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Positive-displacement pumps plunger

The piston plunger pump is the simplest form of a positive displacement pump. These pumps can be powered by a variety of prime movers, internal combustion engines, and electric motors (and in some cases, powered by a gas turbine motor). In such applications, the separate pump unit is connected to the prime mover by a power transmission. [Pg.463]

Reciprocating or positive-displacement pumps with valve action piston pumps, diaphragm pumps, plunger pumps... [Pg.515]

Positive-displacement pump—A pump that conveys fluid by directly moving it using a suitable mechanism such as a piston, plunger, or screw. [Pg.253]

In the first major class of pumps a definite volume of liquid is trapped in a chamber, which is alternately filled from the inlet and emptied at a higher pressure through the discharge. There are two subclasses of positive-displacement pumps. In reciprocating pumps the chamber is a stationary cylinder that contains a piston or plunger in rotary pumps the chamber moves from inlet to discharge and back to the inlet. [Pg.193]

Figure 3-12 classifies pumps as positive-displacement or kinetic. Positive-displacement pumps move liquid at a relatively constant rate and are used when discharge pressures are high, when the pump must be self-priming, and when liquid must be metered at an accurately prescribed rate. Flow through a reciprocating pump is produced by the movement of a piston or a plunger... [Pg.119]

Plunger or diaphragm pumps do not handle large flow rates in excess of 100 m /hr (4400 US gpm), but they are suitable for a wide range of applications at higher volumetric concentrations than centrifugal pumps. Positive displacement pumps can pump slurries with a weight concentration of 70%. [Pg.494]

Fig. 6.37 Schematic representation of four geometrical configurations utilizing external mechanical pressurization giving rise to positive displacement flow, (a) Axially moving plunger in a cylinder, (b) Squeezing disks, (c) Intermeshing gear pump, (d) Counterrotating intermeshing twin screws. Fig. 6.37 Schematic representation of four geometrical configurations utilizing external mechanical pressurization giving rise to positive displacement flow, (a) Axially moving plunger in a cylinder, (b) Squeezing disks, (c) Intermeshing gear pump, (d) Counterrotating intermeshing twin screws.
Positive-displacement reciprocating pumps (a) plunger pump (b) diaphragm pump-... [Pg.194]

Positive Pumps. Positive pumps employed by the food industry have a rotating cavity between two lobes, two gears that rotate in opposite directions, or a crescent or stationary cavity and a rotor. Rotary positive pumps operate at relatively low speed. Fluid enters the cavity by gravity flow or from a centrifugal pump. The positive pump also may use a reciprocating cavity, and may be a plunger or piston pump. These pumps are not truly positive with respect to displacement, but are used for metering product flow. [Pg.361]


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