rusika
Chemical
- Apr 22, 2006
- 7
Hello,
I am trying to figure out what happens to electrical power consumption
for a centrifugal pump when one throttles a downstream valve.
Mechanical Power = Torque x RPM
Electrical Power = V x I
My understanding is that when you throttle downstream to reduce the
flow you create backpressure thereby increasing the operating Torque
of the pump. Since Torque and current are directly related (e.g. Force
= current x B x Length of wire) this would mean that current would
increase and per P = V x I (since system voltage is constant) power
consumption increases. But from the mechanical formula it's possible
for the Torque to increase without overall power consumption
increasing. What am I missing?
I am trying to figure out what happens to electrical power consumption
for a centrifugal pump when one throttles a downstream valve.
Mechanical Power = Torque x RPM
Electrical Power = V x I
My understanding is that when you throttle downstream to reduce the
flow you create backpressure thereby increasing the operating Torque
of the pump. Since Torque and current are directly related (e.g. Force
= current x B x Length of wire) this would mean that current would
increase and per P = V x I (since system voltage is constant) power
consumption increases. But from the mechanical formula it's possible
for the Torque to increase without overall power consumption
increasing. What am I missing?