FACSITEDEV:
I don’t know what an ITT “Flojet” chemical pump is (& I doubt if most respondents do) and the description you give is of little use; what we need to know is what TYPE (centrifugal, PD, etc.) of pump you are employing. That information is more useful because it gives us a hint on the discharge and control characteristics of the pump. Is this the peristaltic pump that you mention later on? Nevertheless, since you mention “Chemical pump” and most non-chemical engineers use this generic term to describe a small, positive displacement, chemical addition pump, I am going to assume that is what you are using. If so, then the following applies:
1) Never, but never ever pipe up a pump's recycle discharge line (I assume that is what you mean by “shunt” – an electrical term, not a fluid mechanics term) directly back to the suction of the pump in question. Always pipe the recycle (or “return”) line back to the pump suction SOURCE, not the suction line. Since the pump has to be located near the source due to NPSHa requirements, it follows that it is just as easy to pipe back to the source in order to ensure stable and predictable suction conditions.
2) Use a liquid back pressure control valve (not a manual needle valve) to maintain a constant pump discharge pressure on the pump. This control valve should be installed on the recycle line going back to the source – not the suction. This ensures – for process control and safety reasons – that the pump’s pressure will be steady and constant at the pre-set value you select.
3) From the pump’s constant discharge pressure piping you can now pipe up from this point to the target you have – I presume you are “dripping” the Formalin solution into a chemical process or something similar. For the purpose of controlling the drip (and the pump’s discharge pressure) you must furnish a valve of some sort to meter out the dosage you need to apply. You can either use a manual needle valve (a ½” stainless steel barstock type?) or a process control valve. From a practical viewpoint it will be very difficult to find an appropriately sized process control valve and the needle valve is less expensive and works well if supervised. With the manual needle you run the risk of someone shutting it off – but the back pressure control valve is there to relieve any excess flow rate in the discharge and take it back to the source. I would opt for the manual needle valve as the best practical method to meter out such small flow quantities.
4) Never, but never ever depend on an existing, pump internal relief valve to control your flow requirements. This is, in effect, what you have stated that you intend to do. I take this opportunity to alert you to what experienced engineers in fluid transport already know: positive displacement pumps contain a built-in relief valve for the purposes of an EMERGENCY relief situation – not for flow control purposes. The device is there to protect the pump from mechanical damage due to potential excessive discharge pressures caused by having the pump’s discharge line blocked. I strongly recommend that you install a small, external relief valve on the external discharge piping coming from the pump and send the relief valve’s discharge directly back to the Formalin source – just as I recommend you do with the flow recycle. This is the conventional, safe method to ensure that the process is protected. You cannot rely on the pump’s relief valve for 100% security. This has a standing policy at serious and recognized chemical companies such as DuPont, Huntsman, etc. for many years. Upon doing research, it has been discovered that the pump manufacturers cannot come up with formal calculations and warranties on their built-in relief devices. These items were incorporated many years ago as an empirical solution. They are fine; but they can’t seriously be relied upon from a strict safety point of view.
Formalin solution is very heat sensitive and must be maintained at the pre-determined temperature – otherwise it will polymerize and cause you a lot of troubles. Checman correctly alerts you to this fact and I would add that the way to control the temperature at a constant value is to keep the solution constantly circulating back to the source (not the suction) and only tapping off the net flowrate that you require for your application – much as you’ve described (or I’ve interpreted).
Good Luck.
Art Montemayor
Spring, TX