Abstract

This study employs numerical simulation to investigate the transient flow and cavitation performance of centrifugal pumps with rough impellers, validating the numerical method with experimental data. Initially, the effect of blade roughness on the external characteristics of centrifugal pumps is examined. Subsequently, the study specifically addresses the impact of roughness on internal flow characteristics during cavitation, including vapor volume distribution, three-dimensional vortex structures, and vorticity distribution in the impeller channel. Furthermore, the influence of blade roughness on local energy loss is analyzed using entropy production theory. Finally, several monitoring points are arranged in the impeller channel to assess pressure pulsation effects. The results show that blade roughness generally reduces the head and efficiency of centrifugal pumps. During the non-cavitation and cavitation incipient stages, roughness marginally increases the head, with a maximum increase in only 0.1%. Impeller roughness causes vacuole collapse and vortex structure enlargement, disrupting the stable flow path within the channel. Blade roughness also escalates energy loss within impeller components, particularly under full cavitation conditions, where the impeller's entropy production accounts for up to 50%. Pressure pulsation results reveal that while blade roughness can slightly suppress cavitation, it also disturbs the flow field pressure. These insights provide guidance and data support for mitigating roughness and cavitation, the two primary instability factors in centrifugal pump operations.

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