SASC
Industrial
- May 7, 2003
- 22
Gentlemen,
I am looking for insights into this problem:
Situation - I am running a Vacuum System composed of liquid ring vacuum pumps processing saturated air at 100 degree F, seal water at 100 degree F, and pumps averaging in the 80 - 90% efficiency range(based against their published performance curves). Seal water is what ist is and can't be found of a lower temperature here. Also, we can't add condensers ahead of the vacuum pumps....cost and water consumption prohibitive. This system provides for the development of marginal vacuum levels(about 16.5" Hg./13.4" Hg.A), both at the pumps and at the application points, and we seek to get higher levels(approaching 18 -20" Hg. range)to assist production. Speeding up pumps is not an option(power limited). Piping, both inlet and exhaust, is superb and not at all inhibitive. I have arrived at an idea...WHAT DO YOU THINK? Idea: The process will accept higher processing temperatures without detrimental results. So, given that latitude, elevate the process temperatures from 125 degree F to 140 degree F, so that the vacuum pumps receive ~115 degree F vapor and thus we gain an enhanced condensing effect and we can "synthetically" accentuate air flow development to gain system resistance that will provide a vacuum level increase.
Please tear apart this idea if you can, and show where the shortcomings are therein.
I am looking for insights into this problem:
Situation - I am running a Vacuum System composed of liquid ring vacuum pumps processing saturated air at 100 degree F, seal water at 100 degree F, and pumps averaging in the 80 - 90% efficiency range(based against their published performance curves). Seal water is what ist is and can't be found of a lower temperature here. Also, we can't add condensers ahead of the vacuum pumps....cost and water consumption prohibitive. This system provides for the development of marginal vacuum levels(about 16.5" Hg./13.4" Hg.A), both at the pumps and at the application points, and we seek to get higher levels(approaching 18 -20" Hg. range)to assist production. Speeding up pumps is not an option(power limited). Piping, both inlet and exhaust, is superb and not at all inhibitive. I have arrived at an idea...WHAT DO YOU THINK? Idea: The process will accept higher processing temperatures without detrimental results. So, given that latitude, elevate the process temperatures from 125 degree F to 140 degree F, so that the vacuum pumps receive ~115 degree F vapor and thus we gain an enhanced condensing effect and we can "synthetically" accentuate air flow development to gain system resistance that will provide a vacuum level increase.
Please tear apart this idea if you can, and show where the shortcomings are therein.