Marine Turbine Hydrodynamics by a Boundary Element Method with Viscous Flow Correction

A computational methodology for the hydrodynamic analysis of horizontal axis marine current turbines is presented. The approach is based on a boundary integral equation method for inviscid flows originally developed for marine propellers and adapted here to describe the flow features that characteri...

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Main Authors: Francesco Salvatore, Zohreh Sarichloo, Danilo Calcagni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-05-01
Series:Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1312/6/2/53
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spelling doaj-eaee686b9b6240fa9daf161fc1b923142021-04-02T04:34:00ZengMDPI AGJournal of Marine Science and Engineering2077-13122018-05-01625310.3390/jmse6020053jmse6020053Marine Turbine Hydrodynamics by a Boundary Element Method with Viscous Flow CorrectionFrancesco Salvatore0Zohreh Sarichloo1Danilo Calcagni2CNR-INSEAN, National Research Council, Marine Technology Research Institute, Via di Vallerano 139, 00128 Rome, ItalyCNR-INSEAN, National Research Council, Marine Technology Research Institute, Via di Vallerano 139, 00128 Rome, ItalyCNR-INSEAN, National Research Council, Marine Technology Research Institute, Via di Vallerano 139, 00128 Rome, ItalyA computational methodology for the hydrodynamic analysis of horizontal axis marine current turbines is presented. The approach is based on a boundary integral equation method for inviscid flows originally developed for marine propellers and adapted here to describe the flow features that characterize hydrokinetic turbines. For this purpose, semi-analytical trailing wake and viscous flow correction models are introduced. A validation study is performed by comparing hydrodynamic performance predictions with two experimental test cases and with results from other numerical models in the literature. The capability of the proposed methodology to correctly describe turbine thrust and power over a wide range of operating conditions is discussed. Viscosity effects associated to blade flow separation and stall are taken into account and predicted thrust and power are comparable with results of blade element methods that are largely used in the design of marine current turbines. The accuracy of numerical predictions tends to reduce in cases where turbine blades operate in off-design conditions.http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1312/6/2/53marine current turbinehydrodynamicsboundary element methodstrailing wake modelsviscous flow correction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Francesco Salvatore
Zohreh Sarichloo
Danilo Calcagni
spellingShingle Francesco Salvatore
Zohreh Sarichloo
Danilo Calcagni
Marine Turbine Hydrodynamics by a Boundary Element Method with Viscous Flow Correction
Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
marine current turbine
hydrodynamics
boundary element methods
trailing wake models
viscous flow correction
author_facet Francesco Salvatore
Zohreh Sarichloo
Danilo Calcagni
author_sort Francesco Salvatore
title Marine Turbine Hydrodynamics by a Boundary Element Method with Viscous Flow Correction
title_short Marine Turbine Hydrodynamics by a Boundary Element Method with Viscous Flow Correction
title_full Marine Turbine Hydrodynamics by a Boundary Element Method with Viscous Flow Correction
title_fullStr Marine Turbine Hydrodynamics by a Boundary Element Method with Viscous Flow Correction
title_full_unstemmed Marine Turbine Hydrodynamics by a Boundary Element Method with Viscous Flow Correction
title_sort marine turbine hydrodynamics by a boundary element method with viscous flow correction
publisher MDPI AG
series Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
issn 2077-1312
publishDate 2018-05-01
description A computational methodology for the hydrodynamic analysis of horizontal axis marine current turbines is presented. The approach is based on a boundary integral equation method for inviscid flows originally developed for marine propellers and adapted here to describe the flow features that characterize hydrokinetic turbines. For this purpose, semi-analytical trailing wake and viscous flow correction models are introduced. A validation study is performed by comparing hydrodynamic performance predictions with two experimental test cases and with results from other numerical models in the literature. The capability of the proposed methodology to correctly describe turbine thrust and power over a wide range of operating conditions is discussed. Viscosity effects associated to blade flow separation and stall are taken into account and predicted thrust and power are comparable with results of blade element methods that are largely used in the design of marine current turbines. The accuracy of numerical predictions tends to reduce in cases where turbine blades operate in off-design conditions.
topic marine current turbine
hydrodynamics
boundary element methods
trailing wake models
viscous flow correction
url http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1312/6/2/53
work_keys_str_mv AT francescosalvatore marineturbinehydrodynamicsbyaboundaryelementmethodwithviscousflowcorrection
AT zohrehsarichloo marineturbinehydrodynamicsbyaboundaryelementmethodwithviscousflowcorrection
AT danilocalcagni marineturbinehydrodynamicsbyaboundaryelementmethodwithviscousflowcorrection
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