4.5 Article

Hydroelastic analysis of underwater rotating propellers based on different boundary conditions

Journal

JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 3, Pages 1163-1178

Publisher

SPRINGER JAPAN KK
DOI: 10.1007/s00773-022-00895-5

Keywords

Fluid-structure interaction; Hydroelastic responses; Propeller; Added mass; Added damping

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52001130, 11922208, 51839005]
  2. Scientific Research Foundation from Huazhong University of Science and Technology [2019kfyXJJS005]
  3. Major Project for Special Technology Innovation of Hubei Province [2019AAA041]

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This article discusses the effects of different boundary conditions on the wet mode frequencies and added damping of marine propellers. The results show that the completely non-penetration boundary condition must be applied to analyze the wet mode frequencies of lightweight propellers, while the first and second boundary conditions overestimate the added damping.
The knowledge of the added mass and damping characteristics induced by the vibration of the propeller in water is important to predict the hydroelastic behavior of the propulsion system. A three-dimensional panel method combined with the finite element method is conducted to analyze the properties of wet modes and added dampings of marine propellers by imposing three different non-penetration boundary conditions. One is imposed on the blade surface of the equilibrium position. The other is named a partly non-penetration boundary condition, which is imposed on the blade surface of real-time vibration position. Only the corrections of the flow velocities that are exerted on the blade surface by the real-time vibration and the equilibrium positions are considered. The third one takes both the correction of the normal vectors and the flow velocities enforced on the blade surface of the real-time vibration and the equilibrium positions into account, and is termed as a completely non-penetration boundary condition. It is observed that the third boundary condition must be applied for analyzing the wet mode frequencies of lightweight propellers, especially for those which have a small blade number. In addition, the added damping is overestimated by applying the first and second boundary conditions.

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