ASYMPTOTIC MULTIPLE-SCALES ANALYSIS OF HYDRAULIC TRANSIENTS IN ELASTIC AND VISCOELASTIC PRESSURIZED CONDUITS
Date
2017-08-24T12:35:41Z
Authors
Yao, Yue (Edward)
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Abstract
The hydraulic transient phenomenon known as water hammer has a long history [35].
To date, only relatively simple cases have been studied analytically among the numerous
publications. In this research, a formal asymptotic wave attenuation form is found
for each of three water hammer models, i.e., the classic model, an unsteady friction
model, and a generalized Kelvin-Voight model. Explicit dependence of pressure-wave
attenuation on lumped parameters is found and a deeper and more direct understanding
of the water hammer phenomenon is obtained that is unavailable from numerical
methods. Firstly, (Yao et al. [99], Chapter 4), water hammer is treated for variable
valve-closure time using a momentum equation extended to partially developed turbulence
(Hansen et al. [43] 1995, [42] 2011). A closed-form pressure-wave attenuation,
found via multiple-scales asymptotics, is useful over much longer times than previous
ad hoc results (Tijsseling et al. [52] 2000). Numerical validation of analytical results
is obtained using the method of characteristics and convergence verified through a
time and space grid reductions. Experimental validation was not considered. The
contribution includes: (i) understanding of parametric dependence of pressure-wave
attenuation, (ii) capacity to handle time-varying closure cases which is currently unavailable,
and (iii) validity in case of flow reversals given uniform fluid movement.
Secondly, (Yao et al. [98], Chapter 5), an unsteady friction model introduced by
Brunone et al. [16] 1990 to account for turbulence, is considered. An extension of
Chapter 4 is used to find the wave attenuation form. Increased attenuation due to unsteady
friction is reduced to a single time-dependent exponential factor involving the
product of Brunone’s unsteady-friction parameters. The numerical solution, found
as before, was used to verify analytic results. Model parameters chosen to match
experimental results (Bergant et al. [8]) were used here. The analytic form surprisingly
predicts that the steady viscous extension (Hansen et al. [42] 2011), accounting
for partially developed turbulence, provides an equally viable explanation for the increased
pressure-wave attenuation given a weak spatial dependence. Finally, (Yao
et al. [100], Chapter 6), the multiple-scales method (Chapters 4 and 5) is further
extended to water hammer in viscoelastic pipe modelled using a Kelvin-Voight representation.
Pipe plasticity is found to increase the pressure wave attenuation rate via
a third time scale driven by weak strain-rate feedback. A Preissmann weighted fourpoint
box-scheme (Weinerowska-Bords [90] 2006) is used to obtain numerical solutions
to the mathematical model. The analytic work is validated by matching to a numerical
solution matched to experimental data (Mitosec et al. [59]). This contribution
includes: (i) resolution of an outstanding paradox (Weinerowska-Bords [90] 2006) involving
an order of magnitude mismatch between predicted Kelvin-Voight parameters
and those required to match numerical and experimental data, and (ii) introduction
of a novel classification method for the prediction of the scale of lumped-parameters
without access to experimental data. Both (i) and (ii) predict that this work will be
useful in the planning and design phases of experiment and field installations.
Description
Keywords
Water hammer, Nonlinear, Pressure wave attenuation, Varying valve closure time, Multiple scales analysis, Flow reversals, Brunone unsteady friction, Weak spatial dependence, Parameter estimation, Polymer, Kelvin-Voight, Weak strain-rate feedback