A Novel Surge Damping Method for Hydraulic Transients with Operating Pump Using an Optimized Valve Control Strategy
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Simulation Model
2.1. One-Dimensional Unsteady Friction Model
- (1)
- The liquid fluid complies with cross-section-averaged properties.
- (2)
- The water liquid is considered to be single phase without entrained air.
- (3)
- The pipe is elastic, and the fluid is compressible.
- (4)
- The pipe flow is assumed to be adiabatic flow.
2.2. Physical Model and Solution Method
3. Optimization Scheme Using ASFA
4. Model Validation
5. Results
5.1. Wave Damping Case without Pump Operation
5.2. Wave Damping Case with Centrifugal Pump Operation
5.3. Wave Damping Case with Positive Displacement Pump Operation
6. Conclusions
- (1)
- The transient wave surge can be reduced through nonlinear valve closure without adding additional damping devices. For transient flow with and without a centrifugal pump running, surge reduction of 9.3% and 11.4% could be obtained in the most severe valve closure case. Even with increasing pressure with positive displacement pump operation, the surge damping method was able to achieve a 34% time margin for reaching the head limit and a maximum reduction in the surge amplitude of 75.2%.
- (2)
- With increasing valve closing time, the surge amplitude caused by valve closure decreases for the transient flow with and without the centrifugal pump running, and the rate of surge amplitude decrease also decreases. For positive displacement pumps, the surge amplitude increases with increasing valve closing time, but at a significantly slower rate of increase with the optimized nonlinear valve closure.
- (3)
- For rapid valve closure in 0.1 s, the optimized nonlinear closing motion performs a similar “И” shape. For other valve closure cases in the present study, the optimized valve opening curves show a relatively smooth variation during the initial stage before decreasing rapidly to full closure during valve operation.
- (4)
- The valve closure process can be abstracted into a traveling salesman problem, and further optimization using an artificial fish swarm algorithm was demonstrated to be beneficial for wave damping. The strategy proposed in the present study could help for either guiding real-time valve control or serve as a design reference for novel valve structures for the purpose of surge protection.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
AFSA | artificial fish swarm algorithm |
CB | convolution-based |
CE | compression–expansion |
CFD | computational fluid dynamics |
IAB | instantaneous accelerations-based |
MOC | method of characteristics |
ODE | ordinary differential equation |
TSP | traveling salesman problem |
1-D | one-dimensional |
Notation | |
a | wave speed (m∙s−1) |
a1, a2 | pump coefficient constants (-) |
A | cross sectional area (m2) |
B | pipeline characteristic impedance (-) |
D | pipe diameter (m) |
f | Darcy–Weisbach friction factor (-) |
g | gravitational acceleration (m∙s−2) |
H | pressure head (m) |
Js | steady friction loss term (-) |
Ju | unsteady friction loss term (-) |
k | empirical decay coefficient (-) |
kd | second viscosity coefficient (-) |
L | pipe length (m) |
n | artificial fish number (-) |
P | cross-section-average pressure (Pa) |
Q | flowrate (m3∙s−1) |
R | pipeline resistance coefficient (-) |
r | radial coordinate (m) |
Re | Reynolds number (-) |
V | cross-section-average velocity (m∙s−1) |
ϖ | phase velocity in fluctuation (rad∙s−1) |
t | time (s) |
τ | valve opening (-) |
ρ | fluid density (kg∙m−3) |
dynamic viscosity (Pa∙s) | |
the second viscosity (Pa∙s) | |
x | coordinate along the pipe axis (m) |
X | artificial fish position (-) |
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Parameters (Unit) | Values |
---|---|
Initial tank head, Hres (m) | 128 |
Initial flow velocity, V0 (m/s) | 0.94 |
Pipeline length, L (m) Wave speed, a (m/s) | 98.11 1298.4 |
Pump rotational speed, npump (r/min) Pump designed head, Hpump (m) Pump designed velocity, Vpump (m/s) | 8000 165.9 0.88 |
blade numbers | 8 |
Valve closing time, tc (s) | 0.1~0.5 |
(kg/m3) | 997.59 |
) | 0.947 × 10−3 |
empirical coefficient k second viscosity coefficient kd Darcy–Weisbach friction factor, f | 0.0138 20.258 0.0224 |
Parameters | Description | Values |
---|---|---|
Vision | visual radius | 0.1 |
step | moving distance | 0.01 |
n | artificial fish quatities | 30 |
dim | artificial fish dimension | 10 |
delta Trailmax Genmax | fish swarm crowdness maximum trial number maximum iteration number | 27 30 500 |
error | convergence error | 1 × 10−4 |
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Cao, Z.; Xia, Q.; Guo, X.; Lu, L.; Deng, J. A Novel Surge Damping Method for Hydraulic Transients with Operating Pump Using an Optimized Valve Control Strategy. Water 2022, 14, 1576. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14101576
Cao Z, Xia Q, Guo X, Lu L, Deng J. A Novel Surge Damping Method for Hydraulic Transients with Operating Pump Using an Optimized Valve Control Strategy. Water. 2022; 14(10):1576. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14101576
Chicago/Turabian StyleCao, Zheng, Qi Xia, Xijian Guo, Lin Lu, and Jianqiang Deng. 2022. "A Novel Surge Damping Method for Hydraulic Transients with Operating Pump Using an Optimized Valve Control Strategy" Water 14, no. 10: 1576. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14101576
APA StyleCao, Z., Xia, Q., Guo, X., Lu, L., & Deng, J. (2022). A Novel Surge Damping Method for Hydraulic Transients with Operating Pump Using an Optimized Valve Control Strategy. Water, 14(10), 1576. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14101576