Design and Efficiency Analysis of High Maneuvering Underwater Gliders for Kuroshio Observation

The Kuroshio Current’s flow velocity imposes exacting requirements on underwater vehicle propulsive systems. Ecological preservation necessitates low-noise propeller designs to mitigate operational disturbances. As technological evolution advances toward greater intelligence and system integration,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Oceans
Main Authors: Zhihao Tian, Bing He, Heng Zhang, Cunzhe Zhang, Tongrui Zhang, Runfeng Zhang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-08-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2673-1924/6/3/48
_version_ 1848775689267838976
author Zhihao Tian
Bing He
Heng Zhang
Cunzhe Zhang
Tongrui Zhang
Runfeng Zhang
author_facet Zhihao Tian
Bing He
Heng Zhang
Cunzhe Zhang
Tongrui Zhang
Runfeng Zhang
author_sort Zhihao Tian
collection DOAJ
container_title Oceans
description The Kuroshio Current’s flow velocity imposes exacting requirements on underwater vehicle propulsive systems. Ecological preservation necessitates low-noise propeller designs to mitigate operational disturbances. As technological evolution advances toward greater intelligence and system integration, intelligent unmanned systems are positioning themselves as a critical frontier in marine innovation. In recent years, the global research community has increased its efforts towards the development of high-maneuverability underwater vehicles. However, propeller design optimization ignores the key balance between acoustic performance and hydrodynamic efficiency, as well as the appropriate speed threshold for blade rotation. In order to solve this problem, the propeller design of the NACA 65A010 airfoil is optimized by using OpenProp v3.3.4 and XFlow 2022 software, aiming at innovating the propulsion system of shallow water agile submersibles. The study presents an integrated design framework combining lattice Boltzmann method (LBM) simulations synergized with fully Lagrangian-LES modeling, implementing rotational speed thresholds to detect cavitation inception, followed by advanced acoustic propagation analysis. Through rigorous comparative assessment of hydrodynamic metrics, we establish an optimization protocol for propeller selection tailored to littoral zone operational demands. Studies have shown that increasing the number of propeller blades can reduce the single-blade load and delay cavitation, but too many blades will aggravate the complexity of the flow field, resulting in reduced efficiency and noise rebound. It is concluded that the propeller with five blades, a diameter of 234 mm, and a speed of 500 RPM exhibits the best performance. Under these conditions, the water efficiency is 69.01%, and the noise is the lowest, which basically realizes the balance between hydrodynamic efficiency and acoustic performance. This paradigm-shifting research carries substantial implications for next-generation marine vehicles, particularly in optimizing operational stealth and energy efficiency through intelligent propulsion architecture.
format Article
id doaj-art-05d5c4fa8a0b46caa129fc60ed1cdb97
institution Directory of Open Access Journals
issn 2673-1924
language English
publishDate 2025-08-01
publisher MDPI AG
record_format Article
spelling doaj-art-05d5c4fa8a0b46caa129fc60ed1cdb972025-09-26T15:05:39ZengMDPI AGOceans2673-19242025-08-01634810.3390/oceans6030048Design and Efficiency Analysis of High Maneuvering Underwater Gliders for Kuroshio ObservationZhihao Tian0Bing He1Heng Zhang2Cunzhe Zhang3Tongrui Zhang4Runfeng Zhang5Tianjin Key Laboratory for Advanced Mechatronic System Design and Intelligent Control, School of Mechanical Engineering, Tianjin University of Technology, Tianjin 300384, ChinaTianjin Key Laboratory for Advanced Mechatronic System Design and Intelligent Control, School of Mechanical Engineering, Tianjin University of Technology, Tianjin 300384, ChinaTianjin Fire Research Institute of Emergency Management Department, Tianjin 300381, ChinaTianjin Key Laboratory for Advanced Mechatronic System Design and Intelligent Control, School of Mechanical Engineering, Tianjin University of Technology, Tianjin 300384, ChinaTianjin Hanhailanfan Marine Technology Co., Ltd., Tianjin 300457, ChinaTianjin Key Laboratory for Advanced Mechatronic System Design and Intelligent Control, School of Mechanical Engineering, Tianjin University of Technology, Tianjin 300384, ChinaThe Kuroshio Current’s flow velocity imposes exacting requirements on underwater vehicle propulsive systems. Ecological preservation necessitates low-noise propeller designs to mitigate operational disturbances. As technological evolution advances toward greater intelligence and system integration, intelligent unmanned systems are positioning themselves as a critical frontier in marine innovation. In recent years, the global research community has increased its efforts towards the development of high-maneuverability underwater vehicles. However, propeller design optimization ignores the key balance between acoustic performance and hydrodynamic efficiency, as well as the appropriate speed threshold for blade rotation. In order to solve this problem, the propeller design of the NACA 65A010 airfoil is optimized by using OpenProp v3.3.4 and XFlow 2022 software, aiming at innovating the propulsion system of shallow water agile submersibles. The study presents an integrated design framework combining lattice Boltzmann method (LBM) simulations synergized with fully Lagrangian-LES modeling, implementing rotational speed thresholds to detect cavitation inception, followed by advanced acoustic propagation analysis. Through rigorous comparative assessment of hydrodynamic metrics, we establish an optimization protocol for propeller selection tailored to littoral zone operational demands. Studies have shown that increasing the number of propeller blades can reduce the single-blade load and delay cavitation, but too many blades will aggravate the complexity of the flow field, resulting in reduced efficiency and noise rebound. It is concluded that the propeller with five blades, a diameter of 234 mm, and a speed of 500 RPM exhibits the best performance. Under these conditions, the water efficiency is 69.01%, and the noise is the lowest, which basically realizes the balance between hydrodynamic efficiency and acoustic performance. This paradigm-shifting research carries substantial implications for next-generation marine vehicles, particularly in optimizing operational stealth and energy efficiency through intelligent propulsion architecture.https://www.mdpi.com/2673-1924/6/3/48Kuroshio observationunderwater glidernoise characteristicspropeller design
spellingShingle Zhihao Tian
Bing He
Heng Zhang
Cunzhe Zhang
Tongrui Zhang
Runfeng Zhang
Design and Efficiency Analysis of High Maneuvering Underwater Gliders for Kuroshio Observation
Kuroshio observation
underwater glider
noise characteristics
propeller design
title Design and Efficiency Analysis of High Maneuvering Underwater Gliders for Kuroshio Observation
title_full Design and Efficiency Analysis of High Maneuvering Underwater Gliders for Kuroshio Observation
title_fullStr Design and Efficiency Analysis of High Maneuvering Underwater Gliders for Kuroshio Observation
title_full_unstemmed Design and Efficiency Analysis of High Maneuvering Underwater Gliders for Kuroshio Observation
title_short Design and Efficiency Analysis of High Maneuvering Underwater Gliders for Kuroshio Observation
title_sort design and efficiency analysis of high maneuvering underwater gliders for kuroshio observation
topic Kuroshio observation
underwater glider
noise characteristics
propeller design
url https://www.mdpi.com/2673-1924/6/3/48
work_keys_str_mv AT zhihaotian designandefficiencyanalysisofhighmaneuveringunderwaterglidersforkuroshioobservation
AT binghe designandefficiencyanalysisofhighmaneuveringunderwaterglidersforkuroshioobservation
AT hengzhang designandefficiencyanalysisofhighmaneuveringunderwaterglidersforkuroshioobservation
AT cunzhezhang designandefficiencyanalysisofhighmaneuveringunderwaterglidersforkuroshioobservation
AT tongruizhang designandefficiencyanalysisofhighmaneuveringunderwaterglidersforkuroshioobservation
AT runfengzhang designandefficiencyanalysisofhighmaneuveringunderwaterglidersforkuroshioobservation