Gear Pumps
A gear pump is a type of positive displacement pump that uses the meshing of gears to pump fluid by displacement. They are compact, relatively simple in design, and capable of handling viscous fluids and delivering high pressures, making them widely used in various industrial applications.
Types of Gear Pumps
External Gear Pumps: Have two identical, externally meshing gears. The most common type.
Internal Gear Pumps: Have an internal gear that meshes with an external spur gear (rotor and idler). Often used for high-viscosity fluids.
Gerotor Pumps: A type of internal gear pump with a specific geometry, often used in automotive oil pumps.
Crescent Gear Pumps: An internal gear pump with a crescent-shaped partition.
Lobe Pumps: Similar to gear pumps but use lobes instead of gears, suitable for shear-sensitive fluids and slurries. (Sometimes grouped with gear pumps due to similar operating principle).
Applications in Various Industries
Hydraulic Power Units: As hydraulic pumps in industrial machinery, mobile equipment, construction equipment, agricultural machinery.
Lubrication Systems: Pumping oil for lubrication in engines, gearboxes, turbines.
Fluid Transfer: Pumping fuel oil, crude oil, asphalt, resins, paints, solvents.
Chemical Processing: Metering and transfer of chemicals.
Food & Beverage: Transfer of syrups, chocolate, edible oils (with hygienic designs).
Extrusion & Polymer Processing: Pumping molten polymers from extruders to dies.
Oil & Gas: Transfer pumps, booster pumps.
Material Selection Considerations
Casing/Housing:
Gears:
Bearings/Bushings:
Seals:
FAQ's