ICET a worldwide
cavitation erosion research project co-ordinated by
|
Dr Janusz Steller, IMP PAN |
Test Panel Members: |
Dr Tadeusz Krzysztofowicz, |
|
Test Secretary: |
Dr
Bolesław Gireń, IMP PAN |
||
Prof. Hartmut Louis, |
|||
Prof.
Marian Mazurkiewicz |
compilation of data on design and operation of existing test rigs,
comparison and correlation of the damage course and cavitation resistance assessments
of selected groups of materials tested under different cavitation conditions,
establishment of relationships between the damage course and the parameters defining
cavitation load conditions,
creation of the basis for further standardisation of the methods used to assess material
resistance to cavitation damage.
No. |
Laboratory |
Contributor |
1. |
Institute
of Water Problems of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences |
|
2. |
China Ship
Scientific Research Centre (CSSRC), Wuxi, China |
|
3. |
Tsinghua
University, Beijing, China |
|
4. |
Technical University of Ostrava (VSB),
Ostrava, Czech Republic |
Jaromir Noskiević1) |
5. |
SIGMA Research Institute, Olomouc, Czech Republic |
|
6. |
VEAG United
Power Plants Co., |
Klaus Junghanß3) |
7. |
University of Hannover,
Hannover, Germany |
|
8. |
KSB AG, Frankenthal, Germany |
Peter Hergt3) |
9. |
Fluid Control
Research Institute (FCRI), Palghat, India |
|
10. |
CISE S.p.A., Milan, Italy |
Remo Martinella4) |
11. |
Hiroshima University, Higashi Hiroshima, Japan |
|
12. |
Institute of
Fluid-Flow Machinery of the Polish Academy of Sciences |
|
13. |
University of Cape Town, Rondebosch,
South Africa |
Anthony Ball6) |
14. |
University of Hull, Hull, United
Kingdom |
|
15. |
The City University, London, United
Kingdom |
1) |
Professor Jaromir Noskievic died in 1997. Following his successor,
Professor Jaroslav Janalik,
nobody continues his cavitation erosion research at the VSB Chair of Hydraulic
Mechanics and Equipment. |
2) |
The SIGMA concern was dissolved in 1990. According
to Dr Alois Koutny all the cavitation erosion test
facilities have been taken over by the ČKD Blansko
Company. Dr A.Koutny is now a managing director of the
LASER-TECH Ltd., Olomouc, Czech Republic. |
3) |
retired |
4) |
The CISE Company does not seem to exist any more. Our numerous attempts to contact Dr R.Martinella or his co-worker, Dr A.Fialdini,
have failed completely. |
5) |
Dr Janusz Steller replaces Professor Kazimierz Steller who died in May 1992. Professor Kazimierz Steller was the ICET initiator and the first
co-ordinator. He was also responsible for providing
all the IMP PAN experimental data. |
6) |
Professor Anthony Ball passed some time after our seminar in 2000. |
general |
commercial
name |
Armco iron |
E04 |
aluminium alloy |
PA2 |
carbon steel |
45 |
acid resistant steel |
1H18N9T |
single-phase brass |
M63 |
polyamide 6 plastics |
tarnamide |
The ICET programme, proposed to the Potential Test Participants, has covered tests on 6
materials listed in the table on the left. Test materials have been selected in
a way providing evident differentiation between their erosion curves - it can
be easily noticed that two of them (Armco iron E04 and aluminium
alloy PA2) are typical reference materials used in numerous erosion tests while
the next three ones (carbon steel 45, stainless steel 1H18N9T, and single phase
brass M63) are structural materials commonly applied in engineering practice.
All the metallic materials were acquired at the CENTROSTAL Steel Storehouse,
the main distributor of metals in Poland while the polyamide 6 plastics was
obtained from the CHEMIPLAST EVG in Gliwice. Chemical composition, heat
treatment conditions and values of some mechanical parameters of metallic
materials as well as are to be found in the ICET documents.
All the Contributing Laboratories have cared by themselves to provide
financial support for experimental tests at their test facilities. Co-ordination
costs were covered by the IMP PAN within the framework of the Central Programme
of Fundamental Research No.02.18 (up to 1990) and the schedule of its statutory
activity (since 1990).
The ICET Seminar has been sponsored by the State Committee for Scientific Research (KBN).
Almost a half of tests were carried out using vibratory rigs .
The vibration frequency of these rigs is usually close to 20 kHz which
corresponds to the ASTM G-32 Standard . An
exception is the IMP PAN lab with a facility
of 8 kHz vibration frequency. Much wider diversity can be noticed in vibration
amplitudes, sizes and mounting methods of test samples. Vibration amplitudes
smaller than those recommended by the ASTM G-32 Standard are often the case ( CSSRC, IWP Bulg.Ac.Sci., University of Hiroshima and Tsinghua University). Counter-samples are applied as a rule in 2 labs (Universities in Cape Town and Hull ). Three further
labs (University of Hiroshima, IWP and the Technical University of Ostrava ) use stationary specimens occasionally. As it is generally known, this
technique enables testing light and brittle materials. Vibrating specimen
buttons are usually screwed in the horn (ASTM G-32 Standard). A specimen is
screwed on the horn in the Czech Republic ( Czechoslovakian standard
CSN-015082-76 ) whereas a mounting
nut (Polish Standard PN-86/H-04427 ) is applied only in the IMP PAN.
Cavitation tunnels involved in the ICET programme show a significant differentiation in the test chamber design. Tests
were conducted in two tunnels with cylindrical cavitator
( the Hohenwarte Pumped Storage Power Plant in Germany and the IWP in Bulgaria), two tunnels with wedge cavitators
( City University, London, and CSSRC,
Wuxi, China) and two tunnels with barricade and counter-barricade systems
(Universities of Hiroshima and Hannover ). The majority of
cavitation tunnels are not used for tests of highly resistant materials.
From among four rotating disks involved in the ICET project, two
facilities are of similar design. Both in the CSSRC and the SIGMA Research Institute (Olomouc, Czech Republic) cavitation has been generated by holes
drilled in the disk upstream of the test samples. Cavitators
in form of cylindrical bolts are applied in the IMP PAN and the KSB laboratory in Frankenthal (Germany). However, the samples are mounted at
the disk in the IMP PAN and on the stagnator vanes in
the KSB lab.
Cavitating jet tests have been
carried out in the FCRI (Palghat,
India) and at the University of Hannover. Both rigs follow exactly the design of Dr A.Lichtarowicz
of the University of Nottingham ( ASTM G134-95 Standard).
It has been only the SIGMA Research Institute which has offered us tests
carried out at a liquid impact device . As it is generally known this kind of a device was widely used in the
past to assess the cavitation erosion resistance of materials.
Main parameters of the test rigs involved in the ICET programme are to be found in the ICET documents.
Test Participants have been asked to conduct erosion tests at least 2
specimens of each kind under specified steady state conditions. As usual, it
was recommended to continue the tests as long as needed in order to attain the
steady-state damage period. It was assumed that the data submitted on the
Measurement Cards would comprise main operating parameters of the facility as
well as tables of mass/volume losses in course of the test, final values of the
mean and maximum depth of pits, data on microhardness
distribution, photographs of damaged surfaces and their metallographic
structure.
Most experimental
results are available through the ICET database. Installation files
of this database are attached to this document and the ICET Preliminary Report
available from the Test Co-ordinator . This report was assumed to form a basis for discussion during the ICET Seminar held on June 1st and 2nd 2000 in the WDW Hotel Complex in Sopot. The
main conclusions following from the test results and the discussions held
during the Seminar will be summarised in the Final
Report to be issued in the beginning of 2001.
Most of the rigs were used to test
all the metallic materials. However, some tests had to be abandoned. In few
cases the Test Co-ordinator was not able to submit
material samples of sufficient size and one cavitation tunnel appeared not
suited for testing highly resistant materials, like carbon steel 45 or
chromium-nickel steel 1H18N9T.
Severe difficulties occurred at
numerous facilities when testing the polyamide 6 (tarnamide)
plastics. Tests had to be abandoned at some vibratory rigs, including those
designed according to the ASTM G-32 standard, as in view of extremely low
density of the tarnamide plastics, there was no
possibility to keep the horn/sample system in resonance at the prescribed
frequency. Due to water absorbing properties of the tarnamide
plastics no mass loss was observed during tests at low cavitation rates.
The scatter in test duration (from
30 minutes for aluminium at the liquid impact rig in
Olomouc up to 365 hours for tarnamide in the
cavitation tunnel in Hiroshima) can be attributed to a very wide spread of
erosion rates. In spite of significant flexibility shown when selecting test
duration, in numerous cases the steady-state period was not attained -
sometimes due to the test having been stopped during the damage rate decrease,
but quite often due to the deceleration period being immediately followed by a
further rise of erosion rate.
Differences in cavitation intensities are manifested by an extremely
wide range of absolute volume losses and mean depth of erosion after a
comparable exposure period (e.g. 1.67 mm3 volume loss and 2.8 mm
erosion depth in an aluminium specimen after a 1400
min test in the CSSRC cavitation tunnel and 1.32 cm3 volume loss and
2 mm erosion depth after a 1200 min test of the same material at the rotating
disk in the IMP PAN lab).
Results of the preliminary analysis
to be found in the ICET documents and other references can be summarised
as follows:
ICET results and related topics were discussed during the ICET Seminar held on June 1st and 2nd 2000 in the WDW Hotel Complex in Sopot seaside resort. The Time Schedule of the Seminar included discussion on the Co-ordinator's Report, oral presentations by the Seminar Participants and workshop meetings. Priority was given to the following items:
Seminar Proceedings are available from the Test Co-ordinator.
1.
Steller J.: International Cavitation Erosion
Test. Test facilities and experimental results, 2eme Journées CAVITATION,
Societé Hydrotechnique de France, Paris 1992
2. Steller J.:
International Cavitation Erosion Test. Survey of test facilities Int. Symp. on Cavitation and Erosion in Hydraulic Structures and
Machinery, Nanjing (China) 1992, pp.51-59
3.
Steller J.: Internationaler Versuch zur
Kavitationserosion. Pump Congress Karlsruhe'92, October 1992, Paper B4-06, Fachgemeinschaft Pumpen im VDMA,
Frankfurt/M. 1992
4.
Matsumura M., Oka Y.I., Sakamoto A.:
Quantitative prediction of erosion damage to metallic materials exposed to
cavitation attack, Proc. 3rd Int. Conf. on Cavitation, Cambridge 1992, pp.81-85
5.
Steller J.: International Cavitation
Erosion Test - summary of results. Proc. 3rd Int. Conf.
on Cavitation, Cambridge 1992, pp. 121-132
6.
Steller J.:
Międzynarodowy Kawitacyjny Test Erozyjny. Wyniki wstępne.[w:] "Problemy
energetyki wodnej ze szczegółowym uwzględnieniem hydraulicznych maszyn
wirnikowych". HYDROFORUM, Sympozjum'91, Wyd. IMP PAN, Gdańsk 1994, s.
177-198
7.
Sakamoto A., Funaki H., Matsumura M.:
Influence of galvanic macro-cells corrosion on the cavitation-erosion. Durability assessment of metallic materials. Wear 186-187(1995)
8. Klein M.: Relationship
database of the International Cavitation Erosion Test. Description of the
EROSION v.2.0/97 application. IMP PAN Int.Rep. no.
562/97 (in Polish)
9.
Steller J.: International Cavitation
Erosion Test and quantitative assessment of material resistance to cavitation. Wear, Vols. 233-235
(1999), pp.51-64
10.
Steller J.: Ocena
odporności kawitacyjnej materiałów konstrukcyjnych w świetle wyników Międzynarodowego
Kawitacyjnego Testu Erozyjnego. [w:] HYDROFORUM 2000, "Hydrauliczne
maszyny wirnikowe w energetyce wodnej i innych działach gospodarki",
Czorsztyn, październik 2000. Materiały Konferencyjne, s.614-626