What Determines Seal Leakage?
What Determines Seal Leakage?
What Determines Seal Leakage?
Load
If the loading conditions change, the worn faces will start another wear transition. Sometimes, the faces have been badly worn and excessive uid pressure opens them under the new loading condition. This can lead to uncontrollable leakage. To survive changing operating conditions, the seal can be designed to avoid contacting wear but with a controllable consistent leakage. A hydrostatic coned face seal is a design example. This type of seal will leak one order of magnitude higher than conventional contacting face seals. More advanced non-contacting non-leaking seal designs have also proven feasible, but have limited application range.
Face Treatments
Various face treatments can be applied to the sealing faces such as slots, grooves, waviness or special lapping processes. These treatments are designed to enhance lubrication and increase hydrodynamic lift, which in turn reduces seal face friction. This increases the lm thickness between the seal faces. They are primarily used in two situations: a) Liquids with poor lubricating qualities b) Heavy face loads relative to the load bearing quality of the seal face materials In using face treatments in light hydrocarbons and other services where vaporization occurs between the seal faces, a high balance ratio is required to maintain face contact and minimize leakage.
Leakage Sources
In most cases, the seal leakage comes from the sealing interface. However, in some situations, leakage may come from the secondary sealing area, such as O-rings. This could be due to O-ring degradation caused by chemical attack, overheating and loss of resilience from compression set. In rare occasions, the sealing rings are porous and uid leaks through the bodies.
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Measuring Leakage
Leakage limits may be given as a volumetric rate, such as milliliters per hour (ml/hr), or as a mass leakage rate, such as grams per hour (g/hr). For volatile organic compounds (VOCs), limits are sometimes expressed as a concentration, i.e., 200 parts per million (ppm), of the VOC. This is usually referred to as an allowable emission rate; the measurement is taken according to EPA Method 21. An emission rate of 1,000-ppm is equal to a mass leakage rate of 5.6-g/hr. Another rough rule of thumb is that a milliliter of liquid contains about 20 drops; therefore, a volumetric leakage rate of 3-ml/hr would be about
60 drops per hour or a drop per minute. Some states, notably California, have a no visible leakage requirement; in practice, this means that visible leakage of three drops per minute is considered a major leak and the pump must be shut down for repair.
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Sealing Sense
In theory, leakage would be greater for a narrow face seal than for a wide face seal, but in practice, narrow face seals often leak less because the sealing gap for narrow faces is usually less than for wide faces.
than wider face widths Face treatments or special lapping techniques to increase sealing gap Composite face materials (due to rougher surface nish) Excessive converging sealing gap due to thermal distortions Excessive divergent sealing gap due to pressure distortion Wiping action of seal face over mating ring Distorted seal faces (high and low spots from some mechanical condition) increase in leakage. The source of most leakage usually is the interface between the two seal faces, but can also come from secondary seals such as O-rings. A balance must be established between steady state and transient operating conditions to control the negative factors that lead to increased leakage. Contact your mechanical seal supplier to determine the design that best establishes this balance for a specic set of operating conditions. Next Month: How do I determine bolt torque for ange connections? We invite your questions on sealing issues and will provide best efforts answers based on FSA publications. Please direct your questions to: [email protected]. P&S
Summary
Mechanical seals are designed to produce an acceptably low level of leakage to function effectively. Many individual internal and external factors, as well as interactions between them, affect the rate of seal leakage. Some design features or treatments enhance reliability but contribute to some marginal
seals that optimize life cycle cost, safety and environmental compliance. The following members of the Mechanical Seal Division sponsor this Sealing Sense series: Advanced Sealing International (ASI) Ashbridge & Roseburgh Inc. A.W. Chesterton Co. CoorsTek Daikin America, Inc. DuPont Performance Elastomers LLC EagleBurgmann Industries LP Flex-A-Seal, Inc. Flowserve Flow Solutions Div. - Seal Group Garlock Sealing Technologies Greene, Tweed & Co./Palmetto, Inc. Industrias Vago de Mexico SA de CV John Crane KC America Latty International S.A. Metallized Carbon Corp. Morgan AM&T Nippon Pillar Corp. of America Parker Hannin Seal Group PPC Mechanical Seals SEPCO - Sealing Equipment Products Co., Inc. SGL Technic Polycarbon Division
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