scholarly journals Study on the effect of dimple position on drag reduction of high-speed maglev train

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Zhou ◽  
Liliang Wu ◽  
Changda Tan ◽  
Tian'en Hu

Abstract Transient numerical simulations were carried out by placing dimples at the top, sides and bottoms of the tail car streamline area of a high-speed maglev train. The results of an improved delayed detached eddy simulation turbulence model using three-dimensional compressible Navier-Stokes and shear-stress transport K-Omega double equations were compared to the results of a wind tunnel test to verify the numerical simulation accuracy, within 5% of the ground truth, which is an acceptable precision range. The results show that dimples arranged on the streamline area atop the train tail car affected the locations at which the airflow at the top and bottom of the train met and weakened the strength of the wake. The aerodynamic drag and lift coefficient decreased by 3.40% and 4.27%, respectively. When the dimples were arranged on the streamline area at the sides or bottoms of the train tail car, they had little effect on the top of the tail car, so they did not destroy the balance of the airflow at the top and bottom. They also had little influence on the development of wake topology. Therefore, the aerodynamic drag and lift of the train changed little.

Author(s):  
Yeongbin Lee ◽  
Minho Kwak ◽  
Kyu Hong Kim ◽  
Dong-Ho Lee

In this study, the aerodynamic characteristics of pantograph system according to the pantograph cover configurations for high speed train were investigated by wind tunnel test. Wind tunnel tests were conducted in the velocity range of 20∼70m/s with scaled experimental pantograph models. The experimental models were 1/4 scaled simplified pantograph system which consists of a double upper arm and a single lower arm with a square cylinder shaped panhead. The experimental model of the pantograph cover is also 1/4 scaled and were made as 4 different configurations. It is laid on the ground plate which modeled on the real roof shape of the Korean high speed train. Using a load cell, the aerodynamic force such as a lift and a drag which were acting on pantograph system were measured and the aerodynamic effects according to the various configurations of pantograph covers were investigated. In addition, the total pressure distributions of the wake regions behind the panhead of the pantograph system were measured to investigate the variations of flow pattern. From the experimental test results, we checked that the flow patterns and the aerodynamic characteristics around the pantograph systems are varied as the pantograph cover configurations. In addition, it is also found that pantograph cover induced to decrease the aerodynamic drag and lift forces. Finally, we proposed the aerodynamic improvement of pantograph cover and pantograph system for high speed train.


Author(s):  
M. R. Meigounpoory ◽  
A. Rahi ◽  
A. Mirbozorgi

The drag and lift forces acting on a rotating impenetrable spherical suspended nano-particle in a homogeneous uniform flow are numerically studied by means of a three-dimensional numerical simulation with slip boundary condition. The effects of both the slip coefficient and rotational speed of the nanosphere on the drag and lift forces are investigated for Reynolds numbers in the range of 0.1 < Re < 100. Increase of rotation increases the drag and lift force exerted by flow at the surface of nano-sphere. By increasing slip coefficient the values of drag and lift coefficients decreases. At full slip condition, rotation of the nano-sphere has not significant effects on the drag and lift coefficient values moreover the lift coefficient of flow around the rotating spherical particle will be vanished. Present numerical results at no-slip condition are in good agreements with certain results of flow around of rotating sphere.


2021 ◽  
Vol 925 ◽  
Author(s):  
Majid Rodgar ◽  
Hélène Scolan ◽  
Jean-Louis Marié ◽  
Delphine Doppler ◽  
Jean-Philippe Matas

We study experimentally the behaviour of a bubble injected into a horizontal liquid solid-body rotating flow, in a range of rotational velocities where the bubble is close to the axis of rotation. We first study the stretching of the bubble as a function of its size and of the rotation of the cell. We show that the bubble aspect ratio can be predicted as a function of the bubble Weber number by the model of Rosenthal (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 12, 1962, 358–366) provided an appropriate correction due to the impact of buoyancy is included. We next deduce the drag and lift coefficients from the mean bubble position. For large bubbles straddling the axis of rotation, we show that the drag coefficient $C_D$ is solely dependent on the Rossby number $Ro$, with $C_D \approx 1.5/Ro$. In the same limit of large bubbles, we show that the lift coefficient $C_L$ is controlled by the shear Reynolds number $Re_{shear}$ at the scale of the bubble. For $Re_{shear}$ larger than 3000 we observe a sharp transition, wherein large fluctuations in the bubble aspect ratio and mean position occur, and can lead to the break-up of the bubble. We interpret this regime as a resonance between the periodic forcing of the rotating cell and the eigenmodes of the stretched bubble.


Author(s):  
Lingxin Zhang ◽  
Haichao Zhou ◽  
Guolin Wang ◽  
Huiyun Li ◽  
Qingyang Wang

Reducing the aerodynamic drag is one of the most important approaches for the development of energy-saving and environment-friendly automobiles. The tire contour has a great influence on the aerodynamic characteristics of automobiles. The aim of this study is to investigate the influence of the tire contour design parameters on the aerodynamic characteristics around a closed wheel, and obtain the optimized tire contour to reduce the automobile aerodynamic drag. A passenger car tire 185/65R14 was selected to conduct the wind tunnel test, and the surface pressure coefficients were used to validate the simulation model established using the detached eddy simulation (DES) model. To decrease tire drag, and taking the upper sidewall height, the tread radii, the tread width, and the transition arc radius of the shoulder as four design variables of contour, a combination of the Latin hypercube experimental design, the Kriging surrogate model, and the adaptive simulated annealing (ASA) algorithm were used to optimize the tire contour design parameters. The changes of flow field around the tire, including the velocity, turbulent kinetic energy, and pressure field were compared and analyzed for further understanding of the drag reduction mechanism. It is found that the aerodynamic drag coefficient of the optimized tire is reduced by 14.5%, and the aerodynamic coefficient drag of the car using the optimized tire is reduced by 7%. The present results are expected to provide useful information for designing new tire structures and improving the aerodynamic performance of the automobile.


2019 ◽  
Vol 141 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nur Alom ◽  
Ujjwal K. Saha

The elliptical-bladed Savonius wind turbine rotor has become a subject of interest because of its better energy capturing capability. Hitherto, the basic parameters of this rotor such as overlap ratio, aspect ratio, and number of blades have been studied and optimized numerically. Most of these studies estimated the torque and power coefficients (CT and CP) at given flow conditions. However, the two important aerodynamic forces, viz., the lift and the drag, acting on the elliptical-bladed rotor have not been studied. This calls for a deeper investigation into the effect of these forces on the rotor performance to arrive at a suitable design configuration. In view of this, at the outset, two-dimensional (2D) unsteady simulations are conducted to find the instantaneous lift and drag forces acting on an elliptical-bladed rotor at a Reynolds number (Re) = 0.892 × 105. The shear stress transport (SST) k–ω turbulence model is used for solving the unsteady Reynolds averaged Navier–Stokes equations. The three-dimensional (3D) unsteady simulations are then performed which are then followed by the wind tunnel experiments. The drag and lift coefficients (CD and CL) are analyzed for 0–360 deg rotation of rotor with an increment of 1 deg. The total pressure, velocity magnitude, and turbulence intensity contours are obtained at various angles of rotor rotation. For the elliptical-bladed rotor, the average CD, CL, and CP, from 3D simulation, are found to be 1.31, 0.48, and 0.26, respectively. The average CP for the 2D elliptical profile is found to be 0.34, whereas the wind tunnel experiments demonstrate CP to be 0.19.


2013 ◽  
Vol 307 ◽  
pp. 156-160
Author(s):  
Yao Ping Zhang

Because of reducing aerodynamic drag, the maglev train could run at a high-speed in the partial vacuum tube. Scientists of some conutries such as U.S., Swiss and China, have started the research work on high-speed tube trains. In this situation, evacuated tube transportation aerodynamics becomes an important theory research aspect, in which the main study content is how to calculate aerodynamic drag. Based on the explicit formula for estimating aerodynamic drag on moving body in an infinite boundary surroundings put up by Isaac Newton, the evacuated tube surroundings is analyzed and the explicit formula with blockage ratio as an independent variable for estimating aerodynamic drag acted on trains running in the evacuated tube which is a finite space is deduced. With the calculation case, compared with the results came out from the explicit formula got in this paper and the results got by Fluent software, it was found that those results are closed. Thus, the explicit formula created in this paper for conveniently estimating aerodynamic drag based on trains running in evacuated tube transportation is credible.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (5) ◽  
pp. 1601-1608
Author(s):  
Hongjiang Cui ◽  
Shenghui Wu ◽  
Ying Guan

Through the improved delay-detached eddy simulation (IDDES), this paper establishes a 1:1 model for a high-speed train, and simulates the transient state of the train running 600km/h in a vacuum pipeline with the pressure of 1,000Pa. The results show that, following the Ω criteria, a pair of counterrotating vortexes can be captured, which alternatively shed near the tip of the last carriage, and propagate over a long distance along the flow direction. The motion and expansion of the vortexes are clearly three-dimensional (3D). Judging by the physical meaning of vortexes, the high vorticity vortexes mainly concentrate near the tip of the last carriage, while the low vorticity vortexes scatter across the wake zone. The latter vortexes have a low dissipation rate and are dominated by rotation. The turbulent energy and Reynolds stress of the wake field are very obvious near the tip of the last carriage, and attenuate quickly along the flow direction. This means the vortexes near the tip of the last carriage face a strong shear effect, and undergo apparent dissipation. Low turbulent energy and Reynolds stress are distributed in the downstream far from the tip of the last carriage, i.e., the interaction zone between vortexes and the ground / inner pipe wall.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yeteng Wang ◽  
Zhenxu Sun

Abstract In the past few years, considerable attention has been paid to high-speed maglev train in the field of rail transit. The design speed of the high-speed maglev train is 600km/h, which is significantly higher than that of the high-speed train. With the increase in operating speed, high-speed maglev trains have higher requirements for aerodynamic shape. Superior performance, the beautiful aerodynamic shape is an important direction for the development of high-speed maglev trains. Based on the Vehicle Modeling Function (VMF) method, the current research has developed a parametric shape design method suitable for the aerodynamic shape of the maglev train’s nose. This method can obtain different topological structures of the high-speed maglev train’s nose. The current research uses this method to generate four maglev train noses with large appearance differences and uses these train noses to construct four simplified high-speed maglev models. Then this study numerically analyzes the flow fields of different train models and compares the differences in aerodynamic performance including aerodynamic drag, aerodynamic lift and wake characteristics. The Q-criterion is used to study the vortex structure and mechanism of different train wake regions, and the vortex propagation process is studied by turbulence kinetic energy (TKE). Studying the difference in the aerodynamic force of different topological shapes will help to improve the aerodynamic performance of high-speed maglev trains.


2015 ◽  
Vol 1 (8) ◽  
pp. 331
Author(s):  
Naveen Kumar Velagapudi ◽  
Lalit Narayan K. ◽  
L. N. V. Narasimha Rao ◽  
Sri Ram Y.

Now a days demand of a high speed car is increasing in which vehicle stability is of major concern. Forces like drag& lift,weight,side forces and thrust acts on a vehicle when moving on road which significantly effect the fuel consumption The drag force is produced by relative motion between air and vehicle and about 60% of total drag is produced at the rear end. Reduction of drag force at the rear end improves the fuel utilization. This work aims to reduce the drag force which improves fuel utilization and protects environment as well. In the stage of work a sedan car with different types of spoilers are used to reduce the aerodynamic drag force. The design of sedan car has been done on CATIA-2010 and the same is used for analysis in ANSYS-(fluent). The analysis is done for finding out drag and lift forces at different velocities, and spoilers. This study proposes an effective numerical model based on the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) approach to obtain the flow structure around a passenger car with a rear spoiler


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Devang S. Nath ◽  
Prashant Chandra Pujari ◽  
Amit Jain ◽  
Vikas Rastogi

Abstract In this era of fast-depleting natural resources, the hike in fuel prices is ever-growing. With stringent norms over environmental policies, the automotive manufacturers are on a voyage to produce efficient vehicles with lower emissions. High-speed cars are at a stake to provide uncompromised performance but having strict rules over emissions drives the companies to approach through a different route to keep the demands of performance intact. One of the most sought-after ways is to improve the aerodynamics of the vehicles. Drag force is one of the major setbacks when it comes to achieving high speeds when the vehicle is in motion. This research aims to examine the effects of different add on devices on the vehicle to reduce drag and make the vehicle aerodynamically streamlined. A more streamlined vehicle will be able to achieve high speeds and consequently, the fuel economy is also improved. The three-dimensional car model is developed in SOLIDWORKS v17. Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) is performed to understand the effects of these add on devices. CFD is carried out in the ANSYSTM 17.0 Fluent module. Drag Coefficient (CD), Lift Coefficient (CL), Drag Force and Lift Force are calculated and compared in different cases. The result of the simulations were analyzed and it was observed that different devices posed several different functionalities, but maximum drag reduction was found in the case of GT with spoiler and diffuser with a maximum reduction of 16.53%.


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