Abstract

Large eddy simulations were used to investigate unsteady tip-leakage cavitating flow over a National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics 0009 hydrofoil. The proper orthogonal decomposition (POD) was combined with fast Fourier transforms to help better understand the deformation dynamics of the vortex and cavity. The results show three typical vortices, i.e., the tip-leakage vortex (TLV), tip-separation vortex (TSV), and shedding–trailing vortex (STV) with their own helical core lines in the averaged cavitating flows. Upstream of x/C = 1.8, the mean TLV core carries the breathing mode waves through the vortex dilatation effect, while the TSV core generates the dilatation, shrinkage, and bending distortions near the cavity interface by vortex stretching and deflection effects. Further downstream, the TLV starts to intertwine with the TSV, and the STV gradually diffuses. The TLV wandering encourages large cavity deformations dominated by the breathing and bending modes. However, in the lower-order POD modes, the contribution of bending modes to the cavity fluctuation energy is greatly weakened due to the variation of the relative cavity radius, r*, which indicates that the breathing mode and the double helix mode play major roles in the cavity interfacial waves. The results also show that the cavity interfacial oscillations are highly correlated with the surrounding velocity fluctuations. Moreover, a modified theoretical dispersion equation can well reproduce the quantitative relation between the vibration frequencies and the axial wavenumbers of the TLV cavity, especially for the wave dynamics of the breathing modes and the double helix modes.

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