How Peristaltic Pumps Works?

How Do Liquid Peristaltic Pumps Work?

A peristaltic pump also referred to as a hose or tube pump works using positive displacement. Fluid is fed through the tubing by rollers that rotate squeezing a flexible tube against the pump housing.

As the roller moves over the tubing, it expands and creates a vacuum to allow more fluid to enter. During operation, at least one roller closes the tubing. Therefore the need for valves is eliminated. The rollers are turned either directly by a motor or by a gearbox.

Schlauchpumpen - Funktionsprinzip

Peristaltic, tube or hose pump is a type of positive displacement pump that transports the liquid through the tube by a series of rollers, that squeeze it against the pump housing, in a similar way that we swallow food.

Where Are Peristaltic Pumps Used?

Peristaltic pumps are ideal for use with corrosive and viscous fluids, as the only part of the pump to come into contact with the fluid is the tubing. With the tubing or the head being easily replacable, the pumps are relatively inexpensive to maintain and virtually maintenance-free. Hence industrial peristaltic pumps and medical peristaltic pumps are among the most popular applications for tube pumps.

Speaking of examples, of the medical device industry, peristaltic pumps are used for processing sterile fluids, dialysis, filtration, or bioprocessing. In food, agriculture, or disinfection markets, they are used for dispensing food or beverages, vitamins, or chemicals. The environmental sector uses hose pumps for wastewater treatment or condensate removal in gas analysis applications.

 

What Are The Benefits Of Peristaltic Pump Technology?

 

  • Dry running
  • Self-priming
  • Reversible (DC)
  • Flow regulation
  • Excellent for use with viscous or aggressive media
  • Tolerant to contamination with particles
  • Thomas peristaltic pumps offer flow rates up to 2000 ml/min, suction height up to 9 m H2O, pressure height up to 100 m H2O

What Are The Peristaltic Pump Motor Types?

Common motor types for peristaltic pumps include brushed direct current (DC), brushless direct current (BLDC), alternating current (AC), or stepper motors. If the hose pump is driven without a gearbox, changing the motor speed can control the flow. Typical motor speeds for peristaltic pumps range between 0-400 revolutions per minute. Usually, DC and BLDC motors are used together with a gearbox to set speed depending on the flow need. Stepper motor speeds can be regulated by using an external controller board.

Motoren Komponente

How Long Do Peristaltic Pumps Last? How Can Peristaltic Pumps Flow Rate Be Controlled?

Flow rates are proportional to motor speed. This makes peristaltic pumps suitable for dispensing and dosing applications.In order to choose the right motor, there are a few aspects to consider. Direct current motors are available in different quality levels ranging from 500 up to 4000 hours of operation. The limiting factors of those motors are the brush system and the bearings. In AC motors lifetime ranges between 1000 hours in shaded pole variants up to more than 10,000 hours in capacitor versions.

When it comes to stepper and brushless DC motors the limiting aspect is usually only the bearing system. In the BLDC and stepper motors, the speed can be adjusted during operation very easily. Those motor types are commonly used when a variable flow rate is needed.


All About Peristaltic Tubing

Typical peristaltic hose or tube materials range from silicone over thermoplastic vulcanizate (TPV) or PVC to fluoroelastomeric materials.Silicone is commonly used when non-aggressive media need to be pumped. Compared to other materials silicone is on the softer end of the range.TPV combines the easy processability of Polypropylene with the elastomeric properties of EPDM. Commonly used tubing materials based on TPV are PharMed® BPT or Santoprene™. When more chemically corrosive media need to be pumped, fluoroelastomeric materials like Viton® are used.

When it comes to choosing the right tubing the right choice of tubing dimensions is crucial. When maximum tube lifetime is key, a tube with a larger inner diameter and low motor speed is advantageous. For higher flow rates large inner diameter tubing and high motor speed should be chosen.When the application requires high accuracy, the tubing should have a minimal inner diameter and motor speed should be high. For pumping, viscous liquids tubes should have higher wall thickness to ensure quick recovery of the original shape.

Particles from tubing may be shed into the fluid circle, a process called spallation. Spallation is to be avoided especially in biological, pharmaceutical, or medical applications. Special types of TPV materials such as Versalloy™ exist that offer optimized properties to reduce spallation.


What To Consider In Peristaltic Pumps?

In order to reduce pulsation, many peristaltic pumps offer a spring-loaded mechanism to ensure smooth pumping action. This feature is also important for shear-sensitive fluids such as living cells. Another aspect to consider is the adjustment of the pump to different tube dimensions depending on the flow rate needed.

The more sophisticated pump types also feature an adjustable occlusion. This feature can help to adjust the pump to different pressure levels that might occur in fluidic systems. Moreover, it helps to adjust the pump performance to different tubing materials. Depending on the type of fluid, softer tubings made out of silicone are used, whereas for chemically demanding applications fluoroelastomeric materials need to be used. Those are usually significantly harder.

Peristaltic pumps stand out due to their ease of use. The tubing or pump head can be replaced in a matter of seconds. The design without the need for internal valves has different advantages.Clockwise and counterclockwise operation is possible, so liquids can be transferred in both directions if the process requires it. As there are no valves, there are fewer restrictions in the tubing, which helps when viscous media need to be transferred.

To increase the efficiency of the product multi-channel peristaltic pumps can be used. In such pumps one motor drives a pump head with up to 15 channels, each containing a separate tube. With that different media can be transferred at the same time or the same medium can be distributed to multiple vessels.The number of rollers used in peristaltic pumps has a major effect on fluid handling. For higher flow rates only two or three rollers are used. The downside of this is that the pulsation is high. If a gentle transfer of the medium is required, often more rollers are used to maintain a moderate level of pulsation.

An important requirement in many medical or analytical processes is to avoid cross-contamination. The tubes are the only part in contact with the medium and can be switched out easily after each process cycle.
Other applications include detergent dispensing in industrial dishwashers, condensate removal in continuous emissions monitoring, or transfer of dialysate in dialysis machines.


What Makes Thomas Peristaltic Pumps Stand Out?

Thomas offers pumps with flow rates ranging from smaller than 0.1 ml per minute up to 2000 ml per minute. In special product versions, high pressure of up to 10 bar can be handled. Our wide portfolio provides solutions for even the most demanding liquid handling applications.

Browse Thomas Peristaltic Pumps

Select Max. Suction Height

0-3 mH2O
3-6 mH2O
6-10 mH2O

Select Flow Rate (l/min

up to 1 LPM
1-5 LPM
5-10 LPM
10-20 LPM
20-30 LPM
30-50 LPM
50-100 LPM
above 150 LPM

Select Max. Vacuum

Up to 300mbar / 9 in.Hg
300-500 mbar / 9-14.75 in.Hg
500-800 mbar / 14.75-23.6 in.Hg
800-900 mbar / 23.6-26.6 in.Hg
Above 900 mbar / 26.6 in.Hg

Select Max. Pressure Level

Up to 1 bar/14.5 psi
1-2 bar/14.5-29 psi
2-5 bar/29-72.52 psi
5-7 bar/72.52-101.53 psi
7-10 bar/101.53-145 psi
above 10 bar/145 psi

Select Flow Rate (cfm)

up to 0.035 cfm
0.035-0.176 cfm
0.18-0.50cfm
0.5-1cfm
1-2 cfm
2-3 cfm
3-4 cfm
4-5 cfm
above 5 cfm