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- Posts: 84
- Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2005 6:17 pm
I have a Waters 600 pump, and I have been having very difficult problems with pressure. The system backpressure is so variable it prevents me from getting experiments conducted. I have lost several days. My mood goes up and down based on the wierd way the system backpressure oscillates. I have a flow restrictor to raise the system pressure at the pumps because my columns, which I pack myself, have relatively large particles (180-250 microns) and don't create much back pressure.
The pressure oscillates very periodically, and corresponds to a cycle of the reciprocating pumps. I anticipate what you're thinking - 'It's obviously a check valve problem, you loser'. I hear you, but please believe that we have certainly scrutinized the check valves thoroughly. We have taken both pump heads off and cleaned (sonication in water, then MeOH) the check valves.
We have performed the modified ramp test repeatedly and most of the time the results have indicated that the check valves are fine. However the results of a recent ramp test suggested that the left pump outlet check valve was not functioning properly. So we exchanged the positions of the left valves, i.e. put the check valve that was in the outlet position in the inlet position. I then re-ran the ramp test wondering if the results would then suggest that the left inlet check valve was the problem. But then the test results suggested that both inlet and outlet check valves were fine.
Sometimes when I am just pumping DI through the system (regardless of flow rate in the range 0.5-5.0 mL/min) the system pressure is well behaved for several minutes, even a couple of hours and then the pressure variations slowly develop and get worse and worse. In the past when the system was working well, the pressure would be about 700 psi with maybe +/- 5% fluctuations at a flow rate of 0.5 mL/min. However, when this problem is at its worst, the pressure will fluctate all the way from 700 down to 0 psi. The big drops in pressure correspond to when the L pump is on the compression cycle.
So, there definitely is something wrong with the left side of the pump, but based on what I've described, you'll understand that I can't conclude that it is a check valve. If it's a check valve perhaps one of the check valves works intermittently. Uwe, have you ever seen that? A check valve that works for a while, and then starts misbehaving? The check valves are the type with the ruby ball, i.e. the one-piece cylindrical units that have the stainless jacket and the flow direction arrow on the outside.
In one of my conversations with Waters tech support they suggested that there may be a leak in one of the lines. If there is a compromised line somewhere it is letting gas in. The pump behaves as though there is and air bubble in it, and plus I have never noticed a leak anywhere. However, if we change to a different reservoir the problems persist. This other observation tells us that if a line it bad it's a line it's not associated with a specific reservoir. Could it be a short bit of line between the pump(s) and some mixing unit?
Any thoughts?
Thanks in advance for your expert consideration,
Dave
