LAPSE:2023.21697
Published Article
LAPSE:2023.21697
Numerical Investigation on Instability Flow Behaviors of Liquid Oxygen in a Feeding Pipeline with a Five-Way Spherical Cavity
Fushou Xie, Siqi Xia, Erfeng Chen, Yanzhong Li, Hongwei Mao, Yuan Ma
March 22, 2023
Abstract
The hydrodynamic information of liquid oxygen in the conveying pipeline of cryogenic launch vehicles directly determines the reliability of the operation of the turbopump. A 0.09 MPa anomalous pressure fall phenomenon in the feeding system has been observed during the flight and run test of a cryogenic rocket with four parallel engines. In previous work, we set up a full-scale experimental system with liquid oxygen as media. The anomalous pressure fall was successfully reproduced. Experimental studies of this phenomenon suggest that the problem might be associated with vortices into the five-way spherical cavity structure. The objective of this study was to determine the three-dimensional instability flow by computational methods to identify and better understand the anomalous pressure fall phenomenon. A numerical model developed by the turbulent conservation equations was validated by experimental data. The generation and evolution of vortices into the five-way spherical cavity of feeding pipelines was captured. It was found that the root cause of the instability flow causing the unusual pressure fall is the formation of a spindle-like vortex into the five-way spherical cavity due to disturbance of the inlet liquid oxygen. The results showed that there is a mirror-symmetrical four-vortices structure in the absence of disturbance, in which the liquid oxygen pressure fall with the rise of the Reynolds number is in good agreement with the predicting values calculated by a set of traditional empirical correlations. In the case of the specific operating conditions, it is also consistent with the experimental results. When the disturbance occurs at the inlet of the spherical cavity, the mirror-symmetrical four-vortices structure gradually evolves into the mirror-symmetrical two-vortices structure. When the disturbance is further enhanced, the mirror-symmetrical two-vortices structure merge with each other to form a spindle-like vortex, which is similar to the Rankine vortex structure. The pressure fall on the corresponding side of the spindle-like vortex core reduces abnormally, and is about 0.07 MPa, which is consistent with the experimental data under certain disturbance conditions. Moreover, it was found that the spindle-like vortex is a stable eddy structure, and would continue to exist once it is formed, which could also not disappear with the removal of the disturbance.
Keywords
Anomalous pressure fall, feedline, instability flow, liquid oxygen, Spindle-like vortex
Subject
Suggested Citation
Xie F, Xia S, Chen E, Li Y, Mao H, Ma Y. Numerical Investigation on Instability Flow Behaviors of Liquid Oxygen in a Feeding Pipeline with a Five-Way Spherical Cavity. (2023). LAPSE:2023.21697
Author Affiliations
Xie F: Institute of Refrigeration and Cryogenic Engineering, Xi’an Jiaotong University, Xi’an 710049, China; State Key Laboratory of Technologies in Space Cryogenic Propellants, Beijing 100028, China
Xia S: Institute of Refrigeration and Cryogenic Engineering, Xi’an Jiaotong University, Xi’an 710049, China
Chen E: Beijing Institute of Astronautical System Engineering, Beijing 100076, China
Li Y: Institute of Refrigeration and Cryogenic Engineering, Xi’an Jiaotong University, Xi’an 710049, China; State Key Laboratory of Technologies in Space Cryogenic Propellants, Beijing 100028, China
Mao H: Institute of Refrigeration and Cryogenic Engineering, Xi’an Jiaotong University, Xi’an 710049, China
Ma Y: Institute of Refrigeration and Cryogenic Engineering, Xi’an Jiaotong University, Xi’an 710049, China [ORCID]
Journal Name
Energies
Volume
13
Issue
4
Article Number
E926
Year
2020
Publication Date
2020-02-19
ISSN
1996-1073
Version Comments
Original Submission
Other Meta
PII: en13040926, Publication Type: Journal Article
Record Map
Published Article

LAPSE:2023.21697
This Record
External Link

https://doi.org/10.3390/en13040926
Publisher Version
Download
Files
Mar 22, 2023
Main Article
License
CC BY 4.0
Meta
Record Statistics
Record Views
196
Version History
[v1] (Original Submission)
Mar 22, 2023
 
Verified by curator on
Mar 22, 2023
This Version Number
v1
Citations
Most Recent
This Version
URL Here
https://psecommunity.org/LAPSE:2023.21697
 
Record Owner
Auto Uploader for LAPSE
Links to Related Works
Directly Related to This Work
Publisher Version