Thrust Force Measurements in an Axial Steam Turbine Test Rig

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Stasenko ◽  
Nikhil Rao ◽  
Diganta Narzary
2008 ◽  
Vol 97 ◽  
pp. 012220 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Pina ◽  
P Pereira ◽  
S Valtchev ◽  
A Gonçalves ◽  
M Ventim Neves ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
H. Schwarz ◽  
J. Friedrichs ◽  
J. Flegler

Brush seals, which were originally designed for gas turbine applications, have been successfully applied to large-scale steam turbines within the past decade. From gas turbine applications, the fundamental behavior and designing levers are known. However, the application of brush seals to a steam turbine is still a challenge. This challenge is mainly due to the extreme load on the brush seal while operating under steam. Furthermore, it is difficult to test brush seals under realistic conditions, i.e. under live steam conditions with high pressure drops. Due to these insufficiencies, 2 test rigs were developed at the University of Technology Braunschweig, Germany. The first test rig is operated under pressurized air and allows testing specific brush seal characteristics concerning their general behavior. The knowledge gained from these tests can be validated in the second test rig, which is operated under steam at pressure drops of 45 bar and temperatures up to 450 °C. Using both the air test rig and the steam test rig helps keep the testing effort comparably small. Design variants can be pre-tested with air, and promising brush seal designs can consequently be tested in the steam seal test rig. The paper focuses on a clamped brush seal design which, amongst others, is used in steam turbine blade paths and shaft seals of current Siemens turbines. The consequences of the brush assembly on the brush appearance and brush performance are shown. The clamped brush seal design reveals several particularities compared to welded brushes. It could be shown that the clamped bristle pack tends to gape when clamping forces rise. Gapping results in an axially expanding bristle pack, where the bristle density per unit area and the leakage flow vary. Furthermore, the brush elements are usually assembled with an axial lay angle, i.e. the bristles are reclined against the backing plate. Hence, the axial lay angle is also part of the investigation.


2007 ◽  
Vol 539-543 ◽  
pp. 36-41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dong Teak Chung

Flying robots with flapping wings are preferred over conventionally fixed or rotational wings in terms of hovering capability for a simple mechanical configuration. Until recently, available actuators for such a robot are limited to (1) a conventional motor with four-bar linkage mechanism or (2) a piezo electric actuator, but none of them could provide enough lift because of low flapping frequency, small stroke angles, and/or frequent mechanical failure. A new actuator capable of generating large stroke angles with high frequency is developed. It consists of an out-runner brushless motor with a modified motor driver attached to a torsion spring. The wing is attached directly on the cap of the motor. A prototype is built and preliminary thrust force measurements are performed. Properties of wing materials suitable for powerful and robust actuators will be discussed. The actuator employed in the present study utilizes resonance oscillation, which leads to high energy efficiency. Further study of wing shape and directional stiffness is needed for generating higher lift capability.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oliver Brunn ◽  
Katharina Deckers ◽  
Thomas Polklas ◽  
Klaus Behnke ◽  
Mark Andre Schwarz
Keyword(s):  
Test Rig ◽  

Author(s):  
M. Raben ◽  
J. Friedrichs ◽  
J. Flegler

Sealing technology is a key feature to improve efficiency of steam turbines for both new power stations and modernization projects. One of the most powerful sealing alternatives for reducing parasitic leakages in the blade path of a turbine as well as in shaft sealing areas is the use of brush seals, which are also widely used in gas turbines and turbo compressors. The advantage of brush seals over other sealing concepts is based on the narrow gap that is formed between the brush seal bristle tips and the mating rotor surface together with its radial adaptivity. While the narrow gap between the bristle tips and the rotor leads to a strongly decreased flow through the seal compared with conventional turbomachinery seals, it is important to be aware of the tight gap that can be bridged by relative motion between the rotor and the brush seal, leading to a contact of the bristles and the rotor surface. Besides abrasive wear occurrence, the friction between the bristles and the rotor leads to heat generation which can be detrimental to turbine operation due to thermal effects, leading to rotor bending connected to increasing shaft vibrations. In order to investigate the frictional heat generation of brush seals, different investigation concepts have been introduced through the past years. To broaden the knowledge about frictional heat generation and to make it applicable for steam turbine applications, a new testing setup was designed for the steam test rig of the Institute of Jet Propulsion and Turbomachinery - TU Braunschweig, Germany, enabling temperature measurements in the rotor body under stationary and transient operation in steam by using rotor-integrated thermocouples. Within this paper, the development of the instrumented new rotor design and all relevant parts of the new testing setup is shown along with the testing ability by means of the validation of the test rig concept and the achieved measurement accuracy. First results prove that the new system can be used to investigate frictional heat generation of brush seals under conditions relevant for steam turbine shaft seals.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diganta Narzary ◽  
David Stasenko ◽  
Nikhil Rao

Abstract A full-size, full-speed, axial flow steam turbine test rig capable of measuring turbine thrust, and static pressures in the rotor-stator disk cavity was built and commissioned. The test rig was operated in a single-stage configuration for the test results first reported in Stasenko et al. [1], and now in this paper. The stage has stationary axial face seals radially inward of the airfoils, near the rotor disk rim. The face seals divide the rotor-stator cavity into inner and outer circumferential cavities, both of which were instrumented with static pressure probes on the stator radial wall. Axial thrust was measured with load cells in every thrust bearing pad. The test rig was operated over a range of three nominal stage pressure ratios (designated as LPR, MPR, and HPR), five nominal stage velocity ratios (0.25–0.6), and five admission fractions (0.38–0.88). This latest group of tests was conducted without rotor disk balance holes, which were mechanically plugged, and will be compared to the original block of tests with disk balance holes opened. In the upstream disk cavity, the two disk balance hole configurations shared many similar pressure characteristics: nearly uniform pressures in the inner cavity, circumferential pressure distributions in the outer cavity that corresponded with the direction of axial thrust, and radial pressure distributions in the outer cavity that were a direct function of rotor speed. General trends of thrust coefficients with the disk holes plugged were correlated to stage pressure ratio, stage velocity ratio, admission fraction, and leakage mass flow rate. Those trends were consistent with the first block of tests with open disk balance holes, although there was an offset toward more operating conditions with negative aggregate thrust coefficients. This suggests that the rotating disk induces a low-pressure gradient in the inner (upstream) cavity, and the opened disk balance holes tend to equalize the inner cavity static pressure toward the higher static pressure on the exit side of the disk. Additionally, thrust coefficients tended to become less negative (or more positive) with stage pressure ratio and with velocity ratio, but tended to become more negative with admission fraction. Significant thrust coefficient reductions were realized with the open disk balance hole configuration, and were determined to be consistently speed-dependent.


Author(s):  
Qi Sun ◽  
Xianglin Kong ◽  
Shengke Jiang ◽  
Gangyun Zhong ◽  
Yu Shang

To improve the aerodynamic performance of flow path for steam turbines, three-stage air turbine experimental test rig is designed and established at Dongfang Steam Turbine Co. Ltd. The experimental test rig is described at first including the wind regime system, controlling system, measurement system and experimental body. The hydraulic dynamometer and torquemeter are used to measure the output power of the experimental turbine stages. Advanced and accurate pressure and temperature measurement equipments and corresponding displacement device are utilized to obtain the aerodynamic parameters of interstage passage flow. The modeling three-stage turbines according to steam turbines are experimentally measured to obtain the aerodynamic performance and flow fields, as well as demonstrate the accurate and reliability of the air turbine experimental test rig. In addition, three-dimensional Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) and S-A one equation turbulent model is also used to obtain the flow characteristics of the experimental turbine stage at the measurement flow conditions. The repeatability of the establishment of air turbine experimental test rig is demonstrated according to two times measurements results. The developed three-stage air turbine experimental test rig can be able to support high reliability of the measurement and verification tool to obtain the aerodynamic performance and flow fields for steam turbines manufactured by Dongfang Steam Turbine Co. Ltd..


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