Abstract

The central aim of this paper is to use OpenFOAM for the assessment of mesh resolution requirements for large-eddy simulation (LES) of flows similar to the ones which occur inside the draft-tube of hydraulic turbines at off-design operating conditions. The importance of this study is related to the fact that hydraulic turbines often need to be operated over an extended range of operating conditions, which makes the investigation of fluctuating stresses crucial. Scale-resolving simulation (SRS) approaches, such as LES and detached-eddy simulation (DES), have received more interests in the recent decade for understanding and mitigating unsteady operational behavior of hydro turbines. This interest is due to their ability to resolve a larger part of turbulent flows. However, verification studies in LES are very challenging, since errors in numerical discretization, but also subgrid-scale (SGS) models, are both influenced by grid resolution. A comprehensive examination of the literature shows that SRS for different operating conditions of hydraulic turbines is still quite limited and that there is no consensus on mesh resolution requirement for SRS studies. Therefore, the goal of this research is to develop a reliable framework for the validation and verification of SRS, especially LES, so that it can be applied for the investigation of flow phenomena inside hydraulic turbine draft-tube and runner at their off-design operating conditions. Two academic test cases are considered in this research, a turbulent channel flow and a case of sudden expansion. The sudden expansion test case resembles the flow inside the draft-tube of hydraulic turbines at part load. In this study, we concentrate on these academic test cases, but it is expected that hydraulic turbine flow simulations will eventually benefit from the results of the current research. The results show that two-point autocorrelation is more sensitive to mesh resolution than energy spectra. In addition, for the case of sudden expansion, the mesh resolution has a tremendous effect on the results, and, so far, we have not capture an asymptotic converging behavior in the results of Root Mean Square (RMS) of velocity fluctuations and two-point autocorrelation. This case, which represents complex flow behavior, needs further mesh resolution studies.

Highlights

  • Hydraulic-turbines are considered a highly reliable power source that can cover an extensive range of operating conditions in response to electricity demand

  • The importance of the large-eddy simulation (LES) for off-design operating conditions is due to the fact that RANS (Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes) studies are mainly capable of accurate flow simulations near the Best Efficiency Point, since optimal swirling flow occurs and the level of turbulence is low

  • This work is dedicated to developing an expertise on how to use, validate, and verify the OpenFOAM CFD code for the large-eddy simulation of the flow types similar to the ones which occur at off-design operating condition, such as part load inside hydraulic turbines

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Hydraulic-turbines are considered a highly reliable power source that can cover an extensive range of operating conditions in response to electricity demand. A comparison of LES and SAS results for a sudden-expansion test case which resembles the vortex rope of a draft tube at part load was performed by Javadi and Nilsson (2014) [11]. Comparison of LES results with DES and URANS results for the Francis-99 draft tube at part load, Best Efficiency Point (BEP), and high load was performed by Minakov et al (2017) for mean velocity profiles and pressure fluctuations [15]. In order to circumvent the complexities related to the geometry and other requirements for the boundary conditions of the flow simulation inside hydraulic turbine draft-tube, two academic test cases including internal non-swirling and swirling flows with available DNS and experimental data were chosen. A sudden-expansion test case which resembles the swirling flow at part load operating condition of a hydraulic turbine draft-tube was investigated. LES results are presented and analyzed for both test cases

Simulation and Modeling of Turbulent Flow
Periodic DNS uu 5
Mesh01
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call