Published 2022
| Version v1
Publication
Experimental Analysis of Cavitation Erosion on Blade Root of Controllable Pitch Propeller
Description
The aim of this study is to experimentally investigate the cavitation
erosion on the blade root of a model scale controllable pitch propeller. Tests are
carried out in a cavitation tunnel, using the soft paint technique to study cavitation
erosion, exploiting also two standard cameras and one high speed camera to study
the damage patterns and cavitation dynamics, respectively. Standard cameras are
placed on the top of test section in order to periodically monitor the occurrence of
damages on the layer of paint. The high-speed camera has been used instead to
analyse bubble dynamics and identify potentially erosive phenomena. Three
different cavitation bubble structures on the blade root have been identified in the
present study: streak cavitation, spherical bubble cavitation, and twisting bubble
cavitation. The paint tests results have been analysed together with high-speed
videos, showing a remarkable agreement between the occurrence of damage and
cavitation collapse phenomena. The results demonstrated two regions on the
propeller blade root with high risk of erosion: (1) suction side blade root showed
significant damage pattern due to single bubble as well as bubble assembly collapse,
and (2) pressure side blade root showed slight damage pattern due to spherical
bubble collapse.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://hdl.handle.net/11567/1094877
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1094877
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE