Effect of incidence angle on cavity blockage and flow stability in the net positive suction head drop of mixed-flow pumps

Author:

Kim Yong-In12ORCID,Kim Sung1,Lee Kyoung-Yong1,Choi Young-Seok12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Thermal & Fluid System R&D Group, Korea Institute of Industrial Technology, Cheonan-si, Republic of Korea

2. Industrial Technology, Korea University of Science and Technology, Daejeon, Republic of Korea

Abstract

The cavitation is an inevitable factor in pumps used in the whole industry, which is a major cause of energy loss and mechanical breakdown. In this study, the cavitation phenomena at the design flow rate were numerically analyzed for two pumps with different incidence angles. The design flow rate for both models was located near the best efficiency point (BEP). The incidence angle was determined with the impeller inlet diameter and the blade angle. A pump with a smaller incidence angle consistently showed a stable flow pattern as the inlet pressure decreased, whereas a pump with a larger incidence angle contained non-uniform flow streamlines despite a very small amount of the generated cavities. The flow pattern at the impeller inlet was handled by the shape and thickness of the generated cavities which could act as an additional blockage in the pumps. The inception and growth of the cavity with a decrease of inlet pressure were also inferred, which was specifically quantified as the blockage ratio. A pump with a larger incidence angle performed poor cavitation characteristics and obtained the pressure fluctuation and cavity oscillation. The magnitude of pressure fluctuation was indicated using the fast Fourier transform (FFT) analysis. The experimental tests were performed on both pumps to validate the numerical results.

Funder

Korea Institute of Industrial Technology

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Mechanical Engineering

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