VFD For Centrifugal Pumps
VFD For Centrifugal Pumps
VFD For Centrifugal Pumps
Feature Report
Variable Frequency
Drives for
Centrifugal Pumps
Joseph T. Ramey
Westchase Design, L.L.C.
Introduction
A VFD (Figure 1) comprises a rectifier,
which converts an alternating current
into a direct current, followed by an
inverter, which converts that direct
current into a coarse version of an alternating current. These operations
are depicted in a simplified manner
in Figure 2, which represents a singlephase current or one phase of a threephase current. The frequency of the
alternating current that is produced is
set by the inverter, and when that current is fed to an electric motor, its fre-
FIGURE 1. A fan
is the only moving part of a
variable frequency drive
VFD considerations
To evaluate VFD applications for
centrifugal pumps, process engineers
need to know a number of things
31
NOMENCLATURE
Feature Report
about them, but this knowledge does
not need to be extensive. This is fortunate because some of the information received on the electrical aspects
is seemingly inconsistent and is assumed to be explained by the different
recommendations and design practices
of the various manufacturers, owners
and engineering firms. A firms electrical engineers will handle the electrical
design, including the VFD selection, in
accordance with the applicable design
practices. Process engineers need only
perform preliminary economic evaluations accordingly and be aware of the
issues. The knowledge of the issues
will allow them to understand any interaction with the process design, to
communicate effectively with the rest
of the project team, and to prevent the
unnecessary repetition of work. It will
also help in applying judgment to the
results of evaluation methods.
Maintenance. VFDs are solid state
devices that require very little maintenance. Above a certain size, they require a fan for cooling, which is the only
moving part. In addition to requiring
periodic cleaning, the fan is the most
likely component to fail. An approximate mean-time-between-failures for
VFDs has been given as 10 years.
Motors. Not all electric motors are
capable of operating on an inverter,
but the severe-duty motors that are
typically specified for CPI centrifugal
pumps are likely to be adequate. The
potential problem is that a fan that is
directly connected to the shaft of the
motor slows down when the speed of
the motor slows down and therefore
may not provide adequate cooling in
that situation. A large turndown may
require an auxiliary fan motor to keep
the fan turning adequately while the
speed of the main motor is reduced.
Centrifugal pumps generally require
an approximate 4:1 turndown to cover
their continuous operating range,
and require a greater turndown only
briefly at startup. A severe-duty motor
will normally meet this requirement.
Some pumps, such as positive displacement pumps, can require a
greater turndown to cover their continuous operating range. Many firms
now specify that motors for centrifugal pumps be capable of operating
on inverters whether or not they are
32
a.c.
API
C1C6
d
EMC
f
H
HAZOP
L
n
Alternating current
American Petroleum Institute
Constants
Inside pipe diameter
Electromagnetic compatibility
Friction factor
Head
Hazards and operability
analysis
Equivalent length
Rotational speed
PFD
Q
VFD
VSD
W
P
M
P
V
Variable
Rectifier
Inverter
B.
(1)
H 2 n22
=
H 1 n12
(2)
A.
(3)
C.
C
FIGURE 3. Shown here are three typical control schemes for A) a centrifugal
pump using a control valve; B) A positive displacement pump using a control
valve; and C) A pump using a variable
frequency drive
33
Feature Report
120
110
( P )Q
C1
(4)
( P )Q
C1 P M V
(5)
Where P is pump efficiency, M is
motor efficiency and V is VFD efficiency. The VFD loss has been restated
as an efficiency for consistency with
the other terms. Equation (5) shows
why the advantage for the VFD is
small. The difference in pressure drop
between the two cases is small. Note
that the zero in Figure 4 has been suppressed to show the differences clearly.
The pump with the VFD has a slightly
higher efficiency. However, the constant loss of the VFD translates into a
decreasing efficiency when the power
is reduced. This works against the two
advantages of the VFD case. In any
event, the differences are small.
Now, consider the case of all-frictional pressure drop and small differences are most emphatically not the
case. The Darcy equation for frictional
pressure drop in pipe [14] is used to
calculate the system curve and is
stated as follows:
P =
C2 fL Q 2
d5
(6)
Where P is pressure drop (usually
34
Head, m
100
90
80
70
60
0
Rate, m3/h
H
C3
(7)
C4 fLQ 2
d5
(8)
The friction factor is constant for welldeveloped turbulent flow, which is the
usual situation for pump circuits. The
length is used as the equivalent length
of all pipe, fittings and equipment. It
is constant for a given circuit and so is
the diameter of the pipe. Equation (8)
reduces to:
H = C 5Q 2
(9)
(10)
FIGURE 4.
Pump curves for
the case of all
static pressure
drop show the
limited opportunity for energy
savings (violet
is fixed speed
pump, green and
blue are with a
VFD and red is
the system curve)
Pump efficiency
140
80
100
60
Head, m
Efficiency, %
120
40
80
60
40
20
20
0
0
0
2
Rate,
(11)
Which shows that the power is proportional to the cube of the flow for
frictional pressure drop. This equation
and Figure 6 illustrate the concept
that different flowrates cannot be averaged linearly to calculate the power
at an average flowrate.
This section has shown that two parameters, the percentage of the total
pressure drop that is frictional (as
opposed to static) and the turndown
in the flow, are important in evaluating the case for using a VFD with a
centrifugal pump. Like any economic
evaluation, the basis for the evaluation must be established first.
Rate, m3/h
W=
m3/h
Basis information
The owner usually sets the bases for
an economic evaluation because many
of the bases represent business decisions rather than engineering decisions. However, an engineering firm
may make recommendations if requested to do so. In a formal project,
the owner provides the basis documents such as the basic engineering
design data and the process design
basis. The owners engineering standards, safety standards and operating procedures will also usually apply.
Engineering firms should be ready
to solicit whatever information or alternative directions that the owner
wants to supply if they are not already
offered. If the evaluation is being done
within the owners organization, it is
still a good idea to have the bases set,
perhaps more informally, before starting the evaluation. Some of the items
to be considered are as follows:
Power cost. If there are different power
sources, the cost will be the marginal
cost for increasing or reducing power.
Any escalation or de-escalation to be
applied also needs to be supplied.
Payout time. Simple payout time is
used for the criterion in this article
and as an example. The general payout time that is specified for the project may be used, or a longer payout
time may be allowed for power savings. Some owners consider that utility savings are more certain than the
general project economics based on
marketing projections, and therefore
are deserving of a less stringent payout criterion.
Turndown pattern. If, for example,
a project is expected to operate at a
lower capacity in the initial period of
its operation, this information needs
to be supplied.
Voltages. If the owner is specifying
35
VFD cost
Cost, $/kW
Feature Report
TABLE 1.
Differential Capital Costs
+ VFD cost
Starter cost
Control valve station
cost
Other capital costs
= Subtotal capital cost
Differential Operating Costs
Power savings
Other operating costs
= Subtotal operating cost
Total Differential Costs
Grand Total
3
Flow
Cost, $/kW
Payout, years
2.5
90%
70%
50%
2
1.5
1
0.5
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
10
Power, kW
50
20
30
40
Frictional drop, % of pump head
37
capacity of 90% and a frictional pressure drop of 0%. That is, there was no
turndown from the maximum normal
capacity and the pressure drop was all
static drop. The result was a payout
period of 0.76 yr or 9.1 mo. This worst
case would probably meet any payout
criterion, therefore, further cases were
not calculated.
For the critical service with two
pumps and two VFDs, the results are
presented in Figure 9, which shows
that any VFD case above 25% frictional drop would have a payout period
of 2 yr or less. In the region shown in
the figure, the lines are nearly linear
but cannot continue to be so toward a
zero payout period. A zero payout period would indicate that the base case
and the VFD case have equal capital
costs. This result is independent of the
turndown and the percent of frictional
drop. Any case with a capital cost difference to be offset by power savings
would need to have a positive payout
period regardless of the turndown or
the percentage of frictional pressure
drop. Anyway, the region of short payout periods does not need be defined
accurately because any cases in this
region would obviously meet any reasonable payout criterion.
Adjustments
There are many assumptions and simplifications involved in the base evaluation method just presented, but this
produces a simple correlation that
the process engineer can apply before
he or she performs the pump process
calculations. He or she needs only to
know the capacity as a fraction of the
rated capacity and to estimate the
percentage of the pressure drop in the
pump circuit that is frictional. He or
she can have an indication of whether
or not a VFD should be shown in early
documents, such as the PFD. When
the pump process calculations have
been completed, some corrections can
be applied to refine the estimate:
The prediction of the payout period
can be refined by making a correction for the power required at the
normal capacity of the pump in the
VFD case rather than accepting the
constant percent of the motor power
that is built into in the base evaluation. The correction factor is given
38
Correction factor
Feature Report
1.5
1
FIGURE 10. A
plot of the correction factor to payout time for operating power
0.5
0
0.5
0.6
0.7
Normal operating power of VFD case
as fraction of motor power
(12)
(13)
0.8
Management of evaluations
Low-voltage VFDs are sufficiently inexpensive that highly detailed evalu-
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In addition to the items in the economic evaluation, there are some advantages and disadvantages that are
not easy to quantify.
Advantages. First, experience with
pumps running at fixed speeds has
convinced some firms that, where
they are applicable, pumps running at
lower speeds require sufficiently less
maintenance that their higher capital
cost is justified. VFDs control pumps
by reducing their speed, so they also
reduce the maintenance to the extent
that they reduce the speed. Second,
VFDs start the pumps at a slow speed
and increase it steadily to the required
speed. This is a desirable method
of starting pumps that minimizes
the impact on both the motors and
the pumps, and minimizes the wear.
Third, the engineering and construction schedule may be shortened a little
by eliminating some control-valve stations. The piping design and construction work is usually on the critical
path, while the electrical design and
construction work may not be. Therefore, reducing some piping work at the
expense of increasing some electrical
work may improve the schedule.
Disadvantages. There are also two
qualitative disadvantages for VFDs,
the first of which is a potential piping vibration problem. The piping of
a pump running at variable speeds is
subject to multiple exciting frequencies and may vibrate at frequencies
where the piping of a pump running
at a fixed speed would not. Some VFDs
can be programmed to skip speed
ranges, which may be an easy solution
if the pump does not have to operate at
the speeds that are causing problems.
Otherwise, additional piping support
at additional cost will be necessary.
The second disadvantage is that an
additional operator may be required
for manual operation. A control-valve
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CHEMICAL ENGINEERING WWW.CHE.COM NOVEMBER 2012
39
Feature Report
ations cannot be justified for typical
new applications because the engineer
or manager would be facing something
like an economic version of Heisenbergs uncertainty principle. Attempting to model many cases, to account for
the costs of minor items, or to estimate
the costs to high accuracy can cost
enough, in itself, to alter the results of
the evaluation. The methods used and
the items considered must be limited to
those that are appropriate to the size of
the investment being considered.
For example, two 37 kW (50 hp) VFDs
would cost approximately $10,000.
Allow credits of approximately $2,000
for the starters and $4,000 for the
control valve station. If there were
no other costs to consider, the net investment would be about $4,000. It
would obviously be unwise to spend
$4,000, or any significant fraction of
it, doing an evaluation. It would be
better to spend the money on the VFD.
A lot of time cannot be justified to
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Feature Report
rationally devoted to the economic
evaluation of low-voltage VFDs. This
applies only to the study to choose
whether or not to use a VFD; it does
not apply to the design itself. That,
of course, must be thorough and take
whatever time is required. The engi-
References
1. Green, Don W., Ed., Perrys Chemical Engineers Handbook, 8th Ed., McGraw Hill,
New York, pp. 1024 to 1039, 2007.
2. Kelly, J. Howard, Understand the Fundamentals of Centrifugal Pumps, Chem. Eng.
Progress, 106(10), October 2010, pp. 2228.
3. Rase, Howard F. and Barrow, M. H., Project
Engineering of Process Plants, John Wiley
& Sons, New York, pp. 248296, 1957.
4. Kern, Robert, Practical Piping Design 12
Parts, Chem. Eng., December 23, 1974,
through November 10,1975.
5. Crane Company Engineering Division,
Technical Paper 410 Flow of Fluids Through
Valves, Fittings, and Pipe 13th Printing,
Crane Co., New York, 1973.
6. Shulka, D. K., Chaware, D. K. and Swamy, R.
B., Variable Frequency Drives: An Algorithm
for Selecting VFDs for Centrifugal Pumps,
Chem. Eng. 117(2), Feb. 2010, pp. 3843.
7. Shuman, Brian, Building a Reliable VFD
System, Belden Document VFDWP, 2009,
http://www.belden.com/docs/upload/VFD_
Choosing_WP.pdf.
Author
Joseph T. Ramey is a member and manager at Westchase Design L.L.C. (9449
Briar Forest Drive #2312,
Houston, TX 77063-1043.
Email:
jtramey1@comcast.
net) and does process engineering on a consulting or
contract basis. He has done
both basic process design and
detailed engineering, and his
most recent engagement has
been with Commonwealth
Engineering and Construction. Prior to forming
Westchase Design, he had worked for several
major engineering and construction companies.
He is a member of the AIChE., and received
a B.Ch.E. from the University of Virginia, a
M.S.Ch.E. from the Georgia Institute of Technology, and is a registered professional engineer in
New Jersey and Texas.
Acknowledgements
The author wishes to thank the South Texas
Section of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers for the opportunity to have
presented much of the material in this article in one of their pre-meeting workshops.
The article benefited from the questions
and comments during the discussion. Also,
thanks to Toshiba International Corp. for
permission to use the photo of its Model P9
ASD (Figure 1).
Circle 3 on p. 60 or go to adlinks.che.com/40273-03
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