Nuceli Effects on Tip Vortex Cavitation Scaling

A cavitation susceptibility meter has been used by the US Navy for 16 years to measure the tensile strength of water in the NSWCCD water tunnels, Lake Pend Oreille in Idaho, Exuma Sound in the Bahama Islands, the Pacific Ocean along the US West Coast, and the North Atlantic Ocean. This meter measure...

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Main Authors: Gowing, Scott, Shen, Young T.
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://caltechconf.library.caltech.edu/108/
https://caltechconf.library.caltech.edu/108/1/Cav2001_bubble.pdf
https://resolver.caltech.edu/CAV2001:sessionA6.005
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spelling ftcaltechconf:oai:caltechconf.library.caltech.edu:108 2023-05-15T17:33:47+02:00 Nuceli Effects on Tip Vortex Cavitation Scaling Gowing, Scott Shen, Young T. 2001-01-01 application/pdf https://caltechconf.library.caltech.edu/108/ https://caltechconf.library.caltech.edu/108/1/Cav2001_bubble.pdf https://resolver.caltech.edu/CAV2001:sessionA6.005 unknown https://caltechconf.library.caltech.edu/108/1/Cav2001_bubble.pdf Gowing, Scott and Shen, Young T. (2001) Nuceli Effects on Tip Vortex Cavitation Scaling. In: CAV 2001: Fourth International Symposium on Cavitation, June 20-23, 2001, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA USA. (Unpublished) https://resolver.caltech.edu/CAV2001:sessionA6.005 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CAV2001:sessionA6.005> other Conference or Workshop Item NonPeerReviewed 2001 ftcaltechconf 2023-01-14T17:13:45Z A cavitation susceptibility meter has been used by the US Navy for 16 years to measure the tensile strength of water in the NSWCCD water tunnels, Lake Pend Oreille in Idaho, Exuma Sound in the Bahama Islands, the Pacific Ocean along the US West Coast, and the North Atlantic Ocean. This meter measures the variation of cavitation nuclei with water tension. Using the bubble stability equation, these tensions are related to equivalent size bubbles to produce a spectrum of bubble concentration versus bubble size. This paper compares these nuclei sizes in the lake and ocean waters. Results of bubble dynamics calculations show a relationship for estimating the nuclei effect on scaling that is separate from the viscous effects on the pressure fields. The influence of these nuclei variations on cavitation inception scaling are discussed for a hypothetical propeller tip vortex cavity. The scaling of two model inception conditions are studied for nuclei variations in the model environment as well as variations in the full-scale environment. The sizes of the nuclei in the two environments differ, but the resulting effects on inception are predicted to be minor, and this trend may be globally true for nuclei variations within natural water bodies. The variations illustrated may be minor compared to the nuclei effect for scaling water tunnel model tests to full-scale. Conference Object North Atlantic CaltechCONF (California Institute of Technology) Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection CaltechCONF (California Institute of Technology)
op_collection_id ftcaltechconf
language unknown
description A cavitation susceptibility meter has been used by the US Navy for 16 years to measure the tensile strength of water in the NSWCCD water tunnels, Lake Pend Oreille in Idaho, Exuma Sound in the Bahama Islands, the Pacific Ocean along the US West Coast, and the North Atlantic Ocean. This meter measures the variation of cavitation nuclei with water tension. Using the bubble stability equation, these tensions are related to equivalent size bubbles to produce a spectrum of bubble concentration versus bubble size. This paper compares these nuclei sizes in the lake and ocean waters. Results of bubble dynamics calculations show a relationship for estimating the nuclei effect on scaling that is separate from the viscous effects on the pressure fields. The influence of these nuclei variations on cavitation inception scaling are discussed for a hypothetical propeller tip vortex cavity. The scaling of two model inception conditions are studied for nuclei variations in the model environment as well as variations in the full-scale environment. The sizes of the nuclei in the two environments differ, but the resulting effects on inception are predicted to be minor, and this trend may be globally true for nuclei variations within natural water bodies. The variations illustrated may be minor compared to the nuclei effect for scaling water tunnel model tests to full-scale.
format Conference Object
author Gowing, Scott
Shen, Young T.
spellingShingle Gowing, Scott
Shen, Young T.
Nuceli Effects on Tip Vortex Cavitation Scaling
author_facet Gowing, Scott
Shen, Young T.
author_sort Gowing, Scott
title Nuceli Effects on Tip Vortex Cavitation Scaling
title_short Nuceli Effects on Tip Vortex Cavitation Scaling
title_full Nuceli Effects on Tip Vortex Cavitation Scaling
title_fullStr Nuceli Effects on Tip Vortex Cavitation Scaling
title_full_unstemmed Nuceli Effects on Tip Vortex Cavitation Scaling
title_sort nuceli effects on tip vortex cavitation scaling
publishDate 2001
url https://caltechconf.library.caltech.edu/108/
https://caltechconf.library.caltech.edu/108/1/Cav2001_bubble.pdf
https://resolver.caltech.edu/CAV2001:sessionA6.005
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation https://caltechconf.library.caltech.edu/108/1/Cav2001_bubble.pdf
Gowing, Scott and Shen, Young T. (2001) Nuceli Effects on Tip Vortex Cavitation Scaling. In: CAV 2001: Fourth International Symposium on Cavitation, June 20-23, 2001, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA USA. (Unpublished) https://resolver.caltech.edu/CAV2001:sessionA6.005 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CAV2001:sessionA6.005>
op_rights other
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