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Visualisation and les simulation of cavitation cloud formation and collapse in an axisymmetric geometry

TLDR
In this paper, the authors present a large-scale visualization and large-dydydy simulation of cavitation inside the apparatus used for surface erosion acceleration tests and material response monitoring.
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This article is published in International Journal of Multiphase Flow.The article was published on 2015-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 75 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Cavitation & Vortex shedding.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Experiments and CFD on vapor and gas cavitation for oil hydraulics

TL;DR: In this article , a compressible Euler-Euler computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model for vapor, gas, and pseudo-cavitation in oil-hydraulic flows is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

On cavitation in the radial flow of a thin lubricating film between two overlying disks

TL;DR: In this article , the authors focused on the characterization and modeling of aviation fuel cavitation physics in radial flow in a thin layer between two disks, a geometry highly relevant to aviation fuel pump systems.

X-ray radiography measurements and numerical simulations of cavitation in a metal nozzle

TL;DR: Doyle et al. as mentioned in this paper presented quantitative, time-resolved measurements of cavitation vapor distribution with a spatial resolution of 5um and a temporal bandwidth of 6.5MHz, using an optically transparent geometry.
Journal ArticleDOI

Numerical investigation of compressible cryogenic cavitating flows by a modified mass transport model

TL;DR: In this paper , a modified mass transport model is proposed based on convective heat transfer, in which the convective Heat Transfer coefficient is associated with the material properties and local temperature, and a numerical modeling framework including large eddy simulations, vapor-liquid equations of state and a modified Mass Transport model is presented.

Multi-dimensional CFD simulation of internal nozzle flows in high pressure fuel injectors

TL;DR: In this article, a solutore multifase based on LES-VOF has been validated on two configurazioni di iniettore, con ugello trasparente, realizzate appositamente by Continental automotive.
References
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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

Kinematical studies of the flows around free or surface-mounted obstacles; applying topology to flow visualization

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the zero-shear-stress points on the surface and on the obstacle must be such that the sum of the nodes and the saddles of the saddle must satisfy
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluation of the turbulence model influence on the numerical simulations of unsteady cavitation

TL;DR: In this article, a simulation of turbulent cavitation in a Venturi-type section was performed by two-dimensional computations of viscous, compressible, and turbulent cavitating flows.
Journal ArticleDOI

Numerical simulation of the unsteady behaviour of cavitating flows

TL;DR: In this paper, a 2D numerical model is proposed to simulate unsteady cavitating flows in 2D geometries, where the mixture of liquid and vapour is considered as a single fluid with variable density.
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (11)
Q1. What is the effect of the vorticity on the edge of the bubble cloud?

Once the surrounding pressure force counteracts the vorticity 587 induced centrifugal force, the edge of the bubble cloud, approximately at a radial distance of 25mm 588 from the axis of symmetry, starts to collapse. 

The 531 effect of Reynolds number is primarily linked to the shedding frequency of the cavitation structures; 532 indeed, when considering a constant cavitation number σ, at low back pressures (which also 533 corresponds to low Reynolds number) the shedding frequency is lower. 

The increase of the Reynolds 550 number with the corresponding increase of the velocity increases the rate of generation of vortices and 551 consequently the frequency of shedding of the resulting cavitating structures. 

The 77 studies were conducted in a cavitating Venturi nozzle section, where part of the nozzle was covered 78 by a thin aluminium foil; this enabled the rapid accumulation of erosion pits and allowed the 79 observation of the erosion development, since the rest nozzle walls were transparent. 

It seems that the increase of the 31 Reynolds number leads to a reduction of the collapse frequency; it is believed that this effect is due to 32 the agglomeration of vortex cavities, which causes a decrease of the apparent frequency. 

Due to the aforementioned detrimental 51 effects of cavitation on hydraulic equipment, most of experimental research has focused over the 52 years on methods with which cavitation damage could be quantified and linked to measurable 53material properties. 

Due to the complexity of the flow 22 field, direct observation of the flow structures was not possible, however vortex shedding is inferred 23 from relevant simulations performed for the same conditions. 

One notable example of a DNS 90 study of the collective bubble collapse is the recent work of[20], where the authors employed massive 91 parallelism to simulate a cluster of 15,000 bubbles collapsing near a wall, utilizing a grid with size of 92 13 trillion cells. 

In each plot, the feed inlet area corresponds to the circle in oncentrically with it, a thin zone has been plottedreflections have prevented the collectionsymmetric at the outlet of the disks gap; there are four outlet e a disturbance in the velocityposition of ~25mm. 

The cavitation cloud was found to change location rather transiently and non-axisymmetrically 196 despite the steady-state operation and the axisymmetric geometry utilized; a typical sequence of the 197 cloud formation and development is shown in Fig. 

The contribution of the pressure wave propagation within the 642 bubbly medium is possibly a driving factor on the development of discrete cavitation clouds, but in 643 the present cannot be taken into account, due to limitations of the modelling capabilities of the 644 software used.