Back to Search
Start Over
Experimental and numerical investigations of cavitation evolution in a high-speed centrifugal pump with inducer
- Source :
- Journal of Hydrodynamics. 33:140-149
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Along with the anti-cavitation performance, the high speed and the high power density, are the main trends in the development of centrifugal pumps. At present, the most effective method is to install an inducer in front of the impeller. However, the tip leakage of the inducer results in the vortex cavitation at the blade leading edge of the inducer, and the cavitating flow inside the inducer seriously interferes with the hydraulic behavior of the inducer as well as the impeller with the development of the cavitation, thus to badly affect the operational reliability of the high-speed centrifugal pump. In the present paper, the cavitating flow in a high-speed centrifugal pump with an inducer is investigated by numerical simulations and visual experiments for different cavitation numbers. A typical evolution process of the cavitation is shown, including the inception, the development and the deterioration. A general description of the pump head-drop phenomenon is made through the study of the local and global flow fields, and the relationship between the vapor distribution and the static pressure distribution along the inducer is determined to describe the evolution of the cavitation. This paper intends to provide the foundation for studying the overall cavitation state of a high-speed centrifugal pump, and designing the inducer with a better cavitation resistance.
- Subjects :
- Leading edge
Materials science
Mechanical Engineering
Flow (psychology)
020101 civil engineering
02 engineering and technology
Mechanics
Static pressure
Condensed Matter Physics
Centrifugal pump
01 natural sciences
010305 fluids & plasmas
0201 civil engineering
Vortex
Impeller
Mechanics of Materials
Modeling and Simulation
Cavitation
0103 physical sciences
Inducer
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18780342 and 10016058
- Volume :
- 33
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Hydrodynamics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........a36c7209beb2529036efe85cea6df792