Investigation of Pump Failure-Induced Waterhammer Waves: A Case Study

Author:

Triki Ali1,Essaidi Badreddine2

Affiliation:

1. Research Laboratory: Advanced Materials, Applied Mechanics, Innovative Processes and Environment 2MPE, Higher Institute of Applied Sciences and Technology of Gabès, University of Gabès, Zrig, Gabès 6029, Tunisia

2. Research Unit: Mechanics, Modeling, Energy and Materials M2EM, Department of Mechanical Engineering, National Engineering School of Gabès, University of Gabès, Zrig, Gabès 6029, Tunisia

Abstract

Abstract This study analyzes the effect of the pipe material type on the transient flow behavior in a pumping system due to an accidental pump shutdown. The material types addressed in this study include steel and high- or low-density polyethylene (HDPE) or (LDPE), involving elastic and plastic rheological pipe-wall behavior. The numerical solution is developed based on the method of characteristics used for the discretization of the extended one-dimensional pressurized-pipe flow model, incorporating the Kelvin-Voigt and Vitkovsky rules. Experimental data from the literature were used to validate the numerical solver. The proposed numerical algorithm is then used to investigate the transient pressure-wave behavior induced by the power failure to a pumping station composed of an inline connection using different pipe material types. The findings show the severity of such a scenario, in terms of the magnitudes of induced up-surge and down-surge pressure waves. Furthermore, this research demonstrates that plastic pipe-wall materials allow for substantial attenuation of surge magnitude in conjunction with the expansion of the period of pressure-wave oscillations. The observed attenuation and expansion effects are also found to be highly dependent on the plastic material type. In this respect, the findings indicate that the (LDPE-steel) piping system's specific layout allows for the best tradeoff between the two last effects.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality

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