
Analysis of flow loss characteristics of slanted axial-flow pump device based on entropy production theory
Author(s) -
Fan Yang,
Zhongbin Li,
Wenzhu Hu,
Chao Liu,
Dongjin Jiang,
Dongsheng Li,
Ahmed Nasr
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
royal society open science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.84
H-Index - 51
ISSN - 2054-5703
DOI - 10.1098/rsos.211208
Subject(s) - entropy production , mechanics , impeller , turbulence , dissipation , entropy (arrow of time) , pipe flow , thermodynamics , physics
Slanted axial-flow pump devices are widely applied in urban water supply, irrigation and drainage engineering fields. The second law of thermodynamics is applied to investigate the flow loss characteristics of the 30° slanted axial-flow pump model according to the flow loss analysis method of entropy production theory, so that the hydraulic loss characteristics can be revealed in internal flow process of the slanted axial-flow pump. The three-dimensional numerical simulation of the whole flow conduit in slanted axial-flow pump was conducted and the entropy production increased in the flow process was calculated. The location and distribution characteristics of the flow loss of the pump were qualitatively analysed. The results show that the entropy production in impeller is the highest among the pump components. With the increase of flow rate, the proportion of the entropy production in impeller in total value of the pump device increases continuously. The wall entropy production of impeller, guide vane and outlet conduit are lower than the mainstream entropy production, and the mainstream entropy production occupies the dominant position. As the flow rate grows, the proportion of turbulent dissipation entropy production decreases, and the proportion of wall dissipation entropy production increases. At 0.8Q bep , the proportion of turbulent dissipation entropy production is close to 74%, which is about 2.8 times that of wall entropy production. Under 1.2Q bep condition, the proportion of turbulent dissipation entropy production is just 5.5% higher than that of wall dissipation entropy production.