Marine Propellers and Propulsion

A special issue of Journal of Marine Science and Engineering (ISSN 2077-1312).

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 July 2016) | Viewed by 13554

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Hamburg University of Technology (TUHH), Institute for Fluid Dynamics and Ship Theory (M8), Am Schwarzenberg-Campus 4, 21073 Hamburg, Germany
Interests: hydrodynamics: naval architecture; fluid mechanics; hydrodynamic modeling numerical modelling; CFD simulation; fluid structure interaction; computational fluid mechanics; underwater acoustics, experimental fluid mechanics
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Keywords

  • propulsion system
  • propeller geometry
  • propeller enviroment
  • ship wake field
  • propeller performance
  • theoretical and analytical methods
  • cavitation
  • propeller noise
  • propeller, ship and rudder interaction
  • waterjet propulsion

Published Papers (2 papers)

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Research

3074 KiB  
Article
Procedure for Application-Oriented Optimisation of Marine Propellers
by Florian Vesting, Rickard E. Bensow, Rikard Johansson, Robert Gustafsson and Nicole Costa
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2016, 4(4), 83; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse4040083 - 26 Nov 2016
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 6504
Abstract
The use of automated optimisation in engineering applications is emerging. In particular, nature inspired algorithms are frequently used because of their variability and robust application in constraints and multi-objective optimisation problems. The purpose of this paper is the comparison of four different algorithms [...] Read more.
The use of automated optimisation in engineering applications is emerging. In particular, nature inspired algorithms are frequently used because of their variability and robust application in constraints and multi-objective optimisation problems. The purpose of this paper is the comparison of four different algorithms and several optimisation strategies on a set of seven test propellers in realistic industrial design setting. The propellers are picked from real commercial projects and the manual final designs were delivered to customers. The different approaches are evaluated and final results of the automated optimisation toolbox are compared with designs generated in a manual design process. We identify a two-stage optimisation for marine propellers, where the geometry is first modified by parametrised geometry distribution curves to gather knowledge of the test case. Here we vary the optimisation strategy in terms of applied algorithms, constraints and objectives. A second supporting optimisation aims to improve the design by locally changing the geometry, based on the results of the first optimisation. The optimisation algorithms and strategies yield propeller designs that are comparable to the manually designed propeller blade geometries, thus being suitable as robust and advanced design support tools. The supporting optimisation, with local modification of the blade geometry and the proposed cavity shape constraints, features particular good performance in modifying cavitation on the blade and is, with the AS NSGA-II (adaptive surrogate-assisted NSGA-II), superior in lead time. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Marine Propellers and Propulsion)
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5148 KiB  
Article
Propeller Cavitation in Non-Uniform Flow and Correlation with the Near Pressure Field
by Francisco Alves Pereira, Fabio Di Felice and Francesco Salvatore
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2016, 4(4), 70; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse4040070 - 05 Nov 2016
Cited by 42 | Viewed by 6427
Abstract
An experimental study is carried out in a cavitation tunnel on a propeller operating downstream of a non-uniform wake. The goal of this work is to establish quantitative correlations between the near pressure field and the cavitation pattern that takes place on the [...] Read more.
An experimental study is carried out in a cavitation tunnel on a propeller operating downstream of a non-uniform wake. The goal of this work is to establish quantitative correlations between the near pressure field and the cavitation pattern that takes place on the propeller blades. The pressure field is measured at the walls of the test section and in the near wake of the propeller and is combined with quantitative high-speed image recording of the cavitation pattern. Through harmonic analysis of the pressure data and image processing techniques that allow retrieving the cavitation extension and volume, we discuss the potential sources that generate the pressure fluctuations. Time correlations are unambiguously established between pressure peak fluctuations and cavitation collapse events, based on the Rayleigh collapse time. Finally, we design a model to predict the cavitation-induced pressure fluctuations from the derivation of the cavitation volume acceleration. A remarkable agreement is observed with the actual pressure field. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Marine Propellers and Propulsion)
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