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Progressing Cavity (Screw) Pumps for Filter Press Feed and Sludge Transfer

Progressing cavity (PC) pumps are the gold standard for moving high-viscosity sludge, shear-sensitive fluids, and high-solids feed into filter presses. Here is how they work and when to specify them.

Progressing cavity pumps (also called PC pumps, mono pumps, or screw pumps) move high-viscosity sludge and shear-sensitive fluids with a steady, pulse-free flow — making them the standard choice for filter press feed lines and municipal sludge transfer where centrifugal pumps fail.

How a Progressing Cavity Pump Works

Inside the pump body, a single helical rotor (typically hardened steel) turns inside a double-helix elastomer stator. As the rotor turns, a chain of sealed cavities moves from inlet to discharge, displacing a fixed volume per revolution. The result: a near-constant flow regardless of discharge pressure, plus very low shear (around 4-12 s⁻¹ shear rate) which preserves floc structure in dewatering applications.

Typical Senjie PC pumps handle viscosities up to 100,000 cP, solids content up to 50%, and discharge pressures to 24 bar (348 psi) per stage — enough to feed even the highest-pressure membrane filter presses.

When to Choose PC Pumps Over Alternatives

Specify a PC pump when one of these matters: (1) you need accurate, repeatable metering for chemical dosing; (2) the fluid contains long-fiber or stringy solids that clog impeller pumps; (3) the slurry is shear-sensitive (polymer-flocculated sludge); (4) you need to pump uphill against high pressure with consistent flow. For abrasive slurries with high silica content, centrifugal slurry pumps or ceramic piston pumps last longer.

Common Applications

  • Municipal sludge dewatering — feeding polymer-flocculated sludge into chamber filter presses without breaking floc
  • Industrial wastewater — biological sludge, primary clarifier sludge, DAF float
  • Food & beverage — fruit pulp, mash, brewery yeast, vinegar lees
  • Chemical industry — high-viscosity intermediates, pigment slurries, catalyst recovery
  • Pharmaceutical — fermentation broth, mycelium suspensions

Specifications & Customization Options

  • Capacity: 0.5 – 80 m³/h (multi-stage to 150 m³/h)
  • Discharge pressure: 6 / 12 / 18 / 24 bar (1-4 stage models)
  • Max viscosity: 100,000 cP
  • Max temperature: 120°C standard, 180°C with FKM stator
  • Rotor materials: Hardened tool steel, chrome plated, tungsten carbide coated
  • Stator materials: NBR, EPDM, FKM (Viton), HNBR for hydrocarbons
  • Drive: SEW or Siemens geared motors, variable-frequency control

FAQs

Why is my PC pump losing flow at constant RPM? The stator is worn — replace it. Stator life depends mainly on abrasive content and the rubber compound. With clean water, expect 20,000+ hours; with abrasive sludge containing sand, 2,000-6,000 hours.

Can a PC pump run dry? Only briefly. The rotor-stator interference fit creates friction heat very quickly — running dry for more than 30 seconds typically burns the stator. Always install a low-flow shutdown sensor.

What’s the right RPM for filter press feeding? Run slow during the initial fill (200-300 RPM) to avoid cake-cracking, then ramp up to design RPM (500-900 RPM) once chambers are partially filled. Variable-frequency drives are essentially required.

Need help sizing a PC pump? Talk to Senjie’s engineering team with your sludge viscosity, dry solids content, target pressure, and filter press model — we’ll match a PC pump from our screw pump catalog to your duty point.