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Slurry Pump Cavitation: Causes, Effects, and Pump Performance Curves Explained

1. What Is Cavitation in Slurry Pumps?

Cavitation refers to the formation of vapor bubbles in a liquid when the local pressure drops to the vapor pressure at a given temperature. This phenomenon typically occurs in slurry pumps when operating conditions are unfavorable.


2. Cavitation Collapse (Bubble Implosion)

When vapor bubbles formed during cavitation move into higher-pressure regions, they rapidly shrink and collapse. This process is known as cavitation collapse or bubble implosion.


3. Causes and Hazards of Cavitation

During pump operation, if the absolute pressure in certain (usually near the impeller inlet) drops below the liquid’s vapor pressure, vaporization occurs and generates a large number of bubbles.

As the liquid containing these bubbles flows into high-pressure zones inside the impeller:

  • The bubbles collapse violently
  • Liquid rushes in to fill the voids at extremely high
  • Strong hydraulic shock (water hammer effect) is generated

This results in:

  • Impact pressures reaching hundreds to thousands of atmospheres
  • Impact frequencies of tens of thousands of times per second

Consequences include:

  • Severe erosion of metal surfaces
  • Damage or perforation of pump components
  • Increased vibration and noise
  • Reduced pump performance
  • In extreme cases, interruption of liquid flow and pump failure

4. Cavitation Process in Pumps

The entire process—from bubble formation to collapse and subsequent material damage—is called the cavitation process.

In slurry pumps, cavitation leads to:

  • Wear of wetted parts (especially impellers and liners)
  • Operational instability
  • Reduced efficiency and head

5. What Are Pump Performance Curves?

Pump performance curves represent the relationship between key operating parameters of a centrifugal pump. These curves are obtained through experimental testing and reflect the fluid dynamics inside the pump.

Main Performance Curves Include:

  • Flow vs Head Curve (Q-H)
  • Flow vs Efficiency Curve (Q-η)
  • Flow vs Power Curve (Q-N)
  • Flow vs NPSH Required Curve (Q-NPSHr)

6. Importance of Pump Performance Curves

For any given flow rate, the performance curves provide a corresponding set of parameters:

  • Head
  • Power consumption
  • Efficiency
  • Required NPSH

This combination is called the operating point.


7. Best Efficiency Point (BEP)

The operating condition at which the pump achieves maximum efficiency is known as the Best Efficiency Point (BEP).

  • Typically close to the design point
  • Ensures:
    • Energy efficiency
    • Stable operation
    • Reduced wear and cavitation risk

8. Practical Recommendation

In real applications, slurry pumps should be operated within the high-efficiency range near the BEP to:

  • Minimize energy consumption
  • Reduce cavitation risk
  • Extend service life

Understanding pump performance parameters is essential for proper pump selection and reliable operation.

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Why Slurry Pump Efficiency Is Generally Lower Than That of Clear Water Pumps
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