Drag Reduction and Efficiency Enhancement in Wide-Range Electric Submersible Centrifugal Pumps via Bio-Inspired Non-Smooth Surfaces: A Combined Numerical and Experimental Study
Abstract
Featured Application
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Numerical Model
2.2. Experimental System
- Flow measurement: Electromagnetic flowmeter (accuracy: 0.5% FS).
- Pressure measurement: Two dynamic pressure sensors (range: 0–1 MPa, accuracy: 0.1%) installed at both the inlet and outlet.
- Speed monitoring: Optical encoder (resolution: 0.1°).
3. Results
3.1. Simulation
3.1.1. Design of Non-Smooth Structure Parameters
- Flow-Dependent Head Enhancement: Maximum head gain of 12.98% occurred at 150 m3/d, representing a 515% increase compared to the 2.11% improvement at 50 m3/d.
- Consistent Efficiency Trends: Efficiency gains mirrored head improvements, with 8.55% enhancement at 150 m3/d versus 1.88% at 50 m3/d.
- Nonlinear Size-Performance Relationship: The d = 0.9 mm configuration achieved synchronized optimization at 150 m3/d, delivering 12.98% head gain and 8.55% efficiency improvement over the baseline, validating the engineering applicability of the theoretical optimal diameter.
3.1.2. Simulation Analysis of Non-Smooth Structure Arrangement
- Performance Degradation in Scheme B: At 150 m3/d, Scheme B achieved only a 4.47% head gain, representing a 65.56% reduction compared to Scheme A (12.98%).
- Marginal Benefits of Dual-Region Optimization: Scheme C provided merely a 2.55-percentage-point head improvement over Scheme A, with efficiency gain differences below 1.5%.
- Dominant Role of Pressure Surface Trailing Edge: Dimples on the pressure surface trailing edge exhibited superior contributions to both head and efficiency enhancements.
3.2. Experiment
4. Discussion
- Simplification of anisotropic wall roughness modeling: Actual pump wall roughness exhibits anisotropy, whereas simulations adopt an isotropic model. This simplification underestimates turbulent dissipation, leading to inaccurate boundary layer predictions. At low flow rates, boundary layer separation exhibits heightened sensitivity to roughness anisotropy; neglecting this effect results in underestimated frictional losses and consequently overpredicted efficiency. Furthermore, the isotropic assumption causes overpredicted head at high flow rates (where actual head is lower due to greater frictional losses), despite enhanced hydrodynamic influence of the bionic non-smooth surfaces.
- Microstructural defects in 3D-printed components: Layer lines, pores, and other printing-induced defects increase surface roughness and induce unintended vortices, reducing actual efficiency. This effect is particularly pronounced for bionic non-smooth impellers: the 0.9 mm radius of dimple structures approaches the ±0.15 mm printing tolerance, rendering experimental specimens highly susceptible to surface defects that persistently reduce efficiency below simulated values.
- Random deviations from flowmeter/pressure sensor calibration errors and mechanical vibrations.
- Wear Resistance Evaluation: Investigating material coatings or hybrid surface textures to enhance durability in abrasive environments.
- Multi-Objective Optimization: Integrating machine learning with CFD to explore synergistic effects of dimple parameters (depth, spacing, distribution) and alternative bio-inspired geometries (e.g., riblets, hierarchical structures).
- Field-Scale Validation: Testing optimized impellers in real-world offshore conditions to assess performance under variable oil–water ratios, gas ingress, and thermal stresses.
5. Conclusions
- (1)
- The dimpled non-smooth structure effectively suppresses boundary layer separation near the impeller wall and reduces viscous friction losses. Numerical simulations indicate that the optimized impeller (dimple diameter d = 0.9 mm) achieves 12.98% and 8.55% improvements in head and efficiency, respectively, compared to the baseline impeller at 150 m3/d. Experimental validation confirms an 11.5% head gain and a 4.6-percentage-point peak efficiency enhancement at 130 m3/d.
- (2)
- Dimple diameter exhibits a nonlinear correlation with performance gains, with d = 0.9 mm yielding optimal overall performance. The structural arrangement significantly impacts drag reduction, where dimple arrays on the trailing edge of the pressure side maximize efficiency by regulating shear layer instability.
- (3)
- Experimental and simulated head-flow curves align in trend, but experimental head values are systematically 1.2–2.8% higher, with a 4% efficiency deviation at 150 m3/d. These systematic errors arise from the combined effects of anisotropic wall roughness, multiphase flow interface slip, and additive manufacturing micro-defects.
- (4)
- The single-region optimization strategy (dimples on the pressure side trailing edge) achieves over 90% of the total performance improvement while maintaining high manufacturability, offering a practical solution for dynamic adaptability of wide-range pumps and intelligent well completion technologies.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
ESP | Electrical submersible pumps |
CFD | Computational fluid dynamics |
MRF | Multiple reference frame |
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Category | Parameter | Value |
---|---|---|
Fluid properties | Oil–water ratio | 1:9 (volumetric) |
Oil density | 850 kg/m3 | |
Water density | 998 kg/m3 | |
Dynamic viscosity | 0.001 Pa·s | |
Boundary conditions | Inlet velocity | 50−150 m3/d |
Rotational speed | 3500 rpm | |
Boundary conditions | Velocity inlet, pressure outlet | |
Numerical settings | Turbulence model | Standard k-ω |
Near-wall treatment | Enhanced Wall Function | |
Convergence | Residuals < 10−5 |
Flow Rate (m3/d) | Head Deviation (%) | Efficiency Deviation (%) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Original Impeller | Bionic Non-Smooth Impeller | Original Impeller | Bionic Non-Smooth Impeller | |
50 | 3.30 | 1.24 | 13.92 | −11.64 |
100 | 2.12 | 4.27 | 0.07 | −2.82 |
150 | 0.07 | −5.46 | 2.24 | −3.81 |
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Fu, T.; Wei, S.; Gao, Y.; Shi, B. Drag Reduction and Efficiency Enhancement in Wide-Range Electric Submersible Centrifugal Pumps via Bio-Inspired Non-Smooth Surfaces: A Combined Numerical and Experimental Study. Appl. Sci. 2025, 15, 7989. https://doi.org/10.3390/app15147989
Fu T, Wei S, Gao Y, Shi B. Drag Reduction and Efficiency Enhancement in Wide-Range Electric Submersible Centrifugal Pumps via Bio-Inspired Non-Smooth Surfaces: A Combined Numerical and Experimental Study. Applied Sciences. 2025; 15(14):7989. https://doi.org/10.3390/app15147989
Chicago/Turabian StyleFu, Tao, Songbo Wei, Yang Gao, and Bairu Shi. 2025. "Drag Reduction and Efficiency Enhancement in Wide-Range Electric Submersible Centrifugal Pumps via Bio-Inspired Non-Smooth Surfaces: A Combined Numerical and Experimental Study" Applied Sciences 15, no. 14: 7989. https://doi.org/10.3390/app15147989
APA StyleFu, T., Wei, S., Gao, Y., & Shi, B. (2025). Drag Reduction and Efficiency Enhancement in Wide-Range Electric Submersible Centrifugal Pumps via Bio-Inspired Non-Smooth Surfaces: A Combined Numerical and Experimental Study. Applied Sciences, 15(14), 7989. https://doi.org/10.3390/app15147989