Skip to main content

Failure investigation, remedies, and mitigation of a centrifugal pump.

 BY LUIS INFANTE & RODOLFO ALVARADO.

A high energy pump at a water injection station in El Furrial, Venezuela exhibited extremely high vibration levels prior to an overhaul. It then suffered a catastrophic failure during startup following overhaul. The hydrodynamic bundle, rotor, and drive end (DE) bearing suffered damage.

 


High energy pump for boiler feed water. Courtesy of Flowserve.

This centrifugal pump is a 3,000 HP, double-case volute, boiler feed water pump type. It has nine stages, outputs 750 gpm of water with suction pressure 1800 psi and discharge pressure 5250 psi. Rated speed was increased from 6000 to 6600 RPM to enhance the hydraulic performance. However, the pump’s actual discharge pressure was about 4,500 psi, well below the target value of 5,000 psi. The coupling was reportedly poorly fitted.

The increased RPM created rotordynamic concerns of getting closer to a critical speed, thus the operator wanted to know about the synchronous regime. The operator also wanted remedial measures and temporary mitigation steps to keep the pump running for 4-6 months until remedies were finally enforced.

The course of action for this investigation was clear since the beginning: conduct an internal clearances analysis and a forced response rotordynamic study.

A thorough study of internal clearances was conducted. Table 1 shows the results from this study featuring a comparison between internal (hydrodynamic bundle) clearances from different data sources, namely: design data, shop measurements, API-610 minimum clearances, and typical clearances for a similar pump with vibratory problems. As a result, the recommended clearance for the center seal, balance piston, eye, and impeller hub seals are shown in the bottom part of Table 1.

Due to the high vibration levels (20 mil DE, 5 mil NDE) reported before the overhaul, a simulation of the pump’s forced response rotordynamic behavior was attempted using a trial unbalance weight located in the coupling. A mass-elastic mathematical model incorporating the effect of the internal seals at 1X and 2X design clearance (as suggested by API 610) was used for this purpose.

One can expect a flexible rotor behavior (first critical speed below operating speed) for this high-speed, long slender shaft, but the stiffening effect provided by the internal seals (Lomakin’s effect) locates the first critical speed in the vicinity of 9,000 RPM, well above 6,600 RPM operating speed. Retrofitting the bearing and coupling with the technology presented below raises this first critical speed to approximately 10,000 RPM, thus discarding the likelihood for resonance despite the steep vibration plot obtained during a ramp up vibration survey.

 


Table 1: Analysis of internal clearances.

REMEDIES AND MITIGATION

Our attention was focused on balancing and the effect on the dynamic stability of the rotor-bearing-support substructure. A bearing and coupling retrofit was recommended with a balancing plane on the coupling and an added mass on the bearing housing. It was discovered that the shaft was excessively long on the DE. Shortening the shaft together with a reduced moment coupling proved to be beneficial in keeping rotor synchronous response away from resonances. Such coupling design has a center of gravity and flex discs moved closer to the bearing.

Tilting pad bearing is a good option for stability and support of this slender high-speed shaft. A pad load distribution analysis showed increased clearances unloading the top pads and the six-pad arrangement offered the best support. Furthermore, a lateral stability analysis revealed six-pad bearing to have the best stability parameters (whirl mode, log dec, amplification factor, undesirable speeds).

Effective mitigation measures that ran for a few months with acceptable vibration levels turned out to be:

1.      Add 150lb to the bearing housing.

2.      Increase internal clearances and bearing clearances (max 6 mil).

3.      Finning the bearing housing ribs for enhanced heat dissipation.

4.      Using the coupling as a balancing plane; adjusting and balancing the coupling.

5.      Correct bearing housing distortion.

CONCLUSIONS

The most likely cause of failure was attributable to tight clearances found in the hydrodynamic bundle’s internal seals. OEM design and even API clearances were considered to be too tight. Reducing internal clearances below API 610 recommendations exposes these pumps to catastrophic failures during start up. For the impeller eye, we recommend a 50% increase (to 27 mil) over API values for stages 1–4 and a 25% increase (to 23 mil) for stages 5–9. Clearances for other rotor locations are shown in Table 1.

Trimming the shaft in the DE side and installing a reduced moment coupling helps in separating the operating speed from the first critical envelope, thus reducing the amplitude of vibration.

 

Source: turbomachinerymag

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

John Crane's Type 28 Dry Gas Seals: How Does It Work?

How Does It Work? Highest Pressure Non-Contacting, Dry-Running Gas Seal Type 28 compressor dry-running gas seals have been the industry standard since the early 1980s for gas-handling turbomachinery. Supported by John Crane's patented design features, these seals are non-contacting in operation. During dynamic operation, the mating ring/seat and primary ring/face maintain a sealing gap of approximately 0.0002 in./5 microns, thereby eliminating wear. These seals eliminate seal oil contamination and reduce maintenance costs and downtime. John Crane's highly engineered Type 28 series gas seals incorporate patented spiral-groove technology, which provides the most efficient method for lifting and maintaining separation of seal faces during dynamic operation. Grooves on one side of the seal face direct gas inward toward a non-grooved portion of the face. The gas flowing across the face generates a pressure that maintains a minute gap between the faces, optimizing flui...

Boiler Systems: Troubles in Operation and Their Causes

Definition of boiler systems Boiler system is a system that is used to heat water and to generate required steam or hot water. The boiler system is generally composed of the following units: (a) Feedwater treatment unit: demineralizer, etc. In case that the raw water is supplied from a river, a lake and so on, the raw water treatment units (clarifier, filter,etc.) are required.  (b) Feedwater line, (c) Deaerator, (d) Boiler including preheater, superheater and desuperheater, (e) Steam and condensate line, (f) Condensate treatment unit, (g) Wastewater treatment unit, (g) Chemical injection unit. Classification of boilers by their structures (1) Cylindrical boilers (pressure : below 20 kgf/cm 2 ) : (a) Vertical boilers, (b) Flue-tube boilers, (c) Fire-tube boilers, (d) Fire and flue-tube boilers. (2) Water-tube boilers : (a) Natural circulation boilers (pressure : low to high), (b) Forced circulation boilers (pressure : low to high), (c) Once-through boilers (pressure : above 75 kgf/...

FACTORS IMPACTING COMPRESSOR SURGE

BY AMIN ALMASI. Surge can be a major challenge for turbo compressors. Operation in the surge area will result in instability, exposing the machine to destructive stresses and forces, high vibration, and even serious damage. Surge during shutdown (trip) has been reported for many turbo-compressors. This is particularly possible if the machine operates at high head and low flow, immediately before the trip, when the operating point can move toward the surge line and even pass it during coast-down (when the turbo-compressor reduces flowrate). When a turbo-compressor experiences a serious alarm, an emergency shutdown is usually initiated. But an immediate shutdown could result in a surge. In this case, the surge happens shortly after the shutdown (trip) and at a high energy level. This could be a surge at a high head (operating point could pass the surge line at high head). In many cases, there are advantages to not removing the driving power from the turbocompressor (tripping) immediately...