THE TRIRO PRINCIPLE

The C6000 series pump is part of the family of TRIRO positive displacement rotary screw type pumps from Plenty Mirrlees Pumps.  This design incorporates just three moving parts - a power rotor and two idlers.  The three rotors have accurately machined precisely intermeshing threads, which form sealed closures inside the pump casing to enclose the fluid being pumped.

The power rotor is connected directly to the prime mover, and as it rotates, the idler rotors turn due tot he action of the pumped liquid.  This action is in effect, that of a piston moving continuously in one direction, providing a smooth uniform low shear flow without pulsations.

The idler rotors perform no work so no gears are required to transmit power between the screws.  Radial forces on the idler rotors are taken up by creating a hydrodynamic bearing surface between the idler rotors and the surrounding cylindrical surfaces, so no other bearings are required.  Axial forces on the screwset, caused by the pressure differential between inlet and outlet, are balanced hydraulically within the pump.

The chamber formed between two adjacent threads and the bore is known as a closure that contains the liquid as it moves through the pump.  As the screwset rotates, the unfolding closures in the suction chamber create low-pressure area and the absolute pressure on the liquid at the pump inlet.  At the discharge end, the folding closures force the liquid into the discharge pipe against the natural resistance (known as discharge pressure) created by the static head and discharge pipe system frictional losses.

The discharge, or backpressure, forces a certain portion of liquid to pass back along the internal clearances from discharge to suction.  This is a characteristic of all rotary positive displacement pumps.  The very fine working clearances of a TRIRO pump reduce this leadage or slip to a minimum thus maximizing the volumetric efficiency.

Discharge Pressure

Being a positive displacement pump the TRIRO pump does not create a discharge pressure by its own action.  Positive displacement pumps provide a flow of fluid to the system, which will consist of piping, and fittings etc that will cause a resistance to the flow.  This is reflected at the pump as discharge pressure.  A positive displacement pump is capable of working at pressures that far exceed the rating of its own components and those of the system.  The only thing that can limit the pressure developed by a positive displacement pump is a  safety relief valve fitted either to the pump or in the system.

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