Title: Ocean Engineering Group/EWRE (8/25/09)
1- Ocean Engineering Group/EWRE (8/25/09)
- Spyros A. Kinnas
- (Google Kinnas Home Page)
- Professor and Director of OTRCs UT Office
- (Offshore Technology Research Center)
-
Research in the area of computational
hydrodynamics with applications on the prediction
of performance and design of high-speed marine
propulsors, modeling of cavitation, and wave/body
interaction.
- Teaching
- CE358 Introductory Ocean Engineering (Fall 09)
- CE319F Elementary Fluid Mechanics
- CE397 Theory of Propulsors (NEW wind/tidal
turbines -Spring10) - CE380T Computational Environmental Fluid
Mechanics (tent. Spring 11) - CE380P Boundary Element Methods (tent. Spring
12)
- Facilities
- Computational Hydrodynamics Laboratory (ECJ
8.502) with 2 computer clusters an older one of
16-node 2-CPU each, and a new 16-node 2-Quad-core
CPU each
2Some recent marine propulsors
Contra-rotating props
Podded prop
3and some water-turbines (used to generate
energy from ocean currents)
4Water-jet Propulsors
Direction of boat
5Axial Flow Water-jet Propulsor
Inflow
Stator
Rotor
6Surface-piercing (or cleaver) propellers
7For high-speed propellers cavitation is often
inevitable
Tip vortex
Sheet
- Cavitation can accelerate erosion of blades,
produce noise, or result in sudden loss of thrust - However, allowing for some cavitation can
increase efficiency
8Two methods to model flow
Boundary Element Method (addressed in CE380P)
Finite Volume Method (addressed in CE380T)
- BEM can only deal with inviscid flow. The effects
of viscosity are evaluated via coupling with
integral boundary layer methods - FVM needs a very large number of cells to
resolve boundary layer within acceptable accuracy
9BEM vs. FVM(application to surface-piercing
hydrofoil)Vinayan, PhD09, UT/OEG
- BEM takes 16 mins on a single processor
- FVM (Fluent) takes 36 hours running parallel in 6
processors
10 Validation with Experiments Surface-Piercing
Propeller M841B
Comparison of ventilation patterns
11Model of water-jet pump performance(Sun, PhD
08, UT/OEG)
Torque on rotor vs. flow-rate
12Prediction of performance of tidal turbines
- Comparisons of the predicted thrust coefficient
and power coefficient for varying TSRwR/V
Cthrust vs. TSR
Cpower .vs. TSR
13Prediction of Cavitation
14Floating Production systems for Storage and
Offloading (FPSO)
FPSO Hulls can suffer from excessive Roll
Motions (periodic angular motions about the
longitudinal axis)
15Bilge keels are used to mitigate roll
16Model of viscous flow around bilge keels and
their effect on damping (Yu, PhD 08, UT/OEG)
17Model of viscous flow around bilge keels and
their effect on damping (NS-2D/-3D UT/OEGs
method)(Yu, PhD 08, UT/OEG)
Damping coefficient vs. roll frequency
BEM is VERY INACCURATE in the case of roll
18- Fall 09 Opportunities in OEG
-
- 3 full-time GRAs (2 committed/ 1 available)
- Computational methods (BEM/FVM) for the
prediction of performance of marine propulsors
(separated flows, leading edge vortex, cavitating
flows, tip gap leakage flows, and 3-D boundary
layer analysis on blades). Requires strong
background in fluid mechanics, calculus, computer
programming.