Volume 1: Fora, Parts A, B, C, and D 2003
DOI: 10.1115/fedsm2003-45320
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Tip-Vortex Induced Cavitation on a Ducted Propulsor

Abstract: An extensive experimental investigation was carried out to examine tip-vortex induced cavitation on a ducted propulsor. The flowfield about a 3-bladed, ducted rotor operating in uniform inflow was measured in detail with three-dimensional LDV; cavitation inception was measured; and a correlated hydrophone/high-speed video system was used to identify and characterize the early, sub-visual cavitation events. Two geometrically-similar, ducted rotors were tested over a Reynolds number range from 1.4×106 to 9×106 i… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…9 McCormick scaling has proven useful for scaling the formation of developed tip vortex cavitation, but it often fails to scale inception pressure when the cavitation events are very intermittent or when there are multiple interacting vortices present in the flow. 10 A recent study of vortex cavitation in the wake of a ducted propulsor showed that the location and inception pressure of the cavitation was associated with the presence of multiple, interacting vortices and not the primary vortex location of lowest pressure. [10][11][12] The complex, unsteady, and stochastic nature of these vortex-laden flows makes the study of vortex cavitation challenging.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…9 McCormick scaling has proven useful for scaling the formation of developed tip vortex cavitation, but it often fails to scale inception pressure when the cavitation events are very intermittent or when there are multiple interacting vortices present in the flow. 10 A recent study of vortex cavitation in the wake of a ducted propulsor showed that the location and inception pressure of the cavitation was associated with the presence of multiple, interacting vortices and not the primary vortex location of lowest pressure. [10][11][12] The complex, unsteady, and stochastic nature of these vortex-laden flows makes the study of vortex cavitation challenging.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…10 A recent study of vortex cavitation in the wake of a ducted propulsor showed that the location and inception pressure of the cavitation was associated with the presence of multiple, interacting vortices and not the primary vortex location of lowest pressure. [10][11][12] The complex, unsteady, and stochastic nature of these vortex-laden flows makes the study of vortex cavitation challenging. Consequently, it is useful to examine vortex cavitation resulting from the simpler canonical interactions, such as those that occur between two initially parallel line vortices.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The influence of Reynolds number among experiments is smaller than the general propellers and hydrofoils in open water. The measured dependence on inception number for the propulsor is 0.21 (Chesnakas & Jessup, 2003), which is significantly lower than the empirical values 0.3 (Farrell & Biller, 1994), or 0.4-0.5 (Arndt, 2002). The visual inception and the sub-visual cavitation events occur approximately at the merge location of tip-leakage vortex and trailing edge vortex.…”
Section: Numerical Results and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 61%
“…As expected, decreasing the gap size from 100% to zero increases the maximum circulation, and the circulation at the tip does not change much except for the case of zero gap. In the case that gap between tunnel wall and blade tip is small, the strong tip vortex which the viscous effect is dominant would develop from the leading edge of the blade and affects the performance of propeller [3,4]. In order to capture the viscous flow effect, the method of the orifice equation model which has been successfully applied to the panel method by [13] and [20] has to to be coupled with the present method.…”
Section: Numerical Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%