Abstract

The pressure fluctuations and the radial fluid forces acting on the impeller, the pressures in the volute, as well as the vibration of the shaft in a centrifugal pump were measured simultaneously, and their relationship was investigated. Experiments were done for various diffuser vanes, flow rates, and rotating speeds. It was demonstrated that both the blade-pressure fluctuations and the volute static pressures are nonuniform circumferentially (not axisymmetrical) under off-design operating conditions and that the two have a strong relationship. At high flow rates, the blade pressure fluctuations, induced by rotor-stator interactions, are large in areas where the volute static pressure is low. The traveling directions of the rotating pressure waves, the whirling directions of the radial fluid forces, and the most predominant frequency components of both the fluctuations and the forces are discussed, and an equation for predicting them is introduced. It was also noted that large alternating fluid forces are not necessarily associated with large pressure fluctuations. Furthermore, when measuring the radial fluid forces in the rotating frame, other frequency components, in addition to those related to the products of the diffuser vane number and the rotating frequency, may occur due to the circumferential unevenness of the pressure fluctuations on the impeller. These components are predictable.