NPSH questions are common, because NPSHr vs. NPSHa is a common acceptance criteria for pumps.
- NPSHa is an allowance provided by the system.
- NPSHr is an absolute pressure measurement and corresponds to a pump’s mechanical efficiency at 95% of the design flow rate.
- In theory, if NPSHa > NPSHr, cavitation is limited within a pump.
For high vapor pressure fluids and liquefied gases (i.e. propane, condensate, etc), a NPSH comparison is not applicable because these fluids are a multiphase mixture of liquid and gas. Vapor is always present in these systems, making cavitation unavoidable. Instead, the appropriate criteria
is includes limited pressure loss within suction piping, maximum withdraw rate relative to size of source vessel and additional constraints detailed in the
Blackmer Liquified Gas Handbook (500-001).
Blackmer Cavitation Series Sliding Vane Pumps (CRL, LGL, SGL) are well suited for operation under continuous cavitation and vapor/liquid mixtures.
In summary, an NPSH comparison is useful for the proper selection of pumps to avoid excessive cavitation. However an NPSH comparison should not be used as acceptance criteria for applications where vapor is expected regardless of the NPSHa condition.