CFD Applications for Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

51
CFD Applications for Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

description

CFD Applications for Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar. COMET employed to perform computations. RANSE solver: Conservation of mass 1 momentum 3 volume concentration 1 In addition: k-  RNG turbulence model2 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of CFD Applications for Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

Page 1: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

CFD Applications for Marine Foil Configurations

Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

Page 2: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

2

COMET employed to perform computations

RANSE solver:

Conservation of mass 1momentum 3volume concentration 1

In addition: k- RNG turbulence model 2In addition: cavitation model (optional) 1

HRIC scheme for free-surface flow

Finite Volume Method:• arbitrary polyhedral volumes, here hexahedral volumes• unstructured grids possible, here block-structured grids• non-matching boundaries possible, here matching boundaries

Page 3: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

3

Diverse Applications to Hydrofoils

Surface-piercing strut

Rudder at extreme angle

Cavitation foil

Page 4: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

4

Motivation: Struts for towed aircraft ill-designed

Wing profile bad choice in this case

Page 5: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

5

Similar flow conditions for submarine masts

Page 6: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

6

Similar flow conditions for hydrofoil boats

Page 7: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

7

Grid designed for problem

Flow highly unsteady: port+starboard modelled1.7 million cells, most clustered near CWL

10 L to each side

8 L

4 L

10 L 10 LStarboard half of grid (schematic)

Page 8: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

8

Cells clustered near free surface

Page 9: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

9

Flow at strut highly unsteady

Circular section strut, Fn=2.03, Rn=3.35·106

Page 10: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

10

Wave height increases with thickness of profile

thickness almost

doubled

circular section strut, Fn=2.03, Re=3.35·106

Thickness “60” Thickness “100”

Page 11: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

11

Wave characteristic changed from strut to cylinder

parabolic strut cylinderFn=2.03, Re=3.35·106

Page 12: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

12

Transverse plate reduces waves

Transverseplate

attached

Parabolic strut, Fn=2.03, Re=3.35·106

Page 13: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

13

Transverse plate reduces waves

Transverseplate

attached

Parabolic strut, Fn=2.03, Rn=3.35·106

Page 14: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

14

Transverse plate less effective for cylinder

Transverseplate (ring)attached

cylinder, Fn=2.03, Re=3.35·106

Page 15: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

15

Problems in convergence solved

Large initial time steps

overshooting leading-edge wave for usual number of outer iterations

convergence destroyed

Use more outer iterations initially

leading-edge wave reduced

convergence good

Page 16: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

16

Remember:

• High Froude numbers require unsteady computations• Comet capable of capturing free-surface details• Realistic results for high Froude numbers• Qualitative agreement with observed flows good• Response time sufficient for commercial applications• Some “tricks” needed in applying code

Page 17: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

17

Diverse Applications to Hydrofoils

Surface-piercing strut

Rudder at extreme angle

Cavitation foil

Page 18: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

18

Concave profiles offer alternatives

Rudder profiles employed in practice

Page 19: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

19

Concave profiles: higher lift gradients and max lift than NACA profiles of same maximum thickness

IfS-profiles: highest lift gradients and maximum lift due to the max thickness close to leading edge and thick trailing edge

NACA-profiles feature the lowest drag

Page 20: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

20

Validation Case (Whicker and Fehlner DTMB)

Stall Conditions

Page 21: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

21

Superfast XII Ferry used HSVA profiles

Superfast XII

Increase maximum rudder angle to 45º

Page 22: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

22

Fine RANSE grid used

RANSE grid with 1.8 million cells, details

• 10 c ahead• 10 c abaft• 10 c aside• 6 h below

Page 23: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

23

Grid generation allows easy rotation of rudder

Page 24: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

24

Body forces model propeller action

Radial Force Distribution

RootTip

Source Terms

Page 25: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

25

Pressure distribution / Tip vortex

Rudder angle 25°

Page 26: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

26

Maximum before 35º

Superfast XII, rudder forces in forward speed

lift

shaft moment

drag

Page 27: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

27

Separation increases with angle

Velocity distribution at 2.6m above rudder base

25º 35º 45º

Page 28: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

28

Reverse flow also simulated

Velocity distribution at top for 35°

forward reverse no separation massive separation

Page 29: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

29

Stall appears earlier in reverse flow

Page 30: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

30

Remember:

• RANSE solver useful for rudder design• higher angles than standard useful

Page 31: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

31

Diverse Applications to Hydrofoils

Surface-piercing strut

Rudder at extreme angle

Cavitation foil

Page 32: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

32

Cavitation model: Seed distribution

average seed radius R0average number of seeds n0

different seed types &spectral seed distribution

„micro-bubble“ &homogenous seed distribution

Page 33: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

33

Cavitation model: Vapor volume fractionV

liquid Vl

„micro-bubble“ R0

vapor bubble R

Vapor volume fraction:

Page 34: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

34

Cavitation model: Effective fluid

The mixture of liquid and vapor is treated as an effective fluid:

Density:

Viscosity:

Page 35: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

35

Cavitation model: Convection of vapor bubbles

Task: model the rate of the bubble growth

convective transport bubble growth or collapse

Lagrangian observation of a cloud of bubbles

Equation describing the transport of the vapor fraction Cv:

&

Page 36: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

36

Cavitation model: Vapor bubble growth

Conventional bubble dynamic =

observation of a single bubble in infinite stagnant liquid

„Extended Rayleigh-Plasset equation“:

Inertia controlled growth model by Rayleigh:

Page 37: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

37

Application to typical hydrofoil

Stabilizing fin rudder

Page 38: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

38

First test: 2-D NACA 0015

Vapor volume fraction Cv for one period

Page 39: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

39

First test: 2-D NACA 0015

Comparison of vapor volume fraction Cv for two periods

Page 40: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

40

3-D NACA 0015

Periodic cavitation patternson 3-D foil

Page 41: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

41

2-D NACA 16-206

Vapor volume fraction Cvfor one period

Page 42: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

42

2-D NACA 16-206

Pressure coefficient Cp for one period

Page 43: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

43

2-D NACA 16-206

Comparison ofvapor volume fraction Cv

with

pressure coefficient Cp for one time step

Page 44: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

44

3-D NACA 16-206: Validation with Experiment

Experiment by Ukon (1986) Cv= 0.05

Page 45: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

45

3-D NACA 16-206

pressure distribution Cp and vapor volume fraction Cv

Page 46: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

46

3-D NACA 16-206

Cv= 0.005 Cv= 0.5

Correlation between visual type of cavitation

andvapor volume fraction Cv ?

Page 47: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

47

3-D NACA 16-206Pressure distribution

with and without calculation of cavitation

Page 48: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

48

3-D NACA 16-206

Minimal and maximalcavitation extent with

vapor volume fraction Cv= 0.05

Exp.

Page 49: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

49

3-D NACA 16-206: VRML model

Page 50: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

50

Remember

• cavitation model reproduces essential characteristics

of real cavitation• reasonable good agreement with experiments • threshold technology

Page 51: CFD Applications for  Marine Foil Configurations Volker Bertram, Ould M. El Moctar

51