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Pulsing fluid flow|
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My application involves pumping a chemical fluid using bladed pumps mounted on the end of long (2-3 feet) flexible shafts. The bladed end is not supported in a bearing. The entire pump is also flexibly mounted and can move around several mm's during normal operation. If you put your hand on the outlet pipe you can sometimes feel a pulsing fluid flow. This is undesirable since the pulsing fluid causes instability in the downstream process. This pulsing is generally caused by dirty or damaged blades. I have tried measuring vibration but the excessive movement of the entire pump/motor structure tends to mask everything. I would like to attach some device to the outlet pipe that could detect these pulses and provide a warning of the presence of pulsing fluid. Any ideas?
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Janno,
I am surprised that you cannot measure blade-rate pulsation (# blades X shaft speed) with vibration spectrum analysis. If the blades are like a propeller, then measure in the axial or thrust direction. PCB Piezotronics has ICP-type dynamic pressure sensors that would work well for this application, if temperature is below 250-F. Charge-type sensors are needed for higher temperatures. Walt |
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Janno,
Why not put in an electronic pressure transmitter and feed it's electrical output to an oscilloscope to observe the time waveform (TWF) and/or to a frequency analyser to observe frequency spectrum (FFT)? This should reveal a lot regarding dynamic pressure performance! |
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