thegasgiant:
The pumping of pure, saturated LCO2 (Liquified CO2) is an ordinary, common occurance today. I've done it many times and I've left installations that may still be in service. Your major Industrial Gas Producers, like Praxair, deliver thousands of tons of LCO2 on a daily basis using transfer pumps mounted on tanker trucks that transport the LCO2 to bottlers (like Coca-Cola, Pepsi) on a daily basis. This pumping of saturated LCO2 takes place under saturated conditions, like your own, and the trucker pumps out the contents of his tanker down to essentially zero level - far less than your good 2 meters of head.
In the early days, 40 years ago, we tried a lot of pumps out at Liquid Carbonic Corp (now Praxair) where the book was written on CO2. We settled on a Smith MC2 model that seemed to work very well. It was a conventional gear pump with cast iron construction. However, I must alert you to the fact that what 25362 is asking has the basis for success. You must TRANSPORT your heat pick up that the pump generates. In other words, you can't throttle, constrain, or allow the pump to heat up without having a heat sink - and that is essentially what you have in a LCO2 pump, no external heat sink. In other words, you don't have a colder fluid (like liquid N2) cooling down the pump and removing the heat generated by pumping. You are totally reliant on the flow of the LCO2 to take the heat built up away with it. You've got to keep it moving forward.
I used centrifugal pumps (both conventional and regenerative turbine) as well as gear pumps and piston pumps to transport LCO2. Their construction material has been cast iron, stainless, and bronze. There are suppliers out there with plenty of experience now and they'll be of great help to you. I realize it's difficult to describe your system without a sketch ability on this forum, but you could at least tell us basic data like 25362 mentions.
You should not have any problems, but you haven't told us how or why the pump(s) fail after the months of service. Is it a materials' failure or a process failue?
Art Montemayor
Spring, TX