Analysis of the core differences between multi-stage blowers and vacuum blowers
In the field of industrial gas transportation, multi-stage blowers and vacuum blowers are two devices with complementary functions but completely different technical principles. Correctly distinguishing the differences between the two is the key to choosing an appropriate device.
1、 Fundamental differences in working principles
Multi stage blowers (such as multi-stage centrifugal fans) use multiple impellers in series to pressurize gas in multiple stages, adopting a "suction compression exhaust" cycle working mode to send gas from the low-pressure end to the high-pressure end. Typical applications include sewage treatment aeration, boiler combustion assistance, and other situations that require continuous positive pressure. And vacuum fans (such as water ring vacuum pumps) form a local low-pressure zone through the rotation of blades, allowing external gas to continuously flow into the pump body and be discharged. Its core function is to create and maintain a negative pressure environment, which is commonly used in processes such as material suction and vacuum drying.
2、 Comparison of performance parameters and differences
The working pressure range of multi-stage blowers is usually between 10-100kPa (gauge pressure), and the maximum air volume of a single machine can reach several hundred cubic meters per minute, suitable for long-distance high-pressure gas transportation. The working pressure range of the vacuum fan is -10~-90kPa (vacuum degree), and although the pumping rate can reach thousands of cubic meters per hour, it cannot establish sustained positive pressure. For example, when selecting a blower for a sewage treatment plant, attention should be paid to the pressure boosting capacity, while for a pharmaceutical packaging production line, the ultimate vacuum degree of the vacuum blower should be emphasized.
3、 Significant differences in structural design
The blower adopts a closed impeller design combined with multi-stage pressurized volutes, and the gear transmission system ensures synchronous operation of the multi-stage impellers. Vacuum fans include specially designed sealing structures (such as mechanical seals) and gas water separation devices, and some models are equipped with anti-corrosion coatings to cope with special gas environments. This structural difference leads to different maintenance methods - the blower needs to clean the impeller dust regularly, and the vacuum pump needs to check the sealing liquid level and vacuum pipeline integrity.
In practical applications, the selection should be based on process requirements: if a pressure system needs to be established and a blower is selected, a vacuum fan must be used if a vacuum environment is required. Some high-end devices can achieve dual-mode switching between air blowing and vacuum, but functional specificity is more important in conventional scenarios.