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ITCMG master

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A major water supply project located in North Africa (484 pumps) ... 2900 rpm (ROTA patch for rotational forces); Wall friction, k-e model; ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ITCMG master


1

Technical Investigation Department
2
METHOD FOR 3-D MODELLINGOF A MIXED FLOW
PUMPUSING PHOENICSD Radosavljevic
3
Introduction
  • Background information on the investigation
  • CFD and PHOENICS role
  • Modelling with PHOENICS
  • Results and analysis
  • Conclusions (simulation, project)

4
The Situation
  • A major water supply project located in North
    Africa (484 pumps).
  • Pumps reported to have been unused when first put
    into service on this project.
  • The type of pump is defined as a wellpump of the
    vertical submersible turbine type (7 stages).
  • Pumps were specified to meet a range of duties
    for 25 years in relation to the envisaged
    drawdown schedule.

5
The Situation
6
The Problem
  • During the course of approximately 3 years of
    operation, pump performance problems were
    encountered in a number of wells.
  • Upon withdrawal from the well, a pump was
    observed to exhibit severe cracking and
    corrosion, in particular in the region of the
    upper pump bowl.
  • Cracking was also observed in the corresponding
    corroded impeller.

7
The Problem
8
The Problem
9
Approach
  • Identifying the nature of the processes involved.
    The primary ones may be categorised as
  • - physical (clogging and abrasion)
  • - chemical (clogging and electro-chemical
    corrosion)
  • - microbial (clogging and microbially-induced
    corrosion)

10
Approach
  • Identifying the nature of the processes involved.
    Important subsidiary factors
  • - operational (steady loads (static water head),
    unsteady loads (water hammer), intermittent
    pumping and over-abstraction
  • - structural and mechanical (design/construction
    and materials).

11
Approach
  • A number of separate studies defined
    including objectives to
  • determine quasi-steady hydrodynamically-induced
    loadings, using CFD analysis (PHOENICS)
  • determine other loadings from specification, such
    as self-weight, torque and centrifugal
  • apply all loadings to finite element analysis
    model and determine individual and combined
    stresses

12
Geometry
  • Not supplied (proprietary vane design)
  • Perform sectioning of impeller and the bowl in
    order to take measurements.

13
Modelling in PHOENICS
  • Model one full stage of the pump as a single
    device
  • Apply sliding grid with Multiblock. Rotating
    block - impeller and stationary block - bowl
  • Advantage
  • Capture of full transient effects and (true)
    dynamic loading

14
Modelling in PHOENICS
  • Problems (constraints of sliding MB)
  • no surface porosities allowed (vanes?)
  • only uniform grid in circumferential direction
    allowed
  • only clock-wise rotation is allowed (pump rotates
    anti-clockwise).

15
Modelling in PHOENICS
  • Despite all the Problems !

16
Modelling in PHOENICS
  • Compromise approach
  • Treat impeller and the bowl as separate
    components
  • Steady simulation of the impeller
  • Transient simulation of the diffuser with the
    correct input flow field (impeller exit). (More
    accurate rotor-stator interaction)

17
Modelling in PHOENICS
  • Impeller modelling
  • Steady
  • BFC grid
  • Single passage (1/6 of the flow volume)
  • Cyclic boundary at the exit (vaneless space)
  • 2900 rpm (ROTA patch for rotational forces)
  • Wall friction, k-e model
  • Outlet flow field data saved in a file.

18
Modelling in PHOENICS
  • Impeller modelling - velocity field

19
Modelling in PHOENICS
  • Stator modelling
  • Transient
  • Inlet flow field cycles through impeller exit
    data
  • BFC grid
  • Single passage (1/7 of the flow volume)
  • Cyclic boundary at the exit and inlet (vaneless
    space)
  • Wall friction, k-e model.

20
Modelling in PHOENICS
  • Stator modelling - Ground

21
Modelling in PHOENICS
  • Stator modelling - Numerics
  • Convergence generally within 500sw(/tstep)
  • Stator - start from steady solution in aligned
    position
  • 10 hours CPU for the transient run

22
Modelling in PHOENICS
  • Stator modelling - velocity field

23
Modelling in PHOENICS
  • Stator modelling - Assumptions
  • Impeller flow calculated in isolation - no
    interaction with the stator
  • Cyclic condition ahead of stator inlet
  • Assessment of accuracy
  • Pressure increase within impeller 3.6 bar
  • Pressure increase within stator 2-3 bar
  • 5.71 bar per stage
  • Torque 98.7 kW vs. 103kW (GXDRAG).

24
Modelling in PHOENICSTransient pressure field in
vaneless space
  • Effect of the impeller blade passing
  • NOTE
  • Contour scaling at plane values

25
CONCLUSIONS
  • PHOENICS
  • GROUND proved extremely valuable
  • Allowed extensive modification to the calculation
    procedure
  • Pump
  • Obtained estimates of the hydrodynamic loading
    within the pump
  • Results do not identify any pronounced local
    peaks in pressure

26
CONCLUSIONS
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