scholarly journals Numerical Research on Hydraulically Generated Vibration and Noise of a Centrifugal Pump Volute with Impeller Outlet Width Variation

2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Houlin Liu ◽  
Jian Ding ◽  
Hanwei Dai ◽  
Minggao Tan ◽  
Xiaochen Tang

The impeller outlet width of centrifugal pumps is of significant importance for numbers of effects. In the paper, these effects including the performance, pressure pulsations, hydraulically generated vibration, and noise level are investigated. For the purpose, two approaches were used to predict the vibration and sound radiation of the volute under fluid excitation force. One approach is the combined CFD/FEM analysis for structure vibration, and then the structure response obtained from the FEM analysis is treated as the boundary condition for BEM analysis for sound radiation. The other is the combined CFD/FEM/BEM coupling method. Before the numerical methods were used, the simulation results were validated by the vibration acceleration of the monitoring points on the volute. The vibration and noise were analyzed and compared at three flow conditions. The analysis of the results shows that the influences of the sound pressure of centrifugal pumps on the structure appear insignificant. The relative outlet widthb2*atnq(SI) = 26.7 in this paper should be less than 0.06, based on an overall consideration of the pump characteristics, pressure pulsations, vibration and noise level.

2012 ◽  
Vol 518-523 ◽  
pp. 3768-3771
Author(s):  
Zhi Yong Xie ◽  
Qi Dou Zhou ◽  
Gang Ji

The exciting force’s accurate measurement of is crucial to the structure-born sound radiation. Forced vibration and sound radiation of the ribbed cylinder is examined in the anechoic room. An approach called added mass and damping method is proposed to calculate the elastic vibration and acoustic field of the cylinder. Results obtained from simulation are show to be in good agreement with the experimental data. Sound radiation induced by different input loading form is examined via simulation and experiment. And the equipollence of force and pressure acting on the base is validated.


2005 ◽  
Vol 127 (4) ◽  
pp. 755-762 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasushi Tatebayashi ◽  
Kazuhiro Tanaka ◽  
Toshio Kobayashi

The authors have been investigating the various characteristics of screw-type centrifugal pumps, such as pressure fluctuations in impellers, flow patterns in volute casings, and pump performance in air-water two-phase flow conditions. During these investigations, numerical results of our investigations made it clear that three back flow regions existed in this type of pump. Among these, the back flow from the volute casing toward the impeller outlet was the most influential on the pump performance. Thus the most important factor to achieve higher pump performance was to reduce the influence of this back flow. One simple method was proposed to obtain the restraint of back flow and so as to improve the pump performance. This method was to set up a ringlike wall at the suction cover casing between the impeller outlet and the volute casing. Its effects on the flow pattern and the pump performance have been discussed and clarified to compare the calculated results with experimental results done under two conditions, namely, one with and one without this ring-type wall. The influence of wall’s height on the pump head was investigated by numerical simulations. In addition, the difference due to the wall’s effect was clarified to compare its effects on two kinds of volute casing. From the results obtained it can be said that restraining the back flow of such pumps was very important to achieve higher pump performance. Furthermore, another method was suggested to restrain back flow effectively. This method was to attach a wall at the trailing edge of impeller. This method was very useful for avoiding the congestion of solids because this wall was smaller than that used in the first method. The influence of these factors on the pump performance was also discussed by comparing simulated calculations with actual experiments.


Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (8) ◽  
pp. 1408 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bin Huang ◽  
Guitao Zeng ◽  
Bo Qian ◽  
Peng Wu ◽  
Peili Shi ◽  
...  

The pressure fluctuation inside centrifugal pumps is one of the main causes of hydro-induced vibration, especially at the blade-passing frequency and its harmonics. This paper investigates the feature of blade-passing frequency excitation in a low-specific-speed centrifugal pump in the perspective of local Euler head distribution based on CFD analysis. Meanwhile, the relation between local Euler head distribution and pressure fluctuation amplitude is observed and used to explain the mechanism of intensive pressure fluctuation. The impeller blade with ordinary trailing edge profile, which is the prototype impeller in this study, usually induces wake shedding near the impeller outlet, making the energy distribution less uniform. Because of this, the method of reducing pressure fluctuation by means of improving Euler head distribution uniformity by modifying the impeller blade trailing edge profile is proposed. The impeller blade trailing edges are trimmed in different scales, which are marked as model A, B, and C. As a result of trailing edge trimming, the impeller outlet angles at the pressure side of the prototype of model A, B, and C are 21, 18, 15, and 12 degrees, respectively. The differences in Euler head distribution and pressure fluctuation between the model impellers at nominal flow rate are investigated and analyzed. Experimental verification is also conducted to validate the CFD results. The results show that the blade trailing edge profiling on the pressure side can help reduce pressure fluctuation. The uniformity of Euler head circumferential distribution, which is directly related to the intensity of pressure fluctuation, is improved because the impeller blade outlet angle on the pressure side decreases and thus the velocity components are adjusted when the blade trailing edge profile is modified. The results of the investigation demonstrate that blade trailing edge profiling can be used in the vibration reduction of low specific impellers and in the engineering design of centrifugal pumps.


Author(s):  
Yasushi Tatebayashi ◽  
Kazuhiro Tanaka ◽  
Toshio Kobayashi

The authors have been investigating the various characteristics of screw-type centrifugal pumps, such as pressure fluctuations in impellers, flow patterns in volute casings, and pump performance in air-water two-phase flow conditions. During these investigations, numerical results of our investigations made it clear that three back flow regions existed in this type of pump. Among these, the back flow from the volute casing toward the impeller outlet was the most influential on the pump performance. Thus the most important factor to achieve higher pump performance was to reduce the influence of this back flow. One simple method was proposed to obtain the restraint of back flow and so as to improve the pump performance. This method was to set up a Ring-like wall at the suction cover casing between the impeller outlet and the volute casing. Its effects on the flow pattern and the pump performance have been discussed and clarified to compare the calculated results with experimental results done under two conditions — namely, one with and one without this Ring-type wall. The influence of wall’s height on the pump head was investigated by numerical simulations. In addition, the difference due to the wall’s effect was clarified to compare its effects on two kinds of volute casing. From the results obtained it can be said that restraining the back flow of such pumps was very important to achieve higher pump performance. Furthermore, another method was suggested to restrain back-flow effectively. This method was to attach a wall at the trailing edge of impeller. This method was very useful for avoiding the congestion of solids because this wall was smaller than that used in the first method. The influence of these factors on the pump performance was also discussed by comparing simulated calculations with actual experiments.


2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (7) ◽  
pp. 180408 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ning Zhang ◽  
Bo Gao ◽  
Zhong Li ◽  
Qifeng Jiang

With the development of cavitation, the high-energy pressure wave from a cavitation bubble collapsing is detrimental to the stable operation of centrifugal pumps. The present paper concentrates on pressure pulsations under cavitation conditions, and pressure amplitudes at the blade-passing frequency ( f BPF ) and RMS values in the 0–500 Hz frequency band are combined to investigate cavitation-induced pressure pulsations. The results show that components at f BPF always dominate the pressure spectrum even at the full cavitation stage. For points P1–P7 on the volute side wall, with a decreasing cavitation number, the pressure energy first remains unchanged and then it rises rapidly after the critical point. For point In1 in a volute suction pipe located close to the cavitation region, the pressure energy changes slightly at high cavitation numbers; then for a particular cavitation number range, the pressure energy decreases, and finally increases again. For different flow rates, the pressure energy at the critical point is much lower than the initial amplitude at the non-cavitation condition for In1. This demonstrates that the cavitation cloud in the typical stage is partially compressible, and the emitted pressure wave from a collapsing cavitation bubble is absorbed and attenuated significantly. Finally, this leads to the pressure energy decreasing rapidly for the measuring point In1 near the cavitation region.


2019 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xin Zhou ◽  
Jian Han ◽  
Yue Zhao ◽  
Bing Wu ◽  
Gong Cheng ◽  
...  

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