CFD prediction and experimental visualisation of cavitation and its erosion in hydraulic valves

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

Abstract

This article presents an experimentally validated computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model for localising and
quantifying cavitation erosion in oil hydraulic valves using large eddy simulation (LES) turbulence modelling and
the cavitation erosion indices by Nohmi. Cavitation erosion, a significant factor limiting the lifespan and performance of hydraulic valves and pumps, is challenging to simulate accurately due to factors like vapour-gas cavitation
separation, cavitation model parameterisation for mineral oil and accounting for the influence of air. A test rig is
shown that enables an adjustable air content, the separation of gas and vapour cavitation and optical access to the
cavitating valve flow. The visualisation data from this rig was used to parametrise and validate the Zwart–Gerber–
Belamri vapour cavitation model for mineral oil and to include the effect of free air, achieving excellent results. The
model is used to quantify cavitation erosion load, with the cavitation indices accurately reflecting erosion location,
shape and intensity as well as the damping effect of air. The simulation method is suitable for industrial use to
reduce cavitation erosion in hydraulic components by optimising the flow path.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article numberE18
Number of pages23
JournalFlow : applications of fluid mechanics
Volume5 (2025)
Publication statusPublished - 15 May 2025
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

Scopus 105005709846

Keywords

Keywords

  • Air in mineral oil, cavitation, erosion damage, fluid power, hydraulic valve, Air in mineral oil, cavitation, erosion damage, fluid power, hydraulic valve