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Agitator Design Basics: Understanding Power per Unit Volume (Pv) and Motor Power

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Agitators are essential equipment in chemical plants. They are used to homogenize reactions, suspend solids, and mix high-viscosity fluids efficiently.

One of the most important indicators in agitator design and scale-up is power per unit volume (Pv).

This article explains the fundamentals of Pv and its relationship with motor power in a practical, beginner-friendly way—especially for engineers involved in mechanical, electrical, or plant design work.

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What Is Power per Unit Volume (Pv)?

Power per unit volume (Pv) is defined as:

Pv = Agitator Power / Liquid Volume (kW/m³)

Pv is commonly used when scaling up agitators. The basic idea is simple:
design the agitator so that the Pv value matches the mixing requirements of the process fluid.

Typical Pv Ranges (Practical Guidelines)

Pv (kW/m³)Mixing Condition
0.05 – 0.1Simple homogenization, easy crystal breakup
0.2 – 0.4Normal liquid mixing
0.5 – 0.8Slurries prone to settling
1 – 3High-viscosity fluids, very difficult slurries

For engineers who are not familiar with process fluids, these values may feel abstract.
As a rule of thumb:

  • ~0.5 kW/m³ → standard target
  • ~0.8 kW/m³ → slurry service

This level of understanding is sufficient before moving on to detailed, case-by-case design.


Pv from an Operating Perspective

Pv is determined by operating conditions, which means it is largely controlled by process design, not mechanical design.

If the reactor size is fixed and the process needs adjustment, typical approaches include:

  • Adjusting agitator speed
    (impeller type and diameter are fixed)
  • Adjusting liquid volume
    (single-batch operation vs. split-batch operation)

This consideration is especially important when multiple products are processed in the same equipment, rather than single-product dedicated units.


Pv as an Equipment Specification

From a mechanical or electrical engineering perspective, operating Pv may be out of scope, but Pv as an equipment specification is not.

Here, Pv is defined as:

Pv (equipment) = Motor Power / Reactor Volume (kW/m³)

This value represents the maximum achievable Pv of the agitator system and must exceed the required operating Pv.

Example

  • Reactor volume: 10 m³
  • Motor power: 10 kW

➡ Equipment Pv = 1.0 kW/m³

If the process only requires 0.5 kW/m³, the agitator speed can be reduced during operation.


Why Motor Power Selection Matters

Looking at commercial agitator catalogs (for example, manufacturers like Shinko Environmental Solutions), we can infer typical design targets:

  • Three-blade pitched impeller / Twin-star impeller
    → ~0.7–0.8 kW/m³
  • Full-zone impeller
    → ~1.2 kW/m³

These values are usually adequate for standard applications, and in many cases, users do not specify motor power explicitly.

However, if you want to exceed standard Pv values (e.g., 1.0 kW/m³ with a twin-star impeller), you must specify the motor power carefully.
This is not just a motor replacement issue.

Higher motor power affects:

  • Impeller diameter
  • Shaft diameter
  • Mechanical seal size
  • Flange and vessel nozzle strength

In extreme cases, the entire agitator or vessel design may need to change.
Motor power is a critical input for both quotation and mechanical design—never treat it lightly.


A Common Pitfall: Low Liquid Volume

While equipment Pv should be higher than operating Pv, there is a hidden risk when liquid volume is small.

Even if agitator speed is reduced:

  • Low liquid volume → Pv increases
  • Speed control may reach its lower limit
  • Pv may remain excessively high

This can lead to poor process results or mechanical issues.
When handling small batches or highly viscous fluids, detailed evaluation is essential.


Summary

  • Pv is a key parameter in agitator design and scale-up
  • Distinguish clearly between:
    • Operating Pv (process-controlled)
    • Equipment Pv (motor and mechanical design)
  • Motor power affects the entire agitator system, not just the motor
  • Special care is required for small liquid volumes and high-viscosity services

Understanding and applying Pv correctly leads to safe, efficient, and flexible chemical plant operation.

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