I am wondering if anyone has had any experience with a piping system becoming overpressurized when the pump is shut off. Here is my scenario:
Fluid: No. 2 diesel fuel
Pump: 2 hp, 1800 rpm gear pump
Flow: 30 gpm
Design pressure: 30 psi
There is a 12 ft negative suction lift at the pump. Downstream of the pump we have: internal pressure relief valve set to 50 psi, pressure gage, butterfly & check valves, 420 micron strainer, oscillating piston flow meter (which requires the 420 micron strainer), and an automatic solenoid valve. After this point, the fuel is discharged into a storage tank. A float switch in the tank shuts off the solenoid valve when fuel is no longer needed which then sends a signal to the PLC to shut off the pump.
When the pump is operating at steady state, the discharge pressure gage reads at 15-20 psi. When the pump is shut off, the pressure gage initially reads 5 psi, but after several minutes, it creeps up until it reaches 50 psi. After draining some of the fluid out of the line, the pressure falls back down to 5 psi, but then creeps back up to 50 psi. After draining the system again, the gage stays around 5 psi.
I've been puzzled by this all afternoon. Anyone have any opinions or advice? I'd appreciate any thoughts on this. I don't think it's due to thermal expansion, but if anyone disagrees, let me know!