scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

The cavitation instability induced by the development of a re-entrant jet

TLDR
In this article, the authors investigated the instability of a partial cavity induced by the development of a re-entrant jet on the basis of experiments conducted on a diverging step and showed that the extent of the auto-oscillation domain primarily depends upon the average adverse pressure gradient in the channel.
Abstract
The instability of a partial cavity induced by the development of a re-entrant jet is investigated on the basis of experiments conducted on a diverging step. Detailed visualizations of the cavity behaviour allowed us to identify the domain of the re-entrant jet instability which leads to classical cloud cavitation. The surrounding regimes are also investigated, in particular the special case of thin cavities which do not oscillate in length but surprisingly exhibit a re-entrant jet of periodical behaviour. The velocity of the re-entrant jet is measured from visualizations, in the case of both cloud cavitation and thin cavities. The limits of the domain of the re-entrant jet instability are corroborated by velocity fluctuation measurements. By varying the divergence and the confinement of the channel, it is shown that the extent of the auto-oscillation domain primarily depends upon the average adverse pressure gradient in the channel. This conclusion is corroborated by the determination of the pressure gradient on the basis of LDV measurements which shows a good correlation between the domain of the cloud cavitation instability and the region of high adverse pressure gradient. A simple phenomenological model of the development of the re-entrant jet in an adverse pressure gradient confirms the strong influence of the pressure gradient on the development of the re-entrant jet and particularly on its thickness. An ultrasonic technique is developed to measure the re-entrant jet thickness, which allowed us to compare it with the cavity thickness. By considering an estimate of the characteristic height of the perturbations developing on the interface of the cavity and of the re-entrant jet, it is shown that cloud cavitation requires negligible interaction between both interfaces, i.e. a thick enough cavity. In the case of thin cavities, this interaction becomes predominant; the cavity interface breaks at many points, giving birth to small-scale vapour structures unlike the large-scale clouds which are periodically shed in the case of cloud cavitation. The low-frequency content of the cloud cavitation instability is investigated using spectral analysis of wall pressure signals. It is shown that the characteristic frequency of cloud cavitation corresponds to a Strouhal number of about 0.2 whatever the operating conditions and the cavity length may be, provided the Strouhal number is computed on the basis of the maximum cavity length. For long enough cavities, another peak is observed in the spectra, at lower frequency, which is interpreted as a surge-type instability. The present investigations give insight into the instabilities that a partial cavity may undergo, and particularly the re-entrant jet instability. Two parameters are shown to be of most importance in the analysis of the re-entrant jet instability: the adverse pressure gradient and the cavity thickness compared to the re-entrant jet thickness. The present results allowed us to conduct a qualitative phenomenological analysis of the stability of partial cavities on cavitating hydrofoils. It is conjectured that cloud cavitation should occur for short enough cavities, of the order of half the chordlength, whereas the instability often observed at the limit between partial cavitation and super-cavitation is here interpreted as a cavitation surge-type instability.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Friction Drag Reduction of External Flows with Bubble and Gas Injection

TL;DR: In this article, the use of partial and supercavities for drag reduction of axisymmetric objects moving within a liquid is reviewed, and the current applications of these techniques to underwater vehicles and surface ships are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Large Eddy Simulation and theoretical investigations of the transient cavitating vortical flow structure around a NACA66 hydrofoil

TL;DR: In this paper, the cavitating flow around a NACA66 hydrofoil is studied numerically with particular emphasis on understanding the cavitation structures and the shedding dynamics, including the cavity growth, break-off and collapse downstream.
Journal ArticleDOI

Detection of cavitation in hydraulic turbines

TL;DR: In this article, an experimental investigation has been carried out in order to evaluate the detection of cavitation in actual hydraulic turbines, based on the analysis of structural vibrations, acoustic emissions and hydrodynamic pressures measured in the machine.
Journal ArticleDOI

Numerical simulation of three dimensional cavitation shedding dynamics with special emphasis on cavitation–vortex interaction

TL;DR: In this article, the structure of the cavitating flow around a twisted hydrofoil was investigated numerically using the mass transfer cavitation model and the modified RNG k-e model with a local density correction for turbulent eddy viscosity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bubbly shock propagation as a mechanism for sheet-to-cloud transition of partial cavities

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used high-speed visualization and X-ray densitometry measurements to examine the cavity dynamics, including the time-resolved void-fraction fields within the cavity.
References
More filters
Book

Cavitation and Bubble Dynamics

TL;DR: In this paper, the fundamental physical processes involved in bubble dynamics and the phenomenon of cavitation are described and explained, and a review of the free streamline methods used to treat separated cavity flows with large attached cavities is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Review of Research on Subsonic Turbulent Flow Reattachment

TL;DR: A review of the available data for turbulent flows over backward-facing steps, including some new data of our own and other previously unpublished data, is presented in this paper, where the authors suggest several areas of research that could lead to improvements in our ability to predict flows with separation bubbles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Features of a reattaching turbulent shear layer in divergent channel flow

TL;DR: In this article, experimental data have been obtained in an incompressible turbulent flow over a rearward-facing step in a diverging channel flow and mean velocities, Reynolds stresses, and triple products that were measured by a laser Doppler velocimeter are presented for two cases of tunnel wall divergence.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new modelling of cavitating flows : a numerical study of unsteady cavitation on a hydrofoil section

TL;DR: In this paper, a bubble two-phase flow (BTF) model is proposed to explain the interaction between viscous effects including vortices and cavitation bubbles, which treats the inside and outside of a cavity as one continuum by regarding the cavity as a compressible viscous fluid whose density changes greatly.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanism and Control of Cloud Cavitation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the generation mechanism of cloud cavitation on a hydrofoil section and found that the collapse of a sheet cavity is triggered by a re-entrant jet rushing from the trailing edge to the leading edge of the sheet cavity, and consequently, the sheet cav is shed in the vicinity of its leading edge and thrown downstream as a cluster of bubbles called cloud cavity.
Related Papers (5)