Water entry behaviour of conical projectiles

This paper is a parametric study of the water-entry problem of plunging projectiles. Four nosecone shapes, namely cylindrical (flat-bottomed), conical, parabolic and power series 0.5, with variations in aspect ratio and mass, were vertically dropped from two different heights. The water entry and su...

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Main Author: Wong, Ji Inn
Other Authors: Daniel New Tze How
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2016
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/67458
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-674582023-03-04T19:04:50Z Water entry behaviour of conical projectiles Wong, Ji Inn Daniel New Tze How School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Aeronautical engineering This paper is a parametric study of the water-entry problem of plunging projectiles. Four nosecone shapes, namely cylindrical (flat-bottomed), conical, parabolic and power series 0.5, with variations in aspect ratio and mass, were vertically dropped from two different heights. The water entry and subsequent cavitation were captured by a high-speed camera. The projectiles were tracked, and the velocity and displacement results normalised and analysed. Comparisons were made between the projectiles at different conditions for output data of velocity, trajectory stability, cavity closure and cavity growth characteristics. It was found that the cylindrical projectiles had the lowest normalised speed but the best stability as compared to the other projectiles. The conical projectile’s velocity attenuated at a faster rate than the parabolic and power series 0.5 projectiles. Increasing the water-entry speed increased stability but decreased the normalised speed in water. A larger mass increased the stability of the projectiles as well as normalised speed, but the latter was more pronounced only for the cylindrical projectile. Lastly, increasing the aspect ratio increased the deceleration of the projectiles but provided more stability. It can be seen that trade-offs exist between velocity and trajectory stability, and the reasons can mostly be derived from the cavitation characteristics. Suggestions for improvements and future work to be done were also provided in this report. Bachelor of Engineering (Aerospace Engineering) 2016-05-17T03:25:39Z 2016-05-17T03:25:39Z 2016 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/67458 en Nanyang Technological University 59 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Aeronautical engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Aeronautical engineering
Wong, Ji Inn
Water entry behaviour of conical projectiles
description This paper is a parametric study of the water-entry problem of plunging projectiles. Four nosecone shapes, namely cylindrical (flat-bottomed), conical, parabolic and power series 0.5, with variations in aspect ratio and mass, were vertically dropped from two different heights. The water entry and subsequent cavitation were captured by a high-speed camera. The projectiles were tracked, and the velocity and displacement results normalised and analysed. Comparisons were made between the projectiles at different conditions for output data of velocity, trajectory stability, cavity closure and cavity growth characteristics. It was found that the cylindrical projectiles had the lowest normalised speed but the best stability as compared to the other projectiles. The conical projectile’s velocity attenuated at a faster rate than the parabolic and power series 0.5 projectiles. Increasing the water-entry speed increased stability but decreased the normalised speed in water. A larger mass increased the stability of the projectiles as well as normalised speed, but the latter was more pronounced only for the cylindrical projectile. Lastly, increasing the aspect ratio increased the deceleration of the projectiles but provided more stability. It can be seen that trade-offs exist between velocity and trajectory stability, and the reasons can mostly be derived from the cavitation characteristics. Suggestions for improvements and future work to be done were also provided in this report.
author2 Daniel New Tze How
author_facet Daniel New Tze How
Wong, Ji Inn
format Final Year Project
author Wong, Ji Inn
author_sort Wong, Ji Inn
title Water entry behaviour of conical projectiles
title_short Water entry behaviour of conical projectiles
title_full Water entry behaviour of conical projectiles
title_fullStr Water entry behaviour of conical projectiles
title_full_unstemmed Water entry behaviour of conical projectiles
title_sort water entry behaviour of conical projectiles
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/67458
_version_ 1759856481937653760