Abstract
In this work, a three-dimensional fluid-structural and vibro-acoustics coupled model of a gear pump is presented. Gear pumps represent the majority of the positive displacement machines used for flow generation in fluid power systems. Typically, the dynamics of gear pumps are dependent on the characteristics of the fluid dynamics inside the pump, which translates into vibrations to the housing. These vibrations then propagate to the surrounding medium and emit sound. The purpose of this study is to propose a three-dimensional fully integrated computational model to simulate the complete gear pump behaviour from the fluid dynamics to the structural vibrations, up to the vibroacoustic response. In this hybrid configuration, a transient CFD (Computational Fluid Dynamics) model is first developed to simulate the 3D flow field with a deforming and re-meshing approach to take into account the variation of the volume between the gears. Second, the internal pressure field calculated at each time step is then used as a loading into a structural FEM (Finite Element Method) model of the gear pump to compute the actual stresses and deformations of the housing. Third, the results of the structural response are used as excitation in a vibroacoustic sub-model to simulate the radiated noise using a high-order FEM technique. The comparison between the numerical and experimental flow curves validates the CFD model. The sound power calculations from the vibroacoustic model show good comparison with the sound intensity measurements around the pump casing, confirming the validity of the proposed coupled model. The described CFD-FEM approach proves to be a powerful gear pump design tool: it provides a reliable estimate of gear pump working parameters such as fluid power and vibroacoustic characteristics, starting from the CAD (Computer-Aided Design) geometry of the components. Furthermore, being one of the first multi-domain simulation models of a gear pump, this work can be useful to researchers as a starting point to correlate the noise emitted with the internal flow in full 3D conditions.
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