Experimental Measurement of Oil Droplets Size and Velocity Above the Rotor/Stator in a Rotary Compressor

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Puyuan Wu ◽  
Jun Chen ◽  
Paul E. Sojka ◽  
Yang Li ◽  
Hongjun Cao

Abstract Hundreds of millions of Air conditioning (AC) systems are produced each year. Many of them, especially small AC appliances, use rotary compressors as the system’s heat pump due to their simple structure and high efficiency in a small system. Lubricant oil is used in the rotary compressor to lubricate the moving parts, such as the crankshaft and the rolling piston, and to seal the clearance between the sliding parts, e.g., the clearance between the rolling piston and the cylinder, and the vane and the cylinder. As the compressed refrigerant vapor is discharged from the cylinder through the discharge port, part of lubricant oil in the cylinder would be carried by the vapor and atomize into small droplets in the lower cavity during the discharge process, which is complicated and highly-coupled. Some of these oil droplets would ultimately be exhausted from the compressor and enter other parts in the system, reducing the compressor reliability and deteriorating the heat transfer of the condenser and the evaporator in the system. Our previous research studied the atomization of the lubricant oil during the discharge process in the compressor’s lower cavity. However, the oil droplets’ behavior downstream of the lower cavity is unknown. Thus, studying the oil droplets’ behavior after passing through the rotor/stator can help understand how the rotor/stator would affect the droplet size distribution and movement, thus controlling the flow rate of escaped oil droplets. In this study, a hot gas bypass test rig is built to run a modified rotary compressor with sapphire windows right above the rotor/stator. The oil droplets’ size distribution and movement along the radial direction are obtained at the shaft’s rotating frequency of 30 and 60 Hz by shadowgraph. It is found that droplet size at 30 and 60 Hz varies little in the inner region of the rotor/stator clearance and would increase sharply above the clearance and keep increasing in the outer region of the clearance. More importantly, droplet velocity has a downward velocity component at the inner region and an upward velocity component at the outer region of the rotor/stator clearance. With the result of droplet size distribution and droplet velocity above the rotor/stator, we propose the model of the oil droplet’s path above the rotor/stator, which can be understood as the coupling of a swirling jet and a rotating disk.

Author(s):  
Puyuan Wu ◽  
Jun Chen ◽  
Paul E. Sojka ◽  
Yang Li ◽  
Hongjun Cao

Abstract The rotary compressor is widely used in small air conditioners, and is the most important element in the system. It relies on eccentric rolling pistons that rotate at high speed to compress refrigerant in the cylinder. The lubricant oil in the rotary compressor is used for lubricating the bearing and sealing the clearance of sliding parts. However, the oil can experience complex and highly-coupled atomization processes when discharged from the cylinder, and part of oil droplets can exhaust from the rotary compressor by the refrigerant flow and reduce the efficiency and reliability of the compressor as a result. Thus, characterizing the behavior of oil droplets in the lower cavity of a rotary compressor where the atomization occurs is a major challenge for manufacturers who rely on CFD tools to predict the multiphase flow. By modifying a rotary compressor, the oil behavior in the lower cavity of a rotary compressor is observed and recorded by shadowgraphy. In the current phase, the number, size, and morphology of oil droplets are analyzed statistically with image processing method, which provides better understanding to the atomization mode in the lower cavity, the velocity of the mist of oil droplets is calculated with Optical Flow Velocimetry. The results can assist designers in improving the CFD analysis of compressors and ultimately reducing the Oil Discharge Rate (ODR).


2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 (1) ◽  
pp. 2017-194
Author(s):  
Lin Zhao ◽  
Michel C. Boufadel ◽  
Feng Gao ◽  
Thomas King ◽  
Brian Robinson ◽  
...  

Abstract (2017-194) The presence of methane bubbles in the oil and gas blowout could greatly reduce the oil droplet sizes. Bubbles tend to introduce energy into the system and separate oil droplets from each other. The interaction of oil droplets and gas bubbles in the near field of a blowout was investigated numerically using the VDROP-J model, whose droplet size distribution (DSD) was thoroughly calibrated. For this purpose, a new numerical scheme has been developed in VDROP-J to account for the interaction of gas bubbles and oil droplets in the blowout, giving simultaneous simulation of bubble and droplet size distribution along the discharged plume. Validation shows improvement of the model compared with the one without considering the gas bubble and oil droplet interactions. Effects of gas volume fraction on the droplet formation are also investigated. This new development will enhance the knowledge in subsea oil and gas blowouts.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (16) ◽  
pp. 5648
Author(s):  
Fei Wang ◽  
Lin Wang ◽  
Guoding Chen ◽  
Donglei Zhu

In order to improve the inadequacy of the current research on oil droplet size distribution in aero-engine bearing chamber, the influence of oil droplet size distribution with the oil droplets coalescence and breakup is analyzed by using the computational fluid dynamics-population balance model (CFD-PBM). The Euler–Euler equation and population balance equation are solved in Fluent software. The distribution of the gas phase velocity field and the volume fraction of different oil droplet diameter at different time are obtained in the bearing chamber. Then, the influence of different initial oil droplet diameter, air, and oil mass flow on oil droplet size distribution is discussed. The result of numerical analysis is compared with the experiment in the literature to verify the feasibility and validity. The main results provide the following conclusions. At the initial stage, the coalescence of oil droplets plays a dominant role. Then, the breakup of larger diameter oil droplet appears. Finally, the oil droplet size distribution tends to be stable. The coalescence and breakup of oil droplet increases with the initial diameter of oil droplet and the air mass flow increasing, and the oil droplet size distribution changes significantly. With the oil mass flow increasing, the coalescence and breakup of oil droplet has little change and the variation of oil droplet size distribution is not obvious.


2006 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. 673-686 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laszlo E. Kollar ◽  
Masoud Farzaneh ◽  
Anatolij R. Karev

Author(s):  
Jian Wang ◽  
Jichuan Wu ◽  
Shouqi Yuan ◽  
Wei-Cheng Yan

Abstract Previous work showed that particle behaviors in ultrasonic atomization pyrolysis (UAP) reactor have a great influence on the transport and collection of particles. In this study, the effects of droplet behaviors (i.e. droplet collision and breakage) and solvent evaporation on the droplet size, flow field and collection efficiency during the preparation of ZnO particles by UAP were investigated. The collision, breakage and solvent evaporation conditions which affect the droplet size distribution and flow pattern were considered in CFD simulation based on Eulerian-Lagrangian method. The results showed that droplet collision and breakage would increase the droplet size, broaden the droplet size distribution and hinder the transport of droplets. Solvent evaporation obviously changed the flow pattern of droplets. In addition, both droplet behaviors and solvent evaporation reduced the collection efficiency. This study could provide detail information for better understanding the effect of droplet behaviors and solvent evaporation on the particle production process via UAP reactor.


2014 ◽  
Vol 32 (14) ◽  
pp. 1655-1663 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leila Kavoshi ◽  
Mohammad S. Hatamipour ◽  
Amir Rahimi ◽  
Mehdi Momeni

2004 ◽  
Vol 4 (5) ◽  
pp. 1255-1263 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Mayer ◽  
M. Schröder ◽  
R. Preusker ◽  
L. Schüller

Abstract. Cloud single scattering properties are mainly determined by the effective radius of the droplet size distribution. There are only few exceptions where the shape of the size distribution affects the optical properties, in particular the rainbow and the glory directions of the scattering phase function. Using observations by the Compact Airborne Spectrographic Imager (CASI) in 180° backscatter geometry, we found that high angular resolution aircraft observations of the glory provide unique new information which is not available from traditional remote sensing techniques: Using only one single wavelength, 753nm, we were able to determine not only optical thickness and effective radius, but also the width of the size distribution at cloud top. Applying this novel technique to the ACE-2 CLOUDYCOLUMN experiment, we found that the size distributions were much narrower than usually assumed in radiation calculations which is in agreement with in-situ observations during this campaign. While the shape of the size distribution has only little relevance for the radiative properties of clouds, it is extremely important for understanding their formation and evolution.


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