• Title/Summary/Keyword: CRP ship propulsion

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On the Model Tests for POD Propulsion Ships

  • Go Seokcheon;Seo Heungwon;Chang Bong Jun
    • Journal of Ship and Ocean Technology
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    • v.9 no.1
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    • pp.1-10
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    • 2005
  • The procedures of model test and performance prediction for the CRP-POD propulsion ships, are studied. At the CRP-POD system, which are highly applicable to ultra large container carriers, RPM ratio of two propellers is not fixed, unlike conventional CRP system, and hence the power of each propeller must be predicted respectively. In this paper, a CRP-POD system is designed for 10,000 TEU class ultra large container carriers, and the characteristics of the CRP-POD system are experimentally studied. Finally, based on this study, the procedure of powering performance evaluation for CRP-POD propulsion ships is suggested. However, further studies on quantitative correction of the present procedure are required.

Experimental Study of the Interaction Characteristics for a Marine CRP in LCT (LCT에서 선박용 상호반전 프로펠러 상호작용 특성의 시험적 연구)

  • Ahn, Jong-Woo;Kim, Ki-Sup;Park, Young-Ha;Lee, Chang-Hun
    • Journal of the Society of Naval Architects of Korea
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    • v.54 no.2
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    • pp.125-131
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    • 2017
  • In order to develop test and performance analysis techniques for a CRP propulsion, a CRP dynamometer which can be installed inside the model ship was designed and manufactured. The object ship was the 16000TEU container carrier, which has test results for the single propeller. The design concept of the present CRP is that forward & after propellers have the same power ratio and their RPM ratio is 0.75:1. To begin with, we checked the performance of the CRP dynamometer through the calibration and then installed it inside the model ship. After the model ship setup including the design CRP and the rudder in the Large Cavitation Tunnel(LCT), a series of model tests composed of power ratio check, propeller behind wake(PBW) test, cavitation observation and pressure fluctuation tests was conducted. Through the model test and data analysis for CRP, the experimental technique was established and the improved method for CRP design was suggested.

Numerical investigation of the unsteady flow of a hybrid CRP pod propulsion system at behind-hull condition

  • Zhang, Yuxin;Cheng, Xuankai;Feng, Liang
    • International Journal of Naval Architecture and Ocean Engineering
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    • v.12 no.1
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    • pp.918-927
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    • 2020
  • Flows induced by hybrid CRP pod propulsion systems (CRP-POD) are fundamentally characterized by unsteadiness. This work presents a numerical study on the unsteady flow of a CRP-POD at behind-hull condition based on CFD (Computational Fluid Dynamics). Unsteady RANS method is adopted, coupled with SST k-u turbulence model and sliding mesh method. The propeller thrusts and torques obtained by CFD is validated by model tests and acceptable agreements are obtained. The time histories of shingle-blade loads and pressures near the hull surface are recorded for the analysis of unsteady flow features. The cases of forward propeller alone and aft propeller alone are also computed to distinguish the hull-propeller interaction and propeller-propeller interaction. The results show the blade loads of both forward and aft propellers strongly fluctuate with phase angles. For the forward propeller, the blade load fluctuation is mainly governed by the hull-propeller interaction, while the aft blade load is remarkably affected by the propeller-propeller interaction in terms of the load average and fluctuation pattern. The fields of pressure, vorticity and velocity are also analyzed to reveal the unsteady flow features.

Study on the Contra-Rotating Propeller system design and full-scale performance prediction method

  • Min, Keh-Sik;Chang, Bong-Jun;Seo, Heung-Won
    • International Journal of Naval Architecture and Ocean Engineering
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    • v.1 no.1
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    • pp.29-38
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    • 2009
  • A ship's screw-propeller produces thrust by rotation and, at the same time, generates rotational flow behind the propeller. This rotational flow has no contribution to the generation of thrust, but instead produces energy loss. By recovering part of the lost energy in the rotational flow, therefore, it is possible to improve the propulsion efficiency. The contra-rotating propeller (CRP) system is the representing example of such devices. Unfortunately, however, neither a design method nor a full-scale performance prediction procedure for the CRP system has been well established yet. The authors have long performed studies on the CRP system, and some of the results from the authors' studies shall be presented and discussed.

A compactly integrated cooling system of a combination dual 1.5-MW HTS motors for electric propulsion

  • Le, T.D.;Kim, J.H.;Hyeon, C.J.;Kim, D.K.;Yoon, Y.S.;Lee, J.;Park, Y.G.;Jeon, H.;Quach, H.L.;Kim, H.M.
    • Progress in Superconductivity and Cryogenics
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    • v.18 no.4
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    • pp.25-29
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    • 2016
  • The high temperature superconducting (HTS) contra-rotating propulsion (CRP) systems comprise two coaxial propellers sited on behind the other and rotate in opposite directions. They have the hydrodynamic advantage of recovering the slipstream rotational energy which would otherwise be lost to a conventional single-screw system. However, the cooling systems used for HTS CRP system need a high cooling power enough to maintain a low temperature of 2G HTS material operating at liquid neon (LNe) temperature (24.5 - 27 K). In this paper, a single thermo-syphon cooling approach using a Gifford-McMahon (G-M) cryo-cooler is presented. First, an optimal thermal design of a 1.5 MW HTS motor was conducted varying to different types of commercial 2G HTS tapes. Then, a mono-cryogenic cooling system for an integration of two 1.5 MW HTS motors will be designed and analyzed. Finally, the 3D finite element analysis (FEA) simulation of thermal characteristics was also performed.