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Accurate and efficient analysis of dynamic runner stresses considering hydrodynamic damping effects
Author(s) -
Björn Hübner,
Jiri Koutnik
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
iop conference series. earth and environmental science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1755-1307
pISSN - 1755-1315
DOI - 10.1088/1755-1315/774/1/012061
Subject(s) - added mass , mechanics , damping matrix , acoustic radiation , turbine , fluid–structure interaction , thermoelastic damping , radiation damping , physics , vibration , control theory (sociology) , acoustics , engineering , structural engineering , computer science , mechanical engineering , stiffness , finite element method , radiation , stiffness matrix , control (management) , particle physics , quantum mechanics , thermal , artificial intelligence , meteorology
Safe and reliable dynamic designs of Francis and pump turbine runners require an accurate and efficient prediction of the dynamic response during operation including dynamic stresses. If resonance phenomena cause significant dynamic amplifications, response amplitudes strongly depend on damping effects, and numerical simulations have to include realistic damping behavior. For submerged components like turbine runners, hydrodynamic (flow-induced) damping and hydro-acoustic radiation are much greater than structural or material damping, but cannot be assessed sufficiently accurate by simple assumptions. Therefore, a newly developed fluid-structure interaction (FSI) methodology is presented which offers accurate and efficient harmonic response analyses of submerged structures not only accounting for added-mass effects but also for flow-induced damping and acoustic radiation. The acoustic FSI approach, widely used to consider added-mass effects, is enhanced by convective terms to include fluid forces caused by the deflection of the mean flow due to structural motion. Only a stationary flow solution, obtained from standard computational fluid dynamics analyses, is required as additional input. The linearized second-order system with non-proportional damping matrix is solved in frequency domain using a Krylov subspace based model order reduction technique. The methodology is validated using experimental damping data from an elastic hydrofoil in a cavitation tunnel. A first application to a prototype Francis runner, being excited close to resonance by rotor-stator interaction, reveals a significant influence of the operating condition on hydrodynamic damping and dynamic stresses. The numerical results for both part load and full load agree very well with measured prototype strains. Meanwhile, the automated methodology is applied as a standard tool within the hydro-mechanical runner design process ensuring dynamically safe and reliable runner designs.

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