Pump Seals
Pump Seals
Pump Seals
ABSTRACT
Mechanical seals are the most common means of sealing
industrial centrifugal pumps. There are a wide variety of seal
options including the use of single or dual seal arrangements.
While dual seals provide benefits in leakage containment and
monitoring, single seals continue to be widely used due to their
lower cost and simpler designs. Newer piping plans however
offer options to increase leakage detectability and containment
in single seals without sacrificing the simplicity of the seal
design.
A Plan 65 piping plan was introduced in API 682 Third
Edition and ISO 21049. This captured leakage detection
practices which were currently in use in the pipeline industry.
The upcoming Fourth Edition of API 682 changes the
designation of this plan to Plan 65A and adds an alternative
version designated as Plan 65B. In addition, the Fourth Edition
of API 682 will introduce Plan 66A and 66B which provide
additional alternatives for monitoring and containing seal
leakage in the seal gland.
The selection of piping plans in any seal application
depends not only on the application conditions but also on the
expectations of the end user. This includes the design of the
pump and also the infrastructure to monitor equipment
performance and handle process leakage. With these new
options for piping plans, end users can add additional
capabilities to their existing Arrangement 1 seal installations
and consider single seals for future applications.
INTRODUCTION
Mechanical seals continue to be the most common method
for sealing centrifugal pumps in the petroleum, petrochemical,
and chemical industries. These seals have proven to provide
reliable operation and meet environmental regulations across a
wide variety of application conditions and pump designs. A
mechanical seal is not, however, a single design. Over the
conditions for the majority of its life. If the inner seal fails
however, the containment seal will prevent excessive leakage
from reaching the atmosphere. There are several standard
piping plans which help support the use of these Arrangement 2
configurations (e.g. Plans 72, 75, and 76).
pump bracket and the detection vessel. High flow rates or high
accumulation levels in the detection vessel will signal a seal
failure. If there is progressive seal failure (gradual increase in
leakage over time), this strategy is usually successful.
Instant seal failures which result in a very high level of
leakage however can be difficult to detect quickly enough to
prevent leakage from reaching to the ground or contaminating
the pump bearing housings. If the leakage rate from the seal is
higher than the gravity induced flow into the Plan 65 piping
system, the level in the pump bracket will increase until it
overflows the bracket. Depending upon the pump construction
and bearing isolators, this can also result in process fluid
entering the bearing housing (Figure 16) and contaminating the
pump lubrication system. This can occur more quickly than the
Plan 65 system can detect the failure and the operator can stop
and block-in the pump.
exiting the seal gland through the drain port. The throttle
bushing must be very restrictive and should ideally be a
segmented bushing design. Plan 66Bs also uses a pressure
transmitter in the drain cavity to monitor pressure and indicate
seal leakage.
REFERENCES
API Standard 682, Second Edition, 2001, Pumps Shaft
Sealing Systems for Centrifugal and Rotary Pumps,
American Petroleum Institute, Washington, D.C.
API Standard 682, Third Edition, 2004, Pumps Shaft Sealing
Centrifugal and Rotary Pumps, American Petroleum
Institute, Washington D.C
Huebner, M. B., Buck, G. S., Azibert, H. V., 2012,
Advancement in Mechanical Sealing API 682 Fourth
Edition, Proceeding of the Twenty-Eighth International
Pump Users Symposium, Turbomachinery Laboratory,
Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The author would like to acknowledge the contributions of
the API 682 Task Force in developing and maintaining the
piping plans standards for industry over the years. Special
recognition goes to Rick Eickhoff for his leadership during the
development of the Fourth Edition of API 682. He would also
like to acknowledge the support of Scott Svendsen and
Flowserve Corporation for the support in preparing this paper.