The cavitation water jet cleaning and coating removal technique represents an innovative sustainable method for cleaning and removing coatings, with the nozzle serving as a crucial component of this technology. Developing an artificially submerged nozzle with a reliable structure and excellent cavitation performance is essential for enhancing cavitation water jets' cleaning and coating removal efficacy in an atmosphere environment (non-submerged state). This study is based on the shear flow cavitation mechanism of an angular nozzle, the resonance principle of an organ pipe, and the jet pump principle. A dual-nozzle co-current cavitation water jet nozzle structure was designed and manufactured. The impact of the nozzle's inlet pressure on the vapor volume percentage, as well as the axial and radial velocities inside the flow field, were examined utilizing ANSYS Fluent software with the CFD method. The dynamic change rule of the cavitation cloud is derived by analyzing the picture of the cavitation cloud in the nozzle's outflow field utilizing pseudo-color imaging techniques. The results show that the maximum vapor volume percentage is more significant than 95% for different inlet pressures in the internal nozzle. The changes that occur in the cavitation cloud exhibit notable regularity, including the four stages of cavitation, which are inception, development, shedding, and collapse. A change period is 1.5 ms, which proves that the homemade co-current cavitation water jet nozzle can achieve good cavitation effects.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma18010146 | DOI Listing |
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