Search citation statements
Paper Sections
Citation Types
Year Published
Publication Types
Relationship
Authors
Journals
Analysis of Damages of Runner Pits at Operating Hydroelectric Stations and Their FailureCriteria. An analysis of documents and on-site inspections of a number of hydrostations revealed many causes of hydropower equipment failures and, in particular, failures related to runner pit (RP) damages. It was found that the operating time of turbine-generator units to failure depends little on the heat and climatic conditions and depends substantially on the operating regimes of the units (including in the starting period) and on the quality of works on manufacturing and installing the RP.On the basis of an analysis of the data of inspecting the units of more than 50 hydrostations we can distinguish the following main RP damages:1. Fatigue cracking accompanied by cavitation erosion of the RP. It is characteristic for bimetallic RPs (for about 8 % of hydrostations).2. Cavitation-erosion damages leading to cracking in RPs are characteristic for 51% of the inspected hydrostations.3. Fatigue failure due to defects of metal, manufacture, and assembly of RPs or design errors (for about 14% of hydrostations).Other schemes of failure of RPs are also possible, for example, loss of dynamic stability of the finned cylindrical shell of the RP with its poor fastening in the offset concrete.We can distinguish separately such a type of damage as damage of the linings of the connecting collar observed on almost all inspected hydrostations, Erosion of concrete forming behind tom-off lining sheets of the connecting collar gradually spreads upward and weakens both the RP structure as a whole and its fastening in the block.As a result of analyzing data on failures we can distinguish a number of factors affecting the reliability of the RP: 1. Absence of reliable cohesion of the concrete with the lining, presence of voids. 2. Insufficient rigidity of the RP structure as a consequence of the poor quality of its fastening in the concrete block. 3. Use of concrete of a poor quality and violation of the technology of placing concrete under winter conditions. 4. The actual thickness of the lining metal does not correspond to the design thickness. 5. Poor-quality fitting of the metalsheets to the stiffenersduring repair, including joining the linings not on the stiffeners. 6. Presence of heat-affected zones of welds (residual thermal stresses, local stress raisers). 7. Presence of notches, cracks, and other defects of the metal lining. 8. Use of metal with physical and mechanical characteristics not corresponding to those used in designing. 9. Noncorrespondence of the design hydrodynamic load acting on elements of the RP. 10. Cavitation erosion causing thinning of parts of the lining (up to local failure of the metal). 11. Poor quality of the welds. 12. Peeling of the protective (anticorrosion) stainless steel layer from the base metal of the liming. 13. Design errors.On the basis of the aforesaid we can formulate the following failure criteria of RP elements: exceeding the allowable stress values in the element (e.g., strength, yield, or fatigue li...
Analysis of Damages of Runner Pits at Operating Hydroelectric Stations and Their FailureCriteria. An analysis of documents and on-site inspections of a number of hydrostations revealed many causes of hydropower equipment failures and, in particular, failures related to runner pit (RP) damages. It was found that the operating time of turbine-generator units to failure depends little on the heat and climatic conditions and depends substantially on the operating regimes of the units (including in the starting period) and on the quality of works on manufacturing and installing the RP.On the basis of an analysis of the data of inspecting the units of more than 50 hydrostations we can distinguish the following main RP damages:1. Fatigue cracking accompanied by cavitation erosion of the RP. It is characteristic for bimetallic RPs (for about 8 % of hydrostations).2. Cavitation-erosion damages leading to cracking in RPs are characteristic for 51% of the inspected hydrostations.3. Fatigue failure due to defects of metal, manufacture, and assembly of RPs or design errors (for about 14% of hydrostations).Other schemes of failure of RPs are also possible, for example, loss of dynamic stability of the finned cylindrical shell of the RP with its poor fastening in the offset concrete.We can distinguish separately such a type of damage as damage of the linings of the connecting collar observed on almost all inspected hydrostations, Erosion of concrete forming behind tom-off lining sheets of the connecting collar gradually spreads upward and weakens both the RP structure as a whole and its fastening in the block.As a result of analyzing data on failures we can distinguish a number of factors affecting the reliability of the RP: 1. Absence of reliable cohesion of the concrete with the lining, presence of voids. 2. Insufficient rigidity of the RP structure as a consequence of the poor quality of its fastening in the concrete block. 3. Use of concrete of a poor quality and violation of the technology of placing concrete under winter conditions. 4. The actual thickness of the lining metal does not correspond to the design thickness. 5. Poor-quality fitting of the metalsheets to the stiffenersduring repair, including joining the linings not on the stiffeners. 6. Presence of heat-affected zones of welds (residual thermal stresses, local stress raisers). 7. Presence of notches, cracks, and other defects of the metal lining. 8. Use of metal with physical and mechanical characteristics not corresponding to those used in designing. 9. Noncorrespondence of the design hydrodynamic load acting on elements of the RP. 10. Cavitation erosion causing thinning of parts of the lining (up to local failure of the metal). 11. Poor quality of the welds. 12. Peeling of the protective (anticorrosion) stainless steel layer from the base metal of the liming. 13. Design errors.On the basis of the aforesaid we can formulate the following failure criteria of RP elements: exceeding the allowable stress values in the element (e.g., strength, yield, or fatigue li...
The article describes approaches to the design of a vane system of radial-axial hydraulic turbines based on an automated design system developed at SPbPU using the Python programming lan-guage. The specified system currently includes the following modules: selection of the main param-eters of the hydraulic turbine, construction of the meridional projection of the impeller, calculation of the potential flow and construction of the blade system of the radial-axial hydraulic turbine. The choice of the main parameters of the hydraulic turbine is based on the technique generally accepted in hydraulic turbine engineering, which has been digitized and introduced into the software pack-age. The paper considers and analyzes different approaches to the design of the meridional bypasses of the flow path in the area of the impeller of a radial-axial hydraulic turbine, a comparison of the results of their construction using different methods is given. A technique that is most suitable for algorithmization in the software package based on the results of the analysis was selected. The con-struction of streamlines and the calculation of velocities along them are presented on the basis of the calculation of the potential flow in the meridian section. The design of the blade system of the hy-draulic turbine was carried out by the method of solving the direct axisymmetric problem of the theory of hydraulic machines. As an example, a blade system of a radial-axial hydraulic turbine was designed for a head up to 75 meters, the initial parameters of which correspond to hydraulic tur-bines-analogues of similar speed. The designed hydro turbine was calculated in Ansys, and the re-sults confirmed its excellent energy properties. It is planned to further develop the software package in terms of automatic construction of 3-dimensional solid models of the flow path, which can later be calculated by the methods of computational fluid dynamics and optimized to obtain hydraulic turbines with parameters corresponding to the current state of the art.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.