As an important option for energy storage projects, pumping stations can also generate electricity when the upstream has surplus water and the pump system operates as a turbine (PAT mode). When it switches from pump mode to PAT mode, the pump operation state changes significantly. This study adopts a numerical simulation to investigate the flow characteristics, time-frequency domain performance and chaotic features of pressure pulsation in a vertical mixed-flow pump device when it operates in different PAT modes. The results show that, when the pump operates in PAT mode, the flow in the straight passage remains smooth, but it deteriorates in the elbow-shaped draft tube, such as developing a spiral stream in the straight section, a disordered stream in the elbow section, and vortexes and flow separation at the beginning of the diffuser section, but it gradually becomes smooth after passing through the diffuser section. Under low-head PAT conditions, circumferential circulation cross flow occurs at the impeller inlet, reducing energy conversion efficiency. Under all PAT conditions, the flow on the blade surface near the hub is stable, but obvious vortexes happen near the shroud. As the head increases, the small-scale vortexes disappear on the mid-blade surface, and the flow becomes smoother on the blade surface near the shroud of the impeller. Except at the impeller outlet, pressure pulsation of the monitoring probes exhibits clear periodicity, with dominant frequencies corresponding to the rotational frequency, and its amplitudes decreasing from shroud to hub. Pressure pulsation under all PAT conditions is chaotic, and phase trajectories exhibit ring-shaped structures consisting of the ring circle and the ring surface. Differences in the circle spacing, size, and spatial position of the ring circle phase locus and ring surface phase locus are observed, and these variations are closely related to the PAT conditions. A correlative relationship exists between the chaotic correlation dimension and flow performance, which is of great significance for the condition monitoring and fault diagnosis of pump units. These findings not only enrich the theoretical research on the PAT mode of pumps, but also provide a reference for similar engineering applications and offer new insights into condition monitoring of hydraulic machinery.
Luo et al. (Fri,) studied this question.