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Title

Investigations into Hydraulic Instability during the Start-Up Process of a Pump-Turbine under Low-Head Conditions.

Authors

Wang, Tingzheng; Yu, Chuqiao; Yang, Haocheng; Zhao, Yilin; Zhou, Yibo; Liu, Hanzhong; Zhou, Daqing; Kan, Kan

Abstract

To investigate the hydraulic characteristics during the start-up process of a full-flow pumped storage unit under low-head conditions, numerical simulations were conducted to study the dynamic characteristics during the process, providing a detailed analysis of the dynamic behavior of the internal flow field during the transition period as well as the associated variation in external performance parameters. Study results revealed a vortex-shedding phenomenon during the initial phase of the start-up process. These vortices restrict the flow, initiating a water hammer effect that abruptly elevates the upstream pressure within the runner. As the high-pressure water hammer dissipated, the flow rate rapidly increased, leading to a secondary but relatively weaker water hammer effect, which caused a momentary drop in pressure. This series of events ultimately resulted in significant oscillations in the unit's head. After the guide vanes stop opening, the vortex structures at the runner inlet and outlet gradually weaken. As the runner torque continues to decline, the unit gradually approaches a no-load condition and enters the S-shaped region. Concurrently, pressure pulsations intensify, and unstable vortex formations reemerge along the leading and trailing edges of the runner blades. The escalated flow velocity at the runner's exit contributes to the elongation of the vortex band within the draft tube, ultimately configuring a double-layer vortex structure around the central region and the pipe walls. This configuration of vortices precipitates the no-load instability phenomenon experienced by the unit.

Subjects

WATER hammer; DRAFT tubes; FLOW velocity; PRESSURE drop (Fluid dynamics); NEW business enterprises

Publication

Processes, 2024, Vol 12, Issue 9, p1876

ISSN

2227-9717

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.3390/pr12091876

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