Relationship Between Unsteady Flow, Pressure Fluctuations, and Noise in a Centrifugal Pump—Part B: Effects of Blade-Tongue Interactions
- 1 March 1995
- journal article
- Published by ASME International in Journal of Fluids Engineering
- Vol. 117 (1) , 30-35
- https://doi.org/10.1115/1.2816814
Abstract
Maps of pressure distributions computed using PDV data, combined with noise and local pressure measurements, are used for identifying primary sources of noise in a centrifugal pump. In the vicinity of the impeller pressure minima occur around the blade and near a vortex train generated as a result of non-uniform outflux from the impeller. The pressure everywhere also varies depending on the orientation of the impeller relative to the tongue. Noise peaks are generated when the pressure difference across the tongue is maximum, probably due to tongue oscillations, and when the wake impinges on the tip of the tongue.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Two-Dimensional Flow Analysis of a Laboratory Centrifugal PumpJournal of Turbomachinery, 1992
- Detailed Flow Investigations Within a High-Speed Centrifugal Compressor ImpellerJournal of Fluids Engineering, 1976
- Instantaneous Measurements in the Jet-Wake Discharge Flow of a Centrifugal Compressor ImpellerJournal of Engineering for Power, 1975
- Rotating Wakes in Vaneless DiffusersJournal of Basic Engineering, 1960