Prediction of Cavitation Erosion: An Energy Approach

Author:

Pereira F.1,Avellan F.1,Dupont Ph.1

Affiliation:

1. IMHEF-EPFL, Institut de Machines Hydrauliques et de Me´canique des Fluides, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Av. de Cour 33, 1007 Lausanne, Switzerland

Abstract

The objective is to define a prediction and transposition model for cavitation erosion. Experiments were conducted to determine the energy spectrum associated with a leading edge cavitation. Two fundamental parameters have been measured on a symmetrical hydrofoil for a wide range of flow conditions: the volume of every transient vapor cavity and its respective rate of production. The generation process of transient vapor cavities is ruled by a Strouhal-like law related to the cavity size. The analysis of the vapor volume data demonstrated that vapor vortices can be assimilated to spherical cavities. Results are valid for both the steady and unsteady cavitation behaviors, this latter being peculiar besides due to the existence of distinct volumes produced at specific shedding rates. The fluid energy spectrum is formulated and related to the flow parameters. Comparison with the material deformation energy spectrum shows a remarkable proportionality relationship defined upon the collapse efficiency coefficient. The erosive power term, formerly suggested as the ground component of the prediction model, is derived taking into account the damaging threshold energy of the material. An erosive efficiency coefficient is introduced on this basis that allows to quantify the erosive potential of a cavitation situation for a given material. A formula for localization of erosion is proposed that completes the prediction model. Finally, a procedure is described for geometrical scale and flow velocity transpositions.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering

Reference39 articles.

1. Avellan, F., and Farhat, M., 1989, “Shock Pressure Generated by Cavitation Vortex Collapse,” International Symposium on Cavitation Noise and Erosion in Fluid Systems, Vol. FED 88, pp. 119–125, San Francisco, ASME Winter Annual Meeting.

2. Baiter, H.-J., 1982, “Estimates of the Acoustic Efficiency of Collapsing Bubbles,” International Symposium on Cavitation Noise, Phoenix, AZ, ASME.

3. Bark, G., and Berlekom, W. B., 1978, “Experimental Investigations of Cavitation Dynamics and Cavitation Noise,” 12th Symposium on Naval Hydrodynamics, pp. 470–493, Washington, D.C., ONR.

4. Bourdon, P., Simoneau, R., Avellan, F., and Farhat, M., 1990, “Vibratory Characteristics of Erosive Cavitation Vortices Downstream of a Fixed Leading Edge Cavity,” 15th Symposium on Modern Technology in Hydraulic Energy Production, Vol. 1, Belgrade (Yugoslavia), IAHR, Paper H3, 12 pp.

5. Brennen, C. E., 1994, “Observations of Cavitating Flows,” 20th Symposium on Naval Hydrodynamics, ONR, Invited Lecture.

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