3.1. Analysis of the Characteristic Curve
The PAT’s working conditions were not steady during its operation, and the flow rate and pressure conditions continued to change over time. Therefore, the PAT’s energy conversion efficiency was also constantly changing under the unsteady working conditions. Chalghoum et al. concluded that the transient characteristics of a centrifugal pump during the starting period are influenced by the valve opening percentage and the starting time [
18]. Wu et al. controlled the flow rate to increase linearly to simulate the rapid opening process of the pump, in which the acceleration effect of the increase in flow rate and the transient effect of the vortics revolution have significant impacst on the performance of the pump [
15]. Based on the research above for the transient flow conditions, the flow was controlled to increase linearly, and the corresponding time was limited within 1 s, thereby simulating the process of rapid changes in the inlet flow. Additionally, this research compared transient flow conditions with constant flow conditions.
The characteristic curve of the linear flow valve used in the PAT system is shown in
Figure 9. When the linear flow valve was adjusted, its characteristic curve and opening curve often presented a trend of upward or downward change, and its comprehensive trend was approximately linear. By controlling the valve opening to increase proportionally with time, the inlet flow rate of the PAT can be changed in an almost linear fashion. To facilitate the simulation of changes in flow, we regarded this factor as an approximately linear change in the numerical simulation.
Table 3 shows four sets of working conditions, among which Condition 1 corresponds to a group of stable condition points. In this group, the PAT operated at a constant speed (2900 rpm), and a constant flow rate for each condition point. The average values of the PAT’s pressure and torque were obtained over six cycles, and then the transient characteristic curve for the new stable working conditions group was obtained, with the flow rate as the scale. At this time, the rate of flow change was regarded as 0. Conditions 2–4 correspond to transient flow conditions under different increase rates of flow, and the flow change rule is graphically represented in
Figure 10. For these three working conditions, the other set conditions were identical to those in the stable working conditions group, but the flow rate linearly increased under the operation range.
The characteristic curves for the four groups of working conditions are shown in
Figure 11. The characteristic curves for the three transient flow conditions were very similar, and there was a gap between them and the curve for the stable conditions.
Figure 11a shows that the shaft power number for the stable working conditions was always higher than for the transient working conditions. Among them, the values of shaft power for Conditions 3 and 4 were higher than for Condition 2, when the flow rate was low. As the flow rate continued to increase, the change in torque for Condition 3 was consistent with that for Condition 2, and when the flow for Condition 4 increased to 0.875 Q
d, its torque became smaller than for the other working conditions.
Figure 11b shows the head number change trend for each group of working conditions. Among them, the head number for Condition 2 was always lower than for the stable working conditions, and it maintained good stability, while the head number values for Conditions 3 and 4 in the low flow range were higher than for Conditions 1 and 2. As the flow increased, Conditions 3 and 4 converged with Condition 2 near the design flow and remained consistent thereafter.
Figure 11c shows the efficiency curve for each set of working conditions. The error was the accumulation of the power number and the head number. As the flow rate increased, the efficiency curves for the variable working conditions gradually deviated from those of the stable working conditions. The higher efficiency curve, that is, the characteristic curve under stable working conditions, was ideal. If the flow rate changed slowly, the efficiency in the middle and high flow ranges would be higher, and would always be lower than for the stable conditions. Under transient flow conditions, the efficiency changes in the low flow range were very chaotic and had no obvious periodicity. The efficiencies for the three transient flow conditions were significantly lower than the efficiency for the stable conditions. This may have occurred because of the turbine stall phenomenon under low flow rate conditions. As the flow rate increased to 0.75 Q
d, the efficiency changes for the transient flow conditions began to show periodicity. Additionally, Conditions 2 to 4 began to show different efficiency changes, that is, a greater increase in rate of flow led to lower efficiencies. At Q
d, the efficiencies for all the conditions reached the maximum values and showed the same slow decline trends after surpassing the design flow rate. When the rate of flow increase was less than or equal to 70 kg/s
2, the PAT’s efficiency change trend was very close to the stable conditions trend, with no large differences.
3.2. Analysis of PAT’s Internal Flow Field
The differences between the characteristic curves for the transient flow conditions and constant flow conditions were identified, which were caused by differences between the internal flow fields for each set of working conditions. An analysis and a comparison of the impeller’s internal flow field for different working conditions was conducted to study the reasons for the differences between the characteristic curves.
The pressure is expressed by the pressure coefficient, which is expressed as follows:
In this equation, is the pressure at the monitoring point, is the reference pressure, and is the peripheral speed at the impeller inlet.
A static pressure cloud diagram of the impeller channel’s radial section is shown in
Figure 12. As the flow rate increased, the static pressure in the impeller gradually decreased, indicating that the turbine had a relatively weak ability to transform and utilize pressure energy at low flow rates. The conversion of pressure energy in the impeller’s flow channel increased as the flow rate increased, and the low-pressure area at the impeller’s outlet rapidly expanded, occupying the entire flow channel after the design flow rate was exceeded.
Next, the static pressure cloud maps for the four working conditions were compared for the same flow rate. When the flow rate was 0.5 Q
d, a greater increase in the rate of flow led to smaller high pressure zones at the inlet of the impeller’s suction surface, as well as more densely distributed pressure contours. This indicated greater inlet and outlet pressure gradients. A larger pressure gradient indicated that there was a larger pressure difference between the inlet and outlet of the impeller. For this reason, the head numbers for Conditions 3 and 4 in
Figure 11b were larger than those for Conditions 1 and 2. For the flow rates Q
d and 1.25 Q
d, there were no obvious differences between the pressure distributions for each group of working conditions. This phenomenon was consistent with the head number change trends for the high flow rate in
Figure 11b.
Figure 13 presents the turbulent kinetic energy distributions and streamline distributions for the PAT impeller’s radial section. When the flow rate was 0.5 Q
d, the streamline distribution in the impeller was chaotic, and there were large vortices in the flow channel. There were high turbulent kinetic energy regions at the impeller’s inlet. The streamlines in the impeller’s flow area for Q
d were uniformly distributed, without obvious high turbulent kinetic energy regions. However, there was a secondary flow near the pressure surface, which may have been caused by the fluid impacting the blades and causing the flow direction to change. A weak vortex cluster appeared at the entrance of the blade’s suction surface, and there was a small area of high turbulent kinetic energy, which may have been caused by inconsistencies in the blade’s placement angle and the inlet velocity. The distribution of these turbulent kinetic energy regions presented an interesting characteristic: no vortex was generated at the entrance of the blade’s suction surface in the flow channel near the tongue, rather, a vortex was generated in the flow channel far from the tongue. At 1.25 Q
d, the streamline distribution was relatively regular. However, the weak vortex at the entrance of the suction surface expanded rapidly when the flow rate increased and occupied nearly half of the flow channel. The vortex’s turbulent flow energy at 1.25 Q
d was also higher than that at Q
d and 0.5 Q
d, the transfer of fluid energy was seriously hindered, and the turbine’s efficiency was affected. As shown in
Figure 11c, the result of the continuous development of the vortex cluster at this location led to a gradual decrease in the turbine’s energy conversion efficiency after the flow rate exceeded the design flow rate.
Figure 14 shows the turbulent kinetic energy distributions for the PAT’s meridian section. At 0.5 Q
d, there was a high turbulent kinetic energy at the impeller’s inlet, where the large vortex area blocked the channel. A larger increase in rate of flow led to a larger vortex cluster at the entrance and more chaotic streamlines at the exit, but the turbulent kinetic energy was evenly distributed without obvious energy loss. At Q
d, there were large vortex clusters for each set of working conditions at the junction of the flow channel exits, and there were also high turbulent kinetic energy regions at this junction. Comparing the four groups of working conditions, the working conditions with the greater increase in rate of flow had larger areas of high turbulent kinetic energy at the junction. This phenomenon corresponds to
Figure 11c: for Conditions 1 to 4, greater flow rate increases led to lower maximum efficiencies. At 1.25 Q
d, the flow channel was filled with regions of high turbulent kinetic energy, and the streamline distributions were somewhat uneven. Comparing the four groups of unsteady working conditions, the working conditions with larger flow rate increases led to the flow channel having smaller high turbulence kinetic energy regions. This difference illustrates the phenomenon in
Figure 11c. Although the highest efficiency point for Condition 4 was lower than that for other working conditions, as the flow rate increased, its efficiency declined the most slowly.
3.3. Stability Impact
A different increase in the rate of flow had different effects on the PAT’s hydraulic performance. When the rate was less than 70 kg/s
2, the instantaneous efficiency change almost followed the efficiency curve for the steady conditions. Hydraulic performance is an important feature of PAT operation. It is also extremely important to study a PAT’s stability for various working conditions. This study used the sliding mesh method to simulate the turbine’s variable-condition operation, monitor the x-direction and y-direction fluid forces on the entire impeller, and obtain the runner’s overall radial force vector through synthesis.
In Equation (14), and are the components of the radial force in the x- and y-directions, respectively, is the total radial force.
Figure 15a presents a polar diagram of the blade’s radial force under constant flow conditions. For 0.5 Q
d, the turbulent flow field inside the impeller runner caused the blade’s radial force to be large and change irregularly. For Q
d, the internal flow field was relatively stable, and the radial force was slightly larger than for 0.5 Q
d and presented a certain periodicity. When the flow rate increased to 1.25 Q
d, the radial force continued to increase with increases in the flow rate, and it presented an obvious periodic change law, that is, there were six obvious fluctuations during a single rotation period.
Figure 15b,c shows polar diagrams for the blade’s radial force under transient flow conditions. When the flow increased from 0.5 Q
d to Q
d, the impeller’s radial force decreased continuously and gradually presented a periodic change law. When Q
d increased to 1.25 Q
d, the radial force for each set of working conditions gradually increased and had an obvious fluctuation law, and the working conditions with slower flow rate increases had larger blade radial force values. Compared with the constant flow condition, the radial force value of the transient flow conditions shows an obvious trend of first decreasing, and then increasing.
The solid lines in
Figure 16 represent the instantaneous change curves of the impeller’s axial force under transient flow conditions, and the dashed lines represent the axial force under different constant flow rates. The runner’s axial force was positively correlated with the flow rate, and as the flow rate increased, the axial force increased more drastically. Different flow rate increases had a weaker impact on the axial force, indicating that the axial force was primarily related to the flow rate. At 0.5 Q
d, the axial forces for the transient flow conditions were close to those of the constant flow rate conditions. The axial force for a set of conditions with a larger flow rate increase was also slightly larger, but with increases in the flow rate, the axial force for different growth rate conditions gradually converged. For a constant Q
d, the axial force was significantly greater than for transient flow conditions, and the corresponding axial force values for each condition under 1.25 Q
d were nearly equal. However, the fluctuations in the axial force for all conditions shared a common trend: the axial force fluctuated violently at low flow rates. At flow rates near Q
d, the fluctuations became gentle, then, as flow rate increased, the axial force amplitude increased again.
Figure 13 shows that the suction surface at the inlet of the impeller runner began to form a weak vortex near Q
d, which then developed and blocked the runner as the flow rate increased. The growth of this vortex is the reason the axial force gradually fluctuated away from stability.
Pressure pulsations in the turbine impact the safe and stable operation of the equipment. They are usually caused by random pressure pulsations caused by unstable secondary flow, backflow, wakes, vortexes, and cavitation; the pulsation of the rotor rotation, and the pulsation of the channel rotation. As shown in
Figure 17, a series of monitoring points, P1–P8, were set in the turbine’s volute to effectively monitor the pressure pulsation distribution in the flow member.
Figure 18 shows the pressure pulsations under stable working conditions. Affected by the rotor’s periodic rotation, the pressures at the monitoring points in the volute experienced 12 peaks and troughs in two cycles, and the pressure pulsation changes during each cycle were similar. As the fluid flowed counterclockwise in the volute channel, from P8 to P1, the value of the average pressure and the amplitude of its pulsation continued to increase, indicating that a volute channel with a smaller cross-section can form greater pressure fluctuations. For 0.5 Q
d, the average pressure of each monitoring point was relatively close, but as the flow increased to Q
d and 1.25 Q
d, there was a big difference between the average pressure of each monitoring point.
Figure 19 shows the pressure pulsations for the three sets of transient flow conditions. The relative pressure pulsation laws for each monitoring point were consistent with those of the stable conditions: the narrower the flow channel, the greater the pressure fluctuation. On the other hand, when the flow rate increased with time, the pressure amplitude at each monitoring point followed a consistent dynamic law: the pressure amplitude first decreased with increasing flow, then reached a minimum in the middle flow interval, and finally increased with increasing flow. However, there were subtle differences for the three transient flow conditions. The flow interval corresponding to the minimum pressure amplitude for Condition 2 was approximately 0.81 Q
d, while the flow intervals corresponding to Conditions 3 and 4 were nearly 0.89 Q
d and Q
d, respectively. That is, as the flow rate increased, the most stable pressure pulsation’s flow range in the turbine volute also increased to the high flow region.