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Performance enhancement of a vortex ring thruster by adopting the Coanda effect

A vortex ring thruster (VRT) is a propulsion device in which a piston pushes fluid and thrusts it in reaction. As the fluid inside a VRT is moving, the boundary layer near the wall at the edge of the exit surface of a VRT separates and rolls up into a vortex ring. In this paper, we performed perform...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of marine science and technology 2024-09, Vol.29 (3), p.683-695
Main Authors: Seok, Woochan, Heo, Young Min, Rhee, Shin Hyung
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:A vortex ring thruster (VRT) is a propulsion device in which a piston pushes fluid and thrusts it in reaction. As the fluid inside a VRT is moving, the boundary layer near the wall at the edge of the exit surface of a VRT separates and rolls up into a vortex ring. In this paper, we performed performance analysis on a regular VRT and a VRT enhanced by the Coanda effect (hereafter referred to as a CoVoRT) on axisymmetric geometry. A CoVoRT consists of two jets: a primary jet and a Coanda jet. The primary jet has a relatively large volume flow rate compared to the Coanda jet, and the Coanda jet attracts the surrounding fluid by flowing along the curved surface at a relatively small flow rate. The present study evaluates the propulsion performance in two ways using SNUFOAM. This software was developed based on OpenFOAM, which is an open-source computational fluid dynamics (CFD) toolkit and specialized for naval hydrodynamics. The first one quantifies the propulsion performance by calculating the ratio of energy input and energy output generated by two jets during a stroke of the piston motion. The second one is to observe the evolution and pinch-off process of a vortex ring with formation time, which is a non-dimensional time scale. The comparison of propulsion performance was conducted with changes in the curvature of the Coanda jet, changes in the length of the Coanda jet exit, and changes in the Coanda jet velocity and piston stroke ratio. For quantitative evaluation of propulsion performance, the propulsion performance evaluation index (PPEI) was introduced. The results showed that the PPEI of a CoVoRT was improved by about 50% compared to that of a VRT, and it was confirmed that the dynamic characteristics of a CoVoRT’s vortex ring were superior to those of a VRT in terms of propulsion performance.
ISSN:0948-4280
1437-8213
DOI:10.1007/s00773-024-01014-2