Simulation and analysis of collapsing vapor-bubble clusters with special emphasis on potentially erosive impact loads at walls

Cavitation is a process where a liquid evaporates due to a pressure drop and re-condenses violently. Noise, material erosion and altered system dynamics characterize for such a process for which shock waves, rarefaction waves and vapor generation are typical phenomena. The current paper presents nov...

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Main Authors: Ogloblina Daria, Schmidt Steffen J., Adams Nikolaus A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2018-01-01
Series:EPJ Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.epj-conferences.org/articles/epjconf/pdf/2018/15/epjconf_efm2018_02079.pdf
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spelling doaj-512d761c141d4b77b2aa88a0b66f11632021-08-02T05:04:33ZengEDP SciencesEPJ Web of Conferences2100-014X2018-01-011800207910.1051/epjconf/201818002079epjconf_efm2018_02079Simulation and analysis of collapsing vapor-bubble clusters with special emphasis on potentially erosive impact loads at wallsOgloblina DariaSchmidt Steffen J.Adams Nikolaus A.Cavitation is a process where a liquid evaporates due to a pressure drop and re-condenses violently. Noise, material erosion and altered system dynamics characterize for such a process for which shock waves, rarefaction waves and vapor generation are typical phenomena. The current paper presents novel results for collapsing vapour-bubble clusters in a liquid environment close to a wall obtained by computational fluid mechanics (CFD) simulations. The driving pressure initially is 10 MPa in the liquid. Computations are carried out by using a fully compressible single-fluid flow model in combination with a conservative finite volume method (FVM). The investigated bubble clusters (referred to as “clouds”) differ by their initial vapor volume fractions, initial stand-off distances to the wall and by initial bubble radii. The effects of collapse focusing due to bubble-bubble interaction are analysed by investigating the intensities and positions of individual bubble collapses, as well as by the resulting shock-induced pressure field at the wall. Stronger interaction of the bubbles leads to an intensification of the collapse strength for individual bubbles, collapse focusing towards the center of the cloud and enhanced re-evaporation. The obtained results reveal collapse features which are common for all cases, as well as case-specific differences during collapse-rebound cycles. Simultaneous measurements of maximum pressures at the wall and within the flow field and of the vapor volume evolution show that not only the primary collapse but also subsequent collapses are potentially relevant for erosion.https://www.epj-conferences.org/articles/epjconf/pdf/2018/15/epjconf_efm2018_02079.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ogloblina Daria
Schmidt Steffen J.
Adams Nikolaus A.
spellingShingle Ogloblina Daria
Schmidt Steffen J.
Adams Nikolaus A.
Simulation and analysis of collapsing vapor-bubble clusters with special emphasis on potentially erosive impact loads at walls
EPJ Web of Conferences
author_facet Ogloblina Daria
Schmidt Steffen J.
Adams Nikolaus A.
author_sort Ogloblina Daria
title Simulation and analysis of collapsing vapor-bubble clusters with special emphasis on potentially erosive impact loads at walls
title_short Simulation and analysis of collapsing vapor-bubble clusters with special emphasis on potentially erosive impact loads at walls
title_full Simulation and analysis of collapsing vapor-bubble clusters with special emphasis on potentially erosive impact loads at walls
title_fullStr Simulation and analysis of collapsing vapor-bubble clusters with special emphasis on potentially erosive impact loads at walls
title_full_unstemmed Simulation and analysis of collapsing vapor-bubble clusters with special emphasis on potentially erosive impact loads at walls
title_sort simulation and analysis of collapsing vapor-bubble clusters with special emphasis on potentially erosive impact loads at walls
publisher EDP Sciences
series EPJ Web of Conferences
issn 2100-014X
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Cavitation is a process where a liquid evaporates due to a pressure drop and re-condenses violently. Noise, material erosion and altered system dynamics characterize for such a process for which shock waves, rarefaction waves and vapor generation are typical phenomena. The current paper presents novel results for collapsing vapour-bubble clusters in a liquid environment close to a wall obtained by computational fluid mechanics (CFD) simulations. The driving pressure initially is 10 MPa in the liquid. Computations are carried out by using a fully compressible single-fluid flow model in combination with a conservative finite volume method (FVM). The investigated bubble clusters (referred to as “clouds”) differ by their initial vapor volume fractions, initial stand-off distances to the wall and by initial bubble radii. The effects of collapse focusing due to bubble-bubble interaction are analysed by investigating the intensities and positions of individual bubble collapses, as well as by the resulting shock-induced pressure field at the wall. Stronger interaction of the bubbles leads to an intensification of the collapse strength for individual bubbles, collapse focusing towards the center of the cloud and enhanced re-evaporation. The obtained results reveal collapse features which are common for all cases, as well as case-specific differences during collapse-rebound cycles. Simultaneous measurements of maximum pressures at the wall and within the flow field and of the vapor volume evolution show that not only the primary collapse but also subsequent collapses are potentially relevant for erosion.
url https://www.epj-conferences.org/articles/epjconf/pdf/2018/15/epjconf_efm2018_02079.pdf
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