Open Access
Numerical investigation of shallow-water effects on hydrokinetic turbine wake recovery
Author(s) -
Timothy O'Doherty,
David S. Thompson,
Shanti Bhushan,
Oumnia El Fajri
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
international marine energy journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2631-5548
DOI - 10.36688/imej.3.25-35
Subject(s) - wake , mechanics , turbulence , turbine , thrust , turbine blade , fluent , flow (mathematics) , geology , computational fluid dynamics , materials science , physics , aerospace engineering , engineering
Thrust, power and intermediate wake predictions obtained using resolved rotating blade with sliding mesh simulations for a hydrokinetic turbine (HKT) are assessed using the open-source flow solver OpenFOAM. Single- and two-phase URANS and DES computations are performed for three-blade, 0.5m diameter (D) turbine mounted on a stanchion that intersects the free surface with a tip-speed ratio λ = 6.15. The thrust and power predictions compare within 5% of the experimental data. Results show that the thrust predictions are dominated by the pressure distribution on the blades, whereas the shear stress plays a significant role in the power predictions. The turbine performance showed unsteadiness with amplitudes around 3% of the mean, due to the disruption of the flow each time a blade passed in front of the stanchion. The wake recovery is primarily due to the growth of shear layers (originating from the blade tips) towards the turbine axis, which are primarily caused by the cross-plane turbulent velocity. The shear layer growth is enhanced by the turbulence produced by the stanchion. Predictions of the mean wake profile compared within 10% of the experimental data, which is significant improvement over previous Fluent predictions that showed large errors of 22%. The improved predictions in OpenFOAM is attributed to better turbulence predictions. Two-phase results show that the interaction between the wake and free-surface is initiated by the interaction of stanchion with the free-surface. The free-surface creates a blockage effect that accelerates the flow in the upper bypass region and enhances the wake recovery.