Numerical analysis of propellers for electric boats using computational fluid dynamics modelling
Lovibond, O; Elbarghthi, AFA; Dvorak, V; et al.Wen, C
Date: 7 January 2023
Article
Journal
Energy Conversion and Management: X
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher DOI
Abstract
In the maritime industry, propellers are the most commonly used form of propulsion and are core to the optimum
performance of a ship. Generally, the performance characteristics of a marine propeller are determined and
analysed by experiments like open water and self-propulsion scale model tests which are costly and timeconsuming at ...
In the maritime industry, propellers are the most commonly used form of propulsion and are core to the optimum
performance of a ship. Generally, the performance characteristics of a marine propeller are determined and
analysed by experiments like open water and self-propulsion scale model tests which are costly and timeconsuming at the initial design stage. In this study, the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations were
performed to evaluate propeller performance. Three Wageningen B-series propellers with varying Expanded Area
Ratios (EAR) were modelled with respect to the design constraints, such as ship speed and rotational velocity.
The performance of the hydrodynamic coefficients, thrust, torque and open water efficiency are then analysed
using the CFD modelling. These characteristics are then validated against experimental data obtained from the
Netherlands Ship Model Basin open water test in Wageningen and used to investigate the flow behaviour. The
analysis considers the Multiple Reference Frame (MRF) model. This study provided a well-founded framework
for applying CFD in the analysis and selection of Wageningen B-series propellers, as well as investigated the
relationship between the EAR, flow behaviour, thrust coefficient, and torque coefficient for electric boats. The
results show that a lower thrust and torque coefficient can improve the flow behaviour with increasing the efficiency by up to 62%. Furthermore, the outcomes reveal that the lower expanded area ratio of 0.6 is more
suitable for electric boats, creating a larger pressure difference of 1.079 MPa and generating extra potential
thrust at the same advance ratio, which leads to greater open water efficiency.
Engineering
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's licence is described as © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).