Kingda pump group
LC Petroleum & Chemical Pump
Kingda® LC series petroleum & chemical pump is a kind of centrifugal pump of single-stage, horizontal, and cantilevered style.
Reasonable construction, excellent performance, and high reliability.
LC Series
petroleum & chemical pump
Overview
The Kingda LC series petroleum & chemical pump is a robust, horizontal, frame-mounted, single-stage, end-suction design with a tangential discharge nozzle. Engineered to handle demanding environments, this pump is ideal for applications involving abrasive or corrosive substances.
It finds extensive use across various sectors, including the petroleum and chemical industries, refineries, paper production, environmental protection projects, seawater treatment, and areas requiring special temperature control and corrosion resistance.
- Heavy-duty, large-diameter shaft
- Multiple structural materials options
- Various impeller designs
- Compatible with direct coupling or belt drive
- Six different drive modes available
Product Parameters
Specifications | |
---|---|
Discharge Diameter(mm) | 25~400 |
Flow Rate(m3/h) | 50~2600 |
Head(m) | 4~25 |
Material: | Alloy Wear-resistant Material |
Performance Range
LC
Working Range of LC-series
Petroleum & Chemical Pump
(only for preliminary selection)
Application
Petroleum & chemical pump play a crucial role across the oil, gas, refining, and chemical industries.
In oilfield extraction, petroleum & chemical pump efficiently draw crude oil and natural gas from underground, particularly excelling in high-temperature, high-pressure, or corrosive environments. After extraction, the crude oil is transported through pipelines to refineries or storage facilities.
At the refinery, petroleum & chemical pump is used to transfer crude oil to distillation towers for fractionation and to handle sulfur-containing or unsaturated hydrocarbons during hydrotreating and hydrocracking processes, ensuring the circulation of the catalyst bed and the efficiency of reactions. During catalytic cracking, these pumps are responsible for transporting both oil products and catalysts.
Additionally, in the chemical industry, petroleum & chemical pump is widely used in chemical reactors to transfer reactants, catalysts, and solvents, ensuring the continuity and stability of the reaction process. In acid and alkali treatment as well as polymerization reactions, these pumps safely and efficiently transport corrosive media and polymerization catalysts, providing reliable support for the production of plastics, rubber, and other polymers.
Spare parts
Metal Parts
Made of high chromium alloy and other durable materials, it boasts exceptional wear resistance, good impact resistance, the ability to withstand higher pressure and harsh conditions, high-temperature resistance, and impressive mechanical strength.
Rubber Parts
Rubber spare parts offer excellent corrosion resistance for use in chemical and mining industries, good wear resistance for low to medium wear slurry transportation, elasticity to absorb impact energy, and are cost-effective with relatively low manufacturing costs.
Frequently Asked Questions
How To Choose A Slurry Pump
When it comes to slurry pumps, you might think that all you need is a pump that can handle the job. But if you’re not careful, you could end up with a pump that’s not only ineffective but also dangerous and expensive.
There are a few important things to consider when choosing a slurry pump: design, construction materials, deployment method, pump seal, and power seal.
Slurry Pump Design
When selecting a pump, you don’t want to end up not getting the right one suitable to get the job done. So, you might need to ask yourself: how big is your slurry?
The size of your slurry is a huge factor in determining what kind of pump you need. If the slurry is small, you could probably use an open centrifugal pump or a closed impeller pump. However, if you have a large amount of slurry that needs to be pumped, then you’ll need to look into a centrifugal axial pump or even a double-suction centrifugal pump.
Slurry pumps come in all shapes and sizes—round, rectangular, square, even triangular! You’ll want to find one that fits your needs perfectly. If you’re going to be transporting your slurry through narrow pipes, you may want one with a smaller diameter opening. If you need to move your slurry quickly, look for one with a large capacity and high flow rate.
Next up: how much does it weigh? This is especially important if you plan on transporting your slurry by hand or with a forklift. The heavier the better if that’s going to be part of your workflow!
And finally: what kind of environment are you working in? If you’re working outdoors (or even indoors), you’ll want something that can withstand both extremes of temperature and weather conditions like rain or snowfall without breaking down on you or corroding over time due to exposure to air pollution like car exhaust fumes.
Construction Materials
Choosing a slurry pump is a lot like choosing a partner for life. You need to know what you want, and you need to be able to compromise with your partner.
The construction materials of the slurry pump can have a significant impact on its performance. The material used in the construction of the pump should be resistant to wear and tear, so that it can be reused for long periods of time.
When choosing a slurry pump, there are many factors to consider. Here are a few of the most important ones:
- Construction materials
Slurry pumps can be made of cast iron, stainless steel, and other metals. Cast iron is more durable than stainless steel and will last longer, but it is heavier than stainless steel. Stainless steel is lighter and easier to install than cast iron, but it is not as durable over time.
- Durability
Durable slurry pumps will last longer than less durable models, so you should consider this factor when choosing your pump.
- Capacity
The capacity of your slurry pump should match the size of your tank so that you don’t overload it or run out of water too quickly during use!
Slurries are specialized compounds found in various processing industries, including sanitary sectors like mining, aggregates, mineral processing, dredging, tunneling, and water treatment, as well as other industries that involve slurry or sewage. Because slurries combine the properties of liquids and solids, special consideration must be given when determining the type and size of the slurry pump to use with them. Kingda Pump features several companies that specialize in slurry pumps capable of handling a wide range of loads, from light to heavy.
SLURRY PUMPS ARE?
Slurries are solid-liquid mixtures, with the liquid acting as a transport mechanism for the solid. The size of particles in slurries can range from a micron to thousands of millimeters. The ability of a pump to move a slurry through a process line is greatly influenced by particle size.
A slurry pump is a centrifugal pump used to transport abrasive and frequently corrosive solid particles inside a carrier fluid. To minimize substantial particle velocity and thus wear rates, the slurry pump should have a low specific speed design that allows for slower operating speeds than ordinary water pumps. Depending on the application, wear-resistant metallic or elastomeric materials are used in slurry pump components that come into contact with the pumped medium.
All Slurries Share Five Essential Characteristics:
- Abrasive when compared to pure liquids.
- Thicker in texture than pure liquids.
- Many solids may be present (determined by a percentage of total volume).
- When the slurry is not moving, the solid particles usually settle out of the residue relatively quickly (depending on the particle size).
- Moving slurries require more energy than moving pure liquids.
Slurries are further classified into four classes by industry based on their aggressiveness, with Class 1 being the least aggressive and Class 4 being the most aggressive. Pumping slurries can wear out pumps and pipeline components in the following ways:
- Gouging, high-stress grinding, and low-stress grinding are abrasions (applicable only with settling-type slurries).
- Surface material resulting from the actions of particles that make up the slurry that is pumped is known as erosion. Pumping settling-type slurries cause the most decay.
- Corrosion is caused by electrical galvanic action in the pumped fluid. Specific slurries (highly acidic or alkaline compounds) have a more significant impact on component corrosion than others.
What Is A Slurry Dewatering Pump?
A slurry dewatering pump is used to pump liquid with solid particles. Submersible slurry pumps vary in design and construction to accommodate different kinds of slurry that differ in saturation solubility, particle density, physical properties, and solvent content. Submersible slurry pumps are more durable than liquid pumps because they have ritual sacrifice content and substitutable wear parts to endure abrasion wear.
The percentage and layout of impellers in the propeller affect efficiency. When handling slurries, efficiency savings are generally undermined by authorizations and the requirement to build abrasion-resistant heavy-duty components while considering materials, thickness, and other factors.
Types Of Slurry Dewatering Pump
Submersible Slurry Pump
These powerful electric submersible pumps are used to pump sand and mud in dredging, quarrying, and mining industries. All models are wear-resistant materials and come standard with an agitator to dissolve solids under water.
A submersible pump has a significant role because it pushes water to the surface by converting rotational energy into kinetic energy into pressure energy. This is achieved as the water enters the pump: first at the inlet, where the rotation happens of the impeller pushes the water through the diffuser.
A submersible pump’s primary and only benefit is that it will never need to be primed because it is submerged in the liquid. It is also very efficient as they don’t need much energy to get or pour water, which will get to the pump.
Only the pressure forces water into a submersible pump, which “saves” a lot by preventing some leakage.
Also, while the pumps aren’t versatile, the choice certainly is. Other submersible pumps can easily handle solids, while others are better suited to liquids. Submersible pumps are quiet because they are submerged, and cavitation is never a problem as there are no ‘pressure spikes’ as the water flows through the pump.
Centrifugal Slurry Pump
Centrifugal pumps in quarries come in solids or slurry handling and clean or dirty water handling. The pump design for these two applications varies greatly. Therefore the operating performance is also different, resulting in significant differences in the power required for the pumps to function correctly.
A slurry pump, in general, is a troublesome iron pump with open clearances, a heavy duty architecture, and minimal machining in its manufacture. As such, those pumps are appropriate for pumping massive or vast quantities of solids contained in slurries. Dredging/slurry pumps, along with Warman or Metso (cease suction) and Dragflow/Toyo (submersible), are top examples of those sorts of pumps in which hydraulic performance isn’t as essential as their capacity to deal with rocks, sand, ore, and different solids-encumbered fluids without experiencing immoderate put on or downtime, even as working in very trying situations for prolonged periods.
What Is A Slurry Pump?
Pumps designed specifically for handling slurry are called slurry pumps. Slurry pumps are more sturdy and heavy-duty than water pumps, which are more susceptible to wear. Slurry pumps are used when there are particles in the fluid stream. Application-based pump and material decisions should be made for trouble-free performance when handling highly corrosive or abrasive liquids. Lindquist lists several businesses that are experts in manufacturing slurry pumps that can take a range of slurry loads from low to heavy.
A slurry pump is a type of centrifugal pump used to move solid particles inside a carrier fluid that is typically acidic and abrasive. To reduce solid particle velocity, the slurry pump should have a low specific speed design that enables slower operating speeds than typical water pumps.
Features Of Slurry Pumps
As indicated below, many different pumps are appropriate for pumping slurries. Before selecting a technology, there are a few crucial considerations to make. The amount of physical wear on the pump and its parts, as well as whether or not the solids will pass through the pump without being affected, will depend on the size and type of the particles in the liquid.
Slurry pumps are often more significant, influential, and made with stronger shafts and bearings than regular pumps. The most common kind of slurry pump is the centrifugal pump. These pumps use a rotating impeller to move the slurry, much like a centrifugal pump would move a liquid that resembles water.
Slurry-optimized centrifugal pumps frequently have the following characteristics in addition to the standard features:
- Increased size and material content of the impellers. To account for abrasive slurry wear, this is done.
- Less and thicker vanes are present on the impeller. Unlike a typical centrifugal pump, which has 5–9 vanes, its 2–5 vanes allow solids to pass through it more readily.
For pumping abrasive slurries, these pumps can also be made of specialized high-wear alloys such as AL-6XN® or Hastelloy® C-22®. Two hardening methods frequently used to harden stainless steel for abrasive slurries are armory and expensive.
Positive displacement pumps may be preferable to centrifugal pumps for some slurry pumping applications. Some of the ailments include:
- An excessively sluggish slurry flow rate
- Someone with a big head (i.e., the height to which the pump can move liquid)
- Higher efficiency is required than can be provided by centrifugal pumps.
- Control over flow has been enhanced.
Slurry Pump
Components
Motor
It could be hydraulic or electric. The submersible electric slurry pump needs to be maintained cool. A cooling jacket should be added if the slurry pump is semi-submerged or dry for an extended period. A motor with Class H insulation is advised for heavy-duty electric slurry submersible pumps. They may also have sensors that recognize high temperatures and moisture.
Impeller
The rotating part of the slurry pump is the impeller. The slurry receives the centrifugal force. They are usually made of spheroidal cast iron with high chromium, which is abrasion-resistant. Impellers can be closed, open, semi-open, or recessed.
Casing
Typically, the casing has a semi-volute or concentric shape. Although it is frequently made of cast iron, depending on the application, it might also be coated to avoid corrosion or made of specialized alloys for abrasive applications.
Shaft And Bearing Assembly
The shaft is in charge of conveying the impeller’s rotating motion from the motor. The shaft’s heavy-duty roller bearings reduce vibration by preventing it from moving in other directions.
Shaft Sleeve
Keeping the shaft secure is its duty. A corrosion- and abrasion-resistant material makes up the shaft sleeve.
Seals Package
The seals’ package stops slurry from leaking into the motor and bearings. The sealed container may contain lip, mechanical, and hybrid seals.
Upper And Lower Plates
The impeller has these plates on both sides. They are susceptible to degeneration. The pump’s clearances are calibrated to maximum efficiency.
Strainer
The filter stops large particles from becoming trapped inside the pump’s impeller zone.
Agitator
This enables the pump to suspend solids while capturing sediments. The way it operates is that the vanes direct a constant, high-pressure flow of liquid in the form of a cone toward the deposits, moving the solids there and generating a high concentration. Additionally, the agitator prevents particles from clogging the pores of the filter.