Ryota Fujiwara
University of Tokushima
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Featured researches published by Ryota Fujiwara.
IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science | 2012
Yasuyuki Nishi; Junichiro Fukutomi; Ryota Fujiwara
Single-blade centrifugal pumps are widely used as sewage pumps. However, a large radial thrust acts on a single blade during pump operation because of the geometrical axial asymmetry of the impeller. This radial thrust causes vibrations of the pump shaft, reducing the service life of bearings and shaft seal devices. Therefore, to ensure pump reliability, it is necessary to quantitatively understand the radial thrust and clarify the behavior and generation mechanism. This study investigated the radial thrust acting on two kinds of single-blade centrifugal impellers having different blade outlet angles by experiments and computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis. Furthermore, the radial thrust was modeled by a combination of three components, inertia, momentum, and pressure, by applying an unsteady conservation of momentum to this impeller. As a result, the effects of the blade outlet angle on both the radial thrust and the modeled components were clarified. The total head of the impeller with a blade outlet angle of 16 degrees increases more than the impeller with a blade outlet angle of 8 degrees at a large flow rate. In this case, since the static pressure of the circumference of the impeller increases uniformly, the time-averaged value of the radial thrust of both impellers does not change at every flow rate. On the other hand, since the impeller blade loading becomes large, the fluctuation component of the radial thrust of the impeller with the blade outlet angle of 16 degrees increases. If the blade outlet angle increases, the fluctuation component of the inertia component will increase, but the time-averaged value of the inertia component is located near the origin despite changes in the flow rate. The fluctuation component of the momentum component becomes large at all flow rates. Furthermore, although the time-averaged value of the pressure component is almost constant, the fluctuation component of the pressure component becomes large at a large flow rate. In addition to the increase of the fluctuation component of this pressure component, because the fluctuation component of the inertia and momentum components becomes large (as mentioned above), the radial thrust increases at a large flow rate, as is the case for the impeller with a large blade outlet angle.
ASME-JSME-KSME 2011 Joint Fluids Engineering Conference: Volume 1, Symposia – Parts A, B, C, and D | 2011
Yasuyuki Nishi; Junichiro Fukutomi; Ryota Fujiwara
Abstract Single-blade centrifugal pumps are widely used as sewage pumps. However, the impeller of a single-blade pump is subjected to strong radial thrust during pump operation because of the geometrical axial asymmetry of the impeller. Therefore, to improve pump reliability, it is necessary to quantitatively understand radial thrust and elucidate the behavior and mechanism of thrust generating. This study investigates the radial thrust acting up on a single-blade centrifugal impeller by conducting experiments and CFD analysis. The results show that the fluctuating component of radial thrust increases as the flow rate deviates from the design flow rate to low or high value. Radial thrust was modeled by a combination of three components, inertia, momentum, and pressure by applying an unsteady conservation of momentum to the impeller. The sum of these components agrees with the radial thrust calculated by integrating the pressure and the shearing stress on the impeller surface. The behavior of each component was shown, and the effects of each component on radial thrust were clarified. The pressure component has the greatest effect on the time-averaged value and the fluctuating component of radial thrust. The time-averaged value of the inertia component is nearly 0, irrespective of the change in the flow rate. However, its fluctuating component has a magnitude nearly comparable with the pressure component at a low flow rate and slightly decreased with the increase in flow rate.
Journal of Fluid Science and Technology | 2009
Yasuyuki Nishi; Ryota Fujiwara; Junichiro Fukutomi
Transactions of the Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers. B | 2009
Yasuyuki Nishi; Ryota Fujiwara; Junichiro Fukutomi
Transactions of the Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers. B | 2010
Yasuyuki Nishi; Ryota Fujiwara; Junichiro Fukutomi
Transactions of the Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers. B | 2009
Yasuyuki Nishi; Ryota Fujiwara; Junichiro Fukutomi
Transactions of the Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers. B | 2009
Yasuyuki Nishi; Ryota Fujiwara; Junichiro Fukutomi
The proceedings of the JSME annual meeting | 2009
Yoshikado Hotta; Ryota Fujiwara; Yasuyuki Nishi; Junichiro Fukutomi; Toru Shigemitsu
The Proceedings of the Fluids engineering conference | 2009
Yasuyuki Nishi; Ryota Fujiwara; Yoshikado Hotta; Junichiro Fukutomi; Toru Shigemitsu
The proceedings of the JSME annual meeting | 2008
Ryota Fujiwara; Yasuyuki Nishi; Junichiro Fukutomi; Toru Shigemitsu