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The Mechanical Seals News
Mechanical Seals Introduction PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Friday, 12 December 2008 03:44

Mechanical Seals Introduction

Mechanical seals are being used increasingly on fluid pumps to replace packed glands and lip seals.   Pumps with mechanical seals perform more efficiently and generally perform more reliably for extended periods of time.

Mechanical seals are provided to prevent pumped fluids from leaking out along the drive shafts.   The controlled leakage path is between two flat surfaces associated with the rotating shaft and the housing respectively.   The leakage path gap varies as the faces are subject to varying external loads which tend the move the faces relative to each other.

The mechanical seal requires a different shaft housing design arrangement compared to that for the other type of seals because the seal is a more complicated arrangement and the mechanical seal does not provide any support to the shaft.

In order for the mechanical seal to perform over an extended time period with low frictional the faces are generally hydrodynamically lubricated.   The fluid film will need to carry substantial load.   If the load becomes to high for the film surface contact will take place with consequent bearing failure. This lubricating film is generally of the order of 3 micrometres thick , or less. This thickness is critical to the required sealing function.   Mechanical seals often have one face of a suitable solid lubricant such that the seal can still operate for a period without the fluid film.

Pressure Balance Mechanical Seals

It is possible to reduce the seal contact pressure by using a pressure balanced seal design of off-set a proportion of the force generated by the pumped fluid pressure.   This principle is illustrated in the sketch below.

Design Features

The mechanical seal generally includes a three static seals.

  • The sleeve seal - this is usually an O-Ring
  • The seal between the moving seal member and the shaft or sleeve.- This is often an o-ring but can be a wedge or vee seal. This seal may not be used for bellows type mechanical seals
  • The housing seal is generally an o-ring of a gasket.

All of these seal must be compatible with the fluid being contained and the associated environment.   These seals may limit the design for high temperature applications. In this case the bellows type alternative may be the best option.


The sealing faces are generally pressed together using some form of spring loading. Several different spring loading systems are available.

  • Single spring
  • Multiple springs distributed around seal body
  • Disc Springs
  • Disc Springs
  • Bellows
  • Magnetic

For conventional mechanical seals the single spring arrangements is used.   The other spring arrangements are used in the space is restricted.


It is vitally important that the sealing surfaces perfectly flat and are parallel.


The seal faces are usually dissimilar materials with the softer face being the narrower surface. For abrasive applications similar hard materials are used e.g tungsten carbide.    The seal surfaces must have sufficient strength to withstand the hydrostatic fluid forces and must be able to remove the heat generated by sliding action.   Carbon is often used against bronze, cast iron, stainless steel etc.

The seal surface must be flat, smooth and square to the shaft.  Both surfaces a normally lapped to a high quality finish.    The harder surface is most important because the softer surface is designed to run-in over the initial operating period.

The shaft design is critical. It must be rigid enough to support the seal in the correct position and the shaft surface finish must be suitable to ensure good sealing on the static seals (0.4 micrometers CLA or better). The shaft Total Indicated Runout (TIR) should not exceed 0.125mm.   There should be minimum shaft vibration.   The shaft may be subject to fretting corrosion as a result of micro-movements of the seal and is is often desireable to have locally hardened surfaces or to use sleeves.

Assembly Options

There are a number of mechanical seal options

  • External Seal.. This design is installed on the outside of the stuffing box with the sealed pressure inside. This provides good access allowing the seal components to be be cleaned.
  • Internal Seal.. Generally mechanical seals are mounted inside the stuffing box with the sealed pressure outside the seal.
  • Double Seals.. Mechanical seals mounted in pairs are used for sealing hazardous, toxic or abrasiv fluids and are often provided with clean flushing fluid between the seals.   Double seals also provide an additional degree of safety were the pressure differentials are likely to reverse and/or there is a high risk of the sealing failing.  There are a number of double seal assembly options as listed below
    • In Series - Used primarily to overcome the risk of failure of a single seal.


    • Face to Face - Used when a cooling fluid interface is required . One seal is used for the process fluid the other seal is used for the coolant.


    • Back to Back - Used when an abrasive fluid is being contained and both seals are flushed with a clean buffer fluid.   The flushing fluid is introduced at a higher pressure the process fluid


The are a large number of variant mechanical seals e.g split seals.   Improved systems are constantly being introduced onto the market

Additional Equipment

The use of mechanical seals generally involve the use of additional equipment primarily for the flushing /coolant systems.   This includes pumps, coolers, strainers, filters etc.

Last Updated ( Thursday, 17 February 2011 04:28 )
 
Ultrananocrystalline Diamond (UNCD) mechanical seals. PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Saturday, 20 September 2008 03:02

Breakthrough Technology Benefits Pump Industry

Overview

High-performance centrifugal pumps form the backbone of modern industry because they can transfer a great variety of fluids and slurries with high efficiency over a wide range of flows and pressures. Crucial to pump operation are the mechanical seals that prevent the fluids being pumped from escaping into the environment while pumping proceeds. In fact, the number one cause of pump downtime is shaft seal failure. To overcome that problem, Argonne researchers have developed and patented a breakthrough technology: Ultrananocrystalline Diamond (UNCD) mechanical seals.

Argonne’s UNCD mechanical seals are primarily designed for high-performance centrifugal pumps. The technology is significant because the UNCD seals harness the unsurpassed properties of diamond to improve the reliability, useful life, and integrity of fluid sealing systems. UNCD is also suitable for use with centrifugal gas compressors.

Diamondlike Properties, Performance

UNCD is a nanomaterial consisting of diamond grains only 2–5 nm in size (20 carbon atom diameters), separated by grain boundaries that are atomically abrupt. The grain boundaries consist of a mixture of diamond- and graphite-bonded carbon. Thus, UNCD is not pure diamond but a nanostructured hybrid of different carbon allotropes (i.e., different forms of the same substance — in this case, carbon) that retains most of the desirable extreme properties of diamond — and, in some cases, exceeds the properties of natural diamond (e.g., fracture strength, electrical transport, field-induced electron emission, electrochemistry, and bio-inertness).

Argonne’s patented UNCD films have been proven to provide ideal mechanical seal faces precisely because such films retain the superior hardness, chemical inertness, and ultralow friction characteristics of natural diamond.

Technology Meets Critical Industry Need

Centrifugal pumps are used for extreme condition service in the petroleum, chemicals, pharmaceutical, pulp and paper, power generation, food and beverage, mining and minerals, transportation, semiconductor, water and waste, refrigeration, automotive, and appliance industries. They are used in virtually every industrial setting because they can transfer a great variety of fluids and slurries with high efficiency over a wide range of flows and pressures. Inevitably, they are critical elements of industrial processes wherever they are used, in that whenever centrifugal pumps shut down for maintenance or repair, the processes they serve must also shut down, impacting, productivity and therefore profits.

Regardless of industrial setting, Argonne’s UNCD mechanical seals are designed to meet demanding industrial requirements involving aqueous solutions, chemicals, corrosive liquids, high-pressure liquids, and hydrocarbons and solvents.

Cost-Effective, Rapid Payback

Mechanical seals come in hundreds of varieties and sizes for myriad applications, ranging from pumping steam to petroleum fluids to abrasive slurries. UNCD mechanical seals are competitively priced with respect to the silicon carbide seals they replace, and industry will save money in pump life cycle by switching to UNCD mechanical seals. Because UNCD can be applied relatively inexpensively, UNCD mechanical seals can offer industry immediate payback in terms of energy savings by greatly reducing friction at the sealing interface. The seals also offer greatly increased mean time to replacement because the faces last longer; increased tolerance to poorly lubricated conditions, which significantly reduces maintenance costs; and reduced face temperatures, which permits the pumping of thermally sensitive media.

Proven, Market-Ready Technology

Because of the numerous highly promising applications for UNCD thin films, Argonne transferred the technology to a start-up company, Advanced Diamond Technologies, Inc. (ADT), that would focus on the technology and pursue multiple markets. ADT has already vigorously pursued several application areas, including mechanical seals, and is doing research on several others.

One of the first steps taken in this regard was to establish a joint development agreement with John Crane, Inc., the technology leader and the world’s largest manufacturer of mechanical seals and associated products. Under the agreement, John Crane performed scores of characterization tests. The results have demonstrated that UNCD dramatically improves the performance capabilities of mechanical seals. The focus is now on producing the seals in large batches so they could be manufactured affordably and utilized for improved performance in commercial applications.

LINKS TO ONLINE INFORMATION

http://www.anl.gov/techtransfer/Available_Technologies/Material_Science/index.html

Licensing:

Terry Maynard, Account Manager

Office of Technology Transfer

Argonne National Laboratory

630-252-9771 (phone)

630-252-5230 (fax)

This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Technical:

Gregory K. Krumdick

Argonne National Laboratory

9700 S. Cass Ave.

630-252-3952 (phone)

630-252-1342 (fax)

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Last Updated ( Sunday, 21 September 2008 09:16 )
 


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