Hydrodynamic performance of a rim-driven thruster improved with gap geometry adjustment
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2023

The hubless rim-driven thruster (RDT) has become increasingly interesting for ship propulsion. Gap flow has been proven as the main feature of RDT that cannot be simply neglected. In this study, based on a classical hubless RDT, the effects of the gap geometry are studied by adjusting its axial passage length, and inlet and outlet oblique angles. The hydrodynamic characteristics of the RDT were simulated with OpenFOAM based on the k – ω shear stress transport turbulence model. Due to the pressure increase after the main flow passes through the rotating blades, the flow inside gap is driven upstream, which is opposite to the main flow direction. It is found that the hydrodynamic efficiency is increased as the gap axial passage length is shortened, which is realized by increasing the oblique angle with the fixed inlet and outlet positions. Moving the inlet and outlet to further downstream and upstream positions has negligible effects on the hydrodynamic efficiency and leads to recirculating flow within the gap near its inlet. These findings shed light on the design of the gap geometry to improve the RDT hydrodynamic performance.

Hubless rim-driven thruster

gap flow

numerical simulation

hydrodynamic performance

Författare

Lin Jianfeng

Chalmers, Mekanik och maritima vetenskaper, Strömningslära

Huadong Yao

Chalmers, Mekanik och maritima vetenskaper, Marin teknik

Chao Wang

Yumin Su

Chun Yang

Engineering Applications of Computational Fluid Mechanics

1994-2060 (ISSN) 1997-003X (eISSN)

Vol. 17 1 2183902

Pilotstudie av elektriska navlösa fälgdrivna propellrar för transport på inre vattenvägar

Lighthouse (FS24_2022/Hållbar sjöfart), 2022-01-01 -- 2022-12-31.

Styrkeområden

Transport

Energi

Ämneskategorier

Teknisk mekanik

Vattenteknik

Strömningsmekanik och akustik

Annan elektroteknik och elektronik

DOI

10.1080/19942060.2023.2183902

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2023-05-11