Author:
DUTTWEILER M. E.,BRENNEN C. E.
Abstract
This study details experiments investigating a previously unrecognized surge instability
on a cavitating propeller in a water tunnel. The surge instability is explored through
visual observation of the cavitation on the propeller blades and in the tip vortices.
Similarities between the instability and previously documented cavitation phenomena
are noted. Measurements of the radiated pressure are obtained, and the acoustic
signature of the instability is identified. The magnitudes of the fluctuating pressures
are very large, presumably capable of producing severe hull vibration on a ship.The origins of this instability are explored through separate investigation of the
cavitation dynamics and the response of the water tunnel to volumetric displacement
in the working section. Experiments are conducted to quantify the dynamics of
the propeller cavitation. Finally, a model is developed for the complete system,
incorporating both the cavitation and facility dynamics. The model predicts active
system dynamics (linked to the mass flow gain factor familiar in the context of pump
dynamics) and therefore potentially unstable behaviour for two distinct frequency
ranges, one of which appears to be responsible for the instability.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
35 articles.
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