Application of Aerodynamically Induced Prewhirl to a Small Turbocharger Compressor

1980 ◽  
Vol 102 (4) ◽  
pp. 943-950 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Kyrtatos ◽  
N. Watson

A design procedure is described which allows the development of an arrangement to aerodynamically impart prewhirl to the inflow of a compressor. The procedure uses compressor performance data and inducer inlet flow distributions together with a mathematical model of the aerodynamic prewhirl inducing arrangement to arrive at the parameters which completely define an arrangement suitable for a particular compressor. The application of the procedure to design an arrangement for a small turbocharger compressor is presented. The effect of the aerodynamically imparted prerotation on the compressor performance was found to be similar to that produced by inlet guide vanes.

Author(s):  
M. J. Shaw ◽  
P. Hield ◽  
P. G. Tucker

An investigation has been carried out into the effects of variable inlet guide vanes (VIGVs) on the performance and stability margin of a transonic fan in the presence of inlet flow distortion. The study was carried out using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and validated with experimental data. The capability of CFD to predict the changes in performance with or without VIGVs in the presence of an inlet flow distortion is assessed. Results show that the VIGVs improve the performance and stability margin and do so by reducing the amount of swirl at inlet to the rotor component of the fan.


Author(s):  
Hiroshi Uchida ◽  
Mutsuo Shiraki ◽  
Akinobu Bessho ◽  
Yoichi Yagi

In Japan, a program of research and development of a 100 kW automotive ceramic gas turbine (CGT) has been carried out in the Petroleum Energy Center with active cooperation of petroleum, automobile and ceramics industries as well as other related industries. As a part of this research and development program, we have studied and developed a centrifugal compressor with variable inlet guide vanes for CGT engines. There has been a strong demand for a compressor with a high efficiency and a wide flow range. The compressor performance goals are an adiabatic efficiency of 81% and a surge margin of 8% under maximum power operating conditions. This paper describes the methods for designing impellers, diffusers and variable inlet guide vanes, and presents the results of compressor performance tests. The test results reveal that the surge margin and compressor efficiency at partial load are improved by using inlet guide vanes.


Author(s):  
Minoru Ishino ◽  
Yuji Iwakiri ◽  
Akinobu Bessho ◽  
Hiroshi Uchida

Variable inlet guide vanes (VIGVs) have been developed for a small centrifugal compressor of automobile turbocharger. The effects of pre-whirl flow generated by VIGVs on compressor performance have been studied experimentally. Furthermore, the flow condition in impeller passage of the compressor with VIGVs has been compared to that of the compressor without VIGVs by using three-dimensional flow analysis. The results of experimental study have shown that pre-whirl flow is advantageous to the efficiency and surge characteristics of compressor. A weak fluid oscillation, which usually occurs in the region of high pressure-ratio and high mass flow rates, has been controlled by using VIGVs. The results of calculation of the viscous compressible flow have shown that the pre-whirl generated by VIGVs is effective in decreasing the area of the reverse flow which occurs at shroud suction side and smoothing the flow distribution between shroud and hub at the impeller exit.


2013 ◽  
Vol 136 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. J. Shaw ◽  
P. Hield ◽  
P. G. Tucker

An investigation was carried out into the effects of variable inlet guide vanes (VIGVs) on the performance and stability margin of a transonic fan in the presence of inlet flow distortion. The study was carried out using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and validated with experimental data. The capability of CFD to predict the changes in performance with or without VIGVs in the presence of an inlet flow distortion is assessed. Results show that the VIGVs improve the performance and stability margin and do so by reducing the amount of swirl at inlet to the rotor component of the fan.


2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (17) ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Mostafa Samy ◽  
Mohamed Metwally ◽  
Wael Elmayyah ◽  
Ibrahem Elsherif

Author(s):  
Peng Wang ◽  
Mehrdad Zangeneh ◽  
Bryn Richards ◽  
Kevin Gray ◽  
James Tran ◽  
...  

Engine downsizing is a modern solution for the reduction of CO2 emissions from internal combustion engines. This technology has been gaining increasing attention from industry. In order to enable a downsized engine to operate properly at low speed conditions, it is essential to have a compressor stage with very good surge margin. The ported shroud, also known as the casing treatment, is a conventional way used in turbochargers to widen the working range. However, the ported shroud works effectively only at pressure ratios higher than 3:1. At lower pressure ratio, its advantages for surge margin enhancements are very limited. The variable inlet guide vanes are also a solution to this problem. By adjusting the setting angles of variable inlet guide vanes, it is possible to shift the compressor map toward the smaller flow rates. However, this would also undermine the stage efficiency, require extra space for installing the inlet guide vanes, and add costs. The best solution is therefore to improve the design of impeller blade itself to attain high aerodynamic performances and wide operating ranges. This paper reports a recent study of using inverse design method for the redesign of a centrifugal compressor stage used in an electric supercharger, including the impeller blade and volute. The main requirements were to substantially increase the stable operating range of the compressor in order to meet the demands of the downsized engine. The three-dimensional (3D) inverse design method was used to optimize the impeller geometry and achieve higher efficiency and stable operating range. The predicted performance map shows great advantages when compared with the existing design. To validate the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) results, this new compressor stage has also been prototyped and tested. It will be shown that the CFD predictions have very good agreement with experiments and the redesigned compressor stage has improved the pressure ratio, aerodynamic efficiency, choke, and surge margins considerably.


1971 ◽  
Vol 11 (04) ◽  
pp. 390-398 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.A. Guin ◽  
R.S. Schechter

Abstract A mathematical model representing the changes in pore structure attending the invasion of a porous material by a reactive fluid tending to dissolve the solid bas previously been tested and found to be valid. This mathematical model is solved by a simulation procedure using Monte Carlo techniques. The results so obtained are indicative of the acidization of sandstone using a last-reacting acid (diffusion limited). A correlation relating the permeability improvement to the change in porosity is presented and found to be applicable to a wide class of initial pore-size distributions. This means that the designer need not have explicit knowledge of the initial pore structure to utilize the correlation. The generality of the correlation stems from the fact that after exposure to fast-acting acids (diffusion-controlled reactions) wormholing tends to occur in all porous matrices, and the acid allows preferentially through these channels. Thus, the process is independent of the fine pore structure since the fine pores receive no acid Wormholing bas been observed in almost all experimental studies of acidization, thus further confirming the validity of the model. Introduction Matrix acidization as practiced in the petroleum industry is a simple operation. Acids treated so as to prevent their corrosive attack on metal parts contacted are pumped down the wellbore and forced into the pore spaces of an oil-bearing rock. The rate of penetration is normally maintained small enough to prevent fracturing of the reservoir The aim of matrix acidization is to enhance the permeability of the region around the wellbore by permeability of the region around the wellbore by dissolving either a portion of the rock or of the foreign impurities that may have been introduced during the drilling operations. The success of this technique of oilwell stimulation is attested to by the fact that a significant fraction of the acids used for stimulation are injected at matrix rates. There were, moreover, in excess of 87 million gal of hydrochloric acid used last year in carbonate formations with many other special purpose acids such as acetic and formic having also been used for stimulation purposes. Despite the fact that acids have long been routinely used as a means of stimulating oil wells to greater production, there is, as yet, no reliable design procedure incorporating all of the essential features into a prediction of the new production that will result from a given acid treatment of a particular well. This lack of a design procedure particular well. This lack of a design procedure has been responsible for the rather minimal efforts expended in obtaining meaningful reaction rate data, for there is very little enthusiasm for obtaining data which cannot be put to practical application. This paper is an extension of some recently reported work on predicting the permeability change resulting from acid treatment of an oil-bearing rock. It has been proposed that the changes in the microstructure owing to acidization in a porous rock can be simulated by considering the effect of acidization of a collection of small, randomly distributed capillaries that are interconnected to the extent that a fluid will be conducted from point to point under the influence of an external pressure gradient. This model, the capillaric model, has been used with varying success in understanding the behavior of porous media. The use of the capillaric model in determining only the results of the evolution of a pore-size distribution, rather than as a vehicle for predicting a number of mare or less independent phenomena, such as capillary pressure curves and dispersion, is, as has been pressure curves and dispersion, is, as has been noted by Schechter and Gidley, a more limited and perhaps attainable goal. Taking the capillaric model to be correct, Guin et al. have shown that an equation relating the porosity change and the permeability change caused by an ideally retarded permeability change caused by an ideally retarded acid can be derived without any assumptions. SPEJ P. 390


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