15,432 research outputs found
The Dynamic Transfer Function for a Cavitating Inducer
Knowledge of the dynamic performance of pumps is essential for the prediction of transient behavior and instabilities in hydraulic systems; the necessary information is in the form of a transfer function which relates the instantaneous or fluctuating pressure and mass flow rate at inlet to the same quantities in the discharge from the pump. The presence of cavitation within the pump can have a major effect on this transfer function since dynamical changes in the volume of cavitation contribute to the difference in the instantaneous inlet and discharge mass flow rates. The present paper utilizes results from free streamline cascade theory to evaluate the elements in the transfer function for a cavitating inducer and shows that the numerical results are consistent with the characteristics observed in some dynamic tests on rocket engine turbopumps
Dynamics of cavitating cascades
The unsteady dynamics of cavitating cascades and inducer pumps were studied with a view to understanding (and possibly predicting) the dynamic characteristics of these devices. The chronology of the research is summarized as well as the final conculsions for each task. The construction of a dynamic pump test facility and its use in making experimental measurements of the transfer function is described as well as tests conducted using a scale model of the low pressure liquid oxygen turbopump inducer in the shuttle main engine. Auto-oscillation and unsteady inlet flow characteristics are discussed in addition to blade cavity influence and bubbly cavitation
Theoretical Study of Fluid Forces on a Centrifugal Impeller Rotating and Whirling in a Volute
Fluid forces on a rotating and whirling centrifugal impeller in a volute are analyzed with the assumption of a two-dimensional rotational, inviscid flow. For simplicity, the flow is assumed to be perfectly guided by the impeller vanes. The theory predicts the tangential and the radial force on the whirling impeller as functions of impeller geometry, volute spacing, and whirl ratio. A good qualitative agreement with experiment is found
Dynamics of cavitating cascades
Brief accounts of the theoretical research conducted on the unsteady cavitation characteristics of liquid rocket engine turbopumps are reported. The objective is to produce estimates of the cavitation compliance and other unsteady characteristics which could then be used in analysis of the pogo instability. Blade cavitation is the particular pheonomenon which is investigated and line arized free streamline methods were employed in both quasistatic and complete dynamic cascade analyses of the unsteady flow. The simpler quasistatic analysis was applied to particular turbopumps but yielded values of compliances significantly smaller than those indirectly obtained from experiments. Reasons for this discrepancy are discussed. The complete dynamic analysis presents a new problem in fundamental hydrodynamics and, though the basic solution is presented, numerical results have not as yet been obtained
Ultra-Short Optical Pulse Generation with Single-Layer Graphene
Pulses as short as 260 fs have been generated in a diode-pumped low-gain
Er:Yb:glass laser by exploiting the nonlinear optical response of single-layer
graphene. The application of this novel material to solid-state bulk lasers
opens up a way to compact and robust lasers with ultrahigh repetition rates.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Journal of Nonlinear Optical Physics
& Material
Observations of Cavitation on a Three-Dimensional Oscillating Hydrofoil
A test apparatus was designed and constructed to observe the effect of sinusoidal pitching oscillations on the cavitation of three-dimensional hydrofoils. The apparatus is capable of oscillating hydrofoils at a rate up to 50 Hz and provides for adjustments in oscillation amplitude and mean angle of attack. Observations of the effect of pitching oscillation on cavitation have been made for a NACA 64-309 (modified) hydrofoil operating at its designed mean angle of attack of 7 degrees with an oscillation amplitude of 2 degrees. Photographs illustrating the interaction between natural cavity shedding frequencies and the foil reduced frequency are included
A Test Program to Measure Fluid Mechanical Whirl-Excitation Forces in Centrifugal Pumps
Much speculation has surrounded the possible unsteady hydrodynamic forces which could be responsible for the excitation of whirl instabilities in turbomachines. However there exist very few measurements of these forces which would permit one to evaluate the merits of the existing fluid mechanical analyses. In keeping with the informal nature of this workshop we will present details of a proposed test program for the measurement of the unsteady forces on centrifugal impellers caused by either (i) azimuthal asymmetry in the volute geometry or (ii) an externally imposed whirl motion of the impeller. In the second case the forces resulting from the imposed whirl motions with frequencies ranging from zero to synchronous will be measured by means of a force balance upon which the impeller is mounted. This work is presently being carried out under contract with the NASA George Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Alabama (Contract NAS 8-33108)
The Influence of Swirl Brakes and a Tip Discharge Orifice on the Rotordynamic Forces Generated by Discharge-to-Suction Leakage Flows in Shrouded Centrifugal Pumps
This paper reports on experiments conducted in the Rotor Force Test Facility at the California Institute of Technology to examine the effects of a tip leakage restriction and swirl brakes on the rotordynamic forces due to leakage flows on an impeller undergoing a prescribed circular whirl. The experiments simulate the leakage flow conditions and geometry of the Alternate Turbopump Design (ATD) of the Space Shuttle High Pressure Oxygen Turbopump and are critical to evaluating the pump's instability problems.
Results indicate the detrimental effects of a discharge orifice and the beneficial effects of adding swirl brakes. Plots of the tangential and normal forces versus whirl frequency ratio show a substantial increase in these forces along with destabilizing resonances when a discharge orifice is added. When swirl brakes are added, some of the detrimental effects of the orifice are reduced. For the tangential force, a significant reduction occurs and a destabilizing resonance appears to be eliminated. For the normal force, although the overall force is not reduced, once again a destabilizing resonance appears to be eliminated
On the Effect of Cavitation on the Radial Forces and Hydrodynamic Stiffness of a Centrifugal Pump
The asymmetric flow within a volute exerts a radial force on a centrifugal impeller. The present paper presents experimental measurements of the radial forces on the impeller in the presence of cavitation
Two-dimensional unsteady analysis of fluid forces on a whirling centrifugal impeller in a volute
Destabilizing fluid forces on a whirling centrifugal impeller rotating in a volute were observed. A quasisteady analysis neglecting shed vorticity or an unsteady analysis without a volute does not predict the existence of such destabilizing fluid forces on a whirling impeller. The effects of a volute and the shed vorticity are considered. We treat cases when an impeller with an infinite number of vanes rotates with a constant velocity omega and its center whirls with a constant eccentric radius epsilon and a constant whirling velocity psi. It is assumed that: (1) the number of the vanes is so large that the impeller can be treated as an actuator impeller in which the flow is perfectly guided; (2) flow is inviscid, incompressible and two dimensional; (3) the eccentricity epsilon is so small that unsteady components can be linearized; (4) vorticity is transported on a prescribed mean flow, the operating point is near design flow rate; and (5) the volute can be represented by a curved plate
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