The Case For Cavitation Induced Heating
The Case For Cavitation Induced Heating
The Case For Cavitation Induced Heating
INDUCED HEATING
A SUGGESTED MECHANISM FOR THE HEATING OBSERVED IN
CONTROLLED CAVITATION ENERGY STEAM GENERATION (CCES)
THE CASE FOR MIST AND
CAVITATION
• Energy balance alone cannot account for the observed levels of heating.
• Heat output cannot exceed hydraulic kinetic energy input.
• Release of hydrogen bonding energy (23KJ/mole) cannot explain the observed heating.
• Electrolysis likely not responsible for observed Oxy Hydrogen disassociation.
• Temperatures above 3000°K required for 50% covalent disassociation.
• Cavitation is the only (non-nuclear) physical process capable of generating such heat levels.
WHAT CAUSES CAVITATION ?
• CAVITATION OCCURS IF THE LOCAL PRESSURE DROPS BELOW THE VAPOR PRESSURE OF THE LIQUID AT LOCAL
TEMPERATURES.
• THE HIGH PRESSURE DROP ACROSS THE INJECTION NOZZLE TENDS TO ACCELERATE THE LIQUID WITHIN THE SMALL
NOZZLE HOLES. THIS ACCELERATION OF LIQUID INSIDE THE NOZZLE THEREBY GENERATES A HIGH LEVEL OF
TURBULENCE, WHICH HAS AN INSTABILITY EFFECT ON THE JET LEAVING THE NOZZLE EXIT.
• AT THE SHARP EDGES INSIDE THE NOZZLE HOLES, SUCH AS THE INLET OF THE NOZZLE HOLE, THE STREAMLINES ARE
CONTRACTED SUCH THAT THE EFFECTIVE CROSS SECTION OF THE FLOW IS REDUCED LEADING TO ACCELERATED
VELOCITY OF THE LIQUID.
• ACCORDING TO BERNOULLI PRINCIPLE, THIS CAUSES A REDUCTION IN THE LOCAL STATIC PRESSURE AND IT CAN REACH
VALUES AS LOW AS THE VAPOR PRESSURE OF THE LIQUID.
FUEL INJECTORS & CAVITATION
• Flow inside injection system and the nozzle is highly unsteady and cavitating
• Ejection fraction is saturated with cavitation bubbles
The kinetic energy of the implosion grows as a cube of the maximum bubble radius Rmax:
E = 4/3 π Rmax3 Pmax (1)
where Rmax – is the maximum bubble radius and Pmax is theliquid pressure during the collapse phase (constant pressure
is assumed).
What makes this energy concentrating process useful is that this energy can be focused onto a minuscule amount of gas
trapped in the initially small (micron-size) gas bubble .From the equation of state for an ideal gas:
P0 V0 = N kB T0 (2)
where P0 – initial bubble gas pressure, V0 = 4/3 π R03 is the initial bubble volume, N – number of atoms of gas in the
bubble, kB – Bolzmann constant, T0 – initial bubble gas temperature, we can estimate maximum energy concentration
per atom of gas (Ea) as