Influence of Manufacturing Errors on the Unbalance Response of Aerodynamic Foil Bearings

Author(s):  
Aurelian Fatu ◽  
Mihai Arghir
2015 ◽  
Vol 137 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Franck Balducchi ◽  
Mihai Arghir ◽  
Romain Gauthier

The paper presents the experimental unbalance response of two slightly different rigid rotors supported by aerodynamic foil bearings. Impulse (Pelton) turbines manufactured directly in the mass of the rotors (on the outer surface) entrain both rotors at rotation speeds comprised between 50 krpm and 100 krpm. The displacements in the two foil bearings are measured during coast down and are depicted as waterfall plots. They show typical nonlinear behavior, i.e., subsynchronous vibrations accompanying the synchronous component. The measurements clearly show that the subsynchronous components bifurcate or jump at typical rotation speeds (mostly rational fractions of the rotation speed). The nonlinear behavior of the rigid rotor supported on foil bearings is also emphasized by varying the added unbalance: with increasing unbalance the vibration spectrum becomes gradually more diverse as new subsynchronous vibrations appear. The experimental results are compared with very simplified theoretical predictions based on the assumption that the air film in the two bearings is infinitely stiff compared to the foil structure. The latter is characterized by a cubic stiffness and a structural damping coefficient. The comparisons show only a rough qualitative agreement.


Author(s):  
Aurelian Fatu ◽  
Mihai Arghir

The dynamic characteristics of foil bearings operating at high rotation speeds depend very much on the mechanical characteristics of the foil structure. For this reason, the stiffness and damping of the structure of foil bearings is a problem that is the focus of many analyses. The mechanical characteristics of the foil structure (top and bump foil) are analyzed either by using a simple approach obtained for an isolated bump modeled as a beam or with more elaborate ones taking into account the three-dimensional nature of the bumps and their mutual interactions. These two kinds of models give different foil structure stiffness, with lower values for the simplified model. However, the published experimental results of the foil bearing structure tend to validate the simplified model. The present paper explains the differences between the simplified and the elaborate models by taking into account the manufacturing errors of the foil structure. A three-dimensional model based on the non-linear theory of elasticity is developed. The model offers a unique insight into the way the bearing structure deforms when the rotor is incrementally pushed into the foil structure. Three realistic manufacturing errors, bump height, bump length and radius of the bump foil are analyzed. Bump height and length vary following a normal distribution with a given standard deviation while the radius of the bump foil is given a waviness form with an imposed peak-to-peak amplitude. Three to five cases were calculated for each kind of error. Results show that only the manufacturing errors of the bump height affect the stiffness of the foil structure by diminishing its values. Height errors of 20 μm standard deviation (4% of the average bump height and 60% of the radial clearance) may induce a 40–50% reduction of the stiffness of the foil structure, i.e. in the range of the predictions of the simplified model.


Author(s):  
Aurelian Fatu ◽  
Mihai Arghir

The dynamic characteristics of foil bearings operating at high rotation speeds depend very much on the mechanical characteristics of the foil structure. For this reason, the stiffness and damping of the structure of foil bearings are problems that are the focus of many analyses. The mechanical characteristics of the foil structure (top and bump foil) are analyzed either by using a simple approach obtained for an isolated bump modeled as a beam or with more elaborate ones taking into account the three-dimensional nature of the bumps and their mutual interactions. These two kinds of models give different foil structure stiffness, with lower values for the simplified model. However, the published experimental results of the foil bearing structure tend to validate the simplified model. The present paper explains the differences between the simplified and the elaborate models by taking into account the manufacturing errors of the foil structure. A three-dimensional model based on the nonlinear theory of elasticity is developed. The model offers a unique insight into the way the bearing structure deforms when the rotor is incrementally pushed into the foil structure. Three realistic manufacturing errors, bump height, bump length, and radius of the bump foil, are analyzed. Bump height and length vary following a normal distribution with a given standard deviation while the radius of the bump foil is given a waviness form with an imposed peak-to-peak amplitude. Three to five cases were calculated for each kind of error. Results show that only the manufacturing errors of the bump height affect the stiffness of the foil structure by diminishing its values. Height errors of 20 μm standard deviation (4% of the average bump height and 60% of the radial clearance) may induce a 40–50% reduction of the stiffness of the foil structure, i.e., in the range of the predictions of the simplified model.


2020 ◽  
Vol 143 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Omar Benchekroun ◽  
Mihai Arghir

Abstract The present work exhibits the numerical investigation of the bump height-manufacturing errors on the unbalance response of an aerodynamic foil journal bearing. This is the first study on the impact of manufacturing errors based on an important number of samples. A statistical analysis predicts the mean values of the characteristics and the standard errors of the mean. The paper presents the most important aspects of the numerical model that was used and the way it was implemented for the unbalance analysis of a four degrees-of-freedom rotor. It was considered that the bump height-manufacturing errors had a normal distribution (i.e., each bump had a different random height) around the design (mean) height value. The standard deviation of the bump heights (the same for all bumps) is a measure of the magnitude of the manufacturing errors. The results give a qualitative but above all quantitative overview of the impact of machining errors on some characteristics of aerodynamic foil bearings.


Author(s):  
Franck Balducchi ◽  
Mihai Arghir ◽  
Sylvain Gaudillere

The paper presents the experimental unbalance response of two slightly different rigid rotors supported by two identical aerodynamic foil bearings. Impulse (Pelton) turbines manufactured directly on the outer surface entrain both rotors at rotation speeds comprised between 50 krpm and 100 krpm. The displacements in the two foil bearings are measured during coast down and are depicted as waterfall plots. They show typical non-linear behavior, i.e. subsynchronous vibrations accompanying the synchronous component. The measurements show clearly that the subsynchronous components bifurcate at typical rotation speeds (mostly rational fractions of the rotation speed). The non-linear behavior of the rigid rotor supported on foil bearings is also underlined by varying the added unbalance: with increasing unbalance the vibration spectrum becomes gradually richer as new subsynchronous vibrations appear. The experimental results are compared with very simplified theoretical predictions based on the assumption that the air film in the two bearings is infinitely stiff compared to the foil structure. This latter is characterized by a cubic stiffness and a structural damping coefficient. The comparisons show only a rough qualitative agreement and enlighten the actual limits of foil bearings theoretical models.


2004 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 54-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. B. LEE ◽  
T. H. KIM ◽  
C. H. KIM ◽  
N. S. LEE ◽  
D. H. CHOI

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