Compute NPSH available for suction conditions and fluids. Include altitude, vapor pressure, and losses easily. Get clear margins before selecting pumps and speeds properly.
Net Positive Suction Head Available (NPSHa) expresses suction energy above the liquid vapor pressure at the pump inlet. A common head-form balance is:
NPSHa = Hatm + Hsurf + Hz - Hvap - Hf - Hv
Practical tip: aim for extra margin above the pump requirement, especially for warm liquids or high suction losses.
| Case | rho (kg/m^3) | Patm (kPa) | Psurf gauge (kPa) | Hz (m) | Hf (m) | Pvap (kPa) | Hv (m) | NPSHa (m) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Water, mild suction | 998 | 101.325 | 0 | 2.0 | 1.0 | 2.34 | 0.20 | about 10.91 |
| Warm water, higher vapor | 992 | 101.325 | 0 | 1.0 | 1.8 | 7.38 | 0.30 | about 8.49 |
| Closed tank, slight pressure | 998 | 101.325 | 20 | 0.5 | 1.2 | 2.34 | 0.15 | about 12.18 |
Values are illustrative. Use measured data for design decisions.
Net Positive Suction Head Available (NPSHa) is the absolute suction head above the liquid’s vapor pressure at the pump inlet. If NPSHa falls below the pump’s NPSH required (NPSHr), vapor bubbles can form and collapse, causing cavitation, noise, vibration, efficiency loss, and long-term impeller damage.
This calculator combines atmospheric head, tank pressure, elevation, vapor pressure, friction losses, and velocity head. For water near 20 °C, density is about 998 kg/m³ and vapor pressure is roughly 2.34 kPa. Suction friction losses commonly range from 0.5–3 m depending on pipe length, fittings, and valves.
Atmospheric head is often the largest positive term for open tanks. At sea level, 101.325 kPa corresponds to about 10.33 m of water. At higher altitudes the available atmospheric head decreases, reducing NPSHa. Use the altitude mode when site elevation is known and barometric data is unavailable.
Vapor pressure rises rapidly with temperature, subtracting more head from NPSHa. Warm liquids are therefore more cavitation-prone. For water, vapor pressure is about 2.34 kPa at 20 °C and increases substantially as temperature approaches boiling. For hydrocarbons or solvents, always use manufacturer vapor pressure data.
Suction-side losses are critical because they directly reduce NPSHa. Keep suction piping short, minimize elbows and restrictions, avoid undersized strainers, and limit sudden expansions. For long runs, increasing pipe diameter can cut friction losses significantly and improve suction stability.
Velocity head accounts for kinetic energy at the suction nozzle and increases with suction velocity (V²/2g). High velocity is common with small pipes and high flow rates, raising losses and reducing NPSHa. Use the compute option to estimate velocity from flow rate and actual inner diameter.
Compare calculated NPSHa with pump NPSHr at the exact operating point (flow, speed, impeller trim, and liquid temperature). Many engineers target a margin above NPSHr to account for uncertainty, fouling, and transient conditions. If margin is tight, reduce losses, lower pump elevation, or pressurize the suction source.
Use consistent reference elevations, measure pressure at the liquid surface or tank vapor space, and confirm whether readings are gauge or absolute. Verify fluid temperature at the suction source and check for flashing at control valves. Small measurement errors can shift NPSHa by meters in low-margin systems.
NPSHa is what your system provides at the pump inlet. NPSHr is what the pump needs at a given flow to avoid excessive cavitation. Always compare them at the same operating point.
Many pump standards include velocity head at the pump suction reference. If you do not know your practice, include it for conservatism, especially when suction velocities are high.
Warm water has higher vapor pressure. Higher vapor pressure subtracts more head in the NPSHa equation, making it easier for the liquid to flash and cavitate at the inlet.
Yes. Enter the tank surface gauge pressure. Positive pressure increases NPSHa, while vacuum decreases it. Make sure your pressure value matches the unit and is truly gauge.
Use pipe friction methods and include fittings and valves as minor losses. If you have a measured suction pressure at the pump, you can back-calculate losses by comparing with the source conditions.
A negative result indicates vapor pressure plus losses exceed the available suction head. Recheck units, gauge versus absolute values, and elevation sign. In real systems, the pump will likely cavitate severely.
It depends on service severity and uncertainty. A larger margin is often used for hot liquids, variable operation, or dirty suction strainers. Follow your company standard and pump vendor guidance.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.