Investigation of an Inversely Designed Centrifugal Compressor Stage: Part 2 — Experimental Investigations

Author(s):  
M. Schleer ◽  
S. S. Hong ◽  
M. Zangeneh ◽  
C. Roduner ◽  
B. Ribi ◽  
...  

This paper presents an experimental investigation of two centrifugal compressor stage configurations. The baseline configuration has been designed using conventional design engineering tools. The second configuration was designed using advanced inverse design rules as described in part 1 (Zangeneh et al. 2003). It is designed to match the choke flow as well as the best point of the conventionally designed stage. The experimental investigation is conducted in the industry-scale centrifugal compressor facility at the Turbomachinery Laboratory of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Performance maps for both configurations at several speed-lines are presented. These plots show the overall behavior of the stages designed using the different design approaches and their operating range. Time resolved measurements show details of the unsteady flow field within the diffuser close to the impeller exit. The time resolved data has been analyzed to assist the explanation of changes in the characteristics and associated efficiency penalties and gains. The processed data shows the benefits of the new inverse design method with respect to an improvement of the compressor efficiency and the operating range. It is seen that the application of an inverse design method results in a more uniform flow into the diffuser.

2004 ◽  
Vol 126 (1) ◽  
pp. 82-90 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Schleer ◽  
S. S. Hong ◽  
M. Zangeneh ◽  
C. Roduner ◽  
B. Ribi ◽  
...  

This paper presents an experimental investigation of two centrifugal compressor stage configurations. The baseline configuration has been designed using conventional design engineering tools. The second configuration was designed using advanced inverse design rules as described in Part I. It is designed to match the choke flow as well as the best point of the conventionally designed stage. The experimental investigation is conducted in the industry-scale centrifugal compressor facility at the Turbomachinery Laboratory of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Performance maps for both configurations at several speed lines are presented. These plots show the overall behavior of the stages designed using the different design approaches and their operating range. Time-resolved measurements show details of the unsteady flow field within the diffuser close to the impeller exit. The time-resolved data have been analyzed to assist the explanation of changes in the characteristics and associated efficiency penalties and gains. The processed data show the benefits of the new inverse design method with respect to an improvement of the compressor efficiency and the operating range. It is seen that the application of an inverse design method results in a more uniform flow into the diffuser.


2017 ◽  
Vol 140 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lee Galloway ◽  
Stephen Spence ◽  
Sung In Kim ◽  
Daniel Rusch ◽  
Klemens Vogel ◽  
...  

The stable operating range of a centrifugal compressor stage of an engine turbocharger is limited at low mass flow rates by aerodynamic instabilities which can lead to the onset of rotating stall or surge. There have been many techniques employed to increase the stable operating range of centrifugal compressor stages. The literature demonstrates that there are various possibilities for adding special treatments to the nominal diffuser vane geometry, or including injection or bleed flows to modify the diffuser flow field in order to influence diffuser stability. One such treatment is the porous throat diffuser (PTD). Although the benefits of this technique have been proven in the existing literature, a comprehensive understanding of how this technique operates is not yet available. This paper uses experimental measurements from a high pressure ratio (PR) compressor stage to acquire a sound understanding of the flow features within the vaned diffuser which affect the stability of the overall compression system and investigate the stabilizing mechanism of the porous throat diffuser. The nonuniform circumferential pressure imposed by the asymmetric volute is experimentally and numerically examined to understand if this provides a preferential location for stall inception in the diffuser. The following hypothesis is confirmed: linking of the diffuser throats via the side cavity equalizes the diffuser throat pressure, thus creating a more homogeneous circumferential pressure distribution, which delays stall inception to lower flow rates. The results of the porous throat diffuser configuration are compared to a standard vaned diffuser compressor stage in terms of overall compressor performance parameters, circumferential pressure nonuniformity at various locations through the compressor stage and diffuser subcomponent analysis. The diffuser inlet region was found to be the element most influenced by the porous throat diffuser, and the stability limit is mainly governed by this element.


Author(s):  
Timothy C. Allison ◽  
Natalie R. Smith ◽  
Robert Pelton ◽  
Jason C. Wilkes ◽  
Sewoong Jung

Successful implementation of sCO2 power cycles requires high compressor efficiency at both the design-point and over a wide operating range in order to maximize cycle power output and maintain stable operation over a wide range of transient and part-load operating conditions. This requirement is particularly true for air-cooled cycles where compressor inlet density is a strong function of inlet temperature that is subject to daily and seasonal variations as well as transient events. In order to meet these requirements, a novel centrifugal compressor stage design was developed that incorporates multiple novel range extension features, including a passive recirculating casing treatment and semi-open impeller design. This design, presented and analyzed for CO2 operation in a previous paper, was fabricated via direct metal laser sintering and tested in an open-loop test rig in order to validate simulation results and the effectiveness of the casing treatment configuration. Predicted performance curves in air and CO2 conditions are compared, resulting in a reduced diffuser width requirement for the air test in order to match design velocities and demonstrate the casing treatment. Test results show that the casing treatment performance generally matched computational fluid dynamics (CFD) predictions, demonstrating an operating range of 69% and efficiency above air predictions across the entire map. The casing treatment configuration demonstrated improvements over the solid wall configuration in stage performance and flow characteristics at low flows, resulting in an effective 14% increase in operating range with a 0.5-point efficiency penalty. The test results are also compared to a traditional fully shrouded impeller with the same flow coefficient and similar head coefficient, showing a 42% range improvement over traditional designs.


1989 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Japikse ◽  
David M. Karon

A detailed experimental investigation of a small centrifugal compressor stage has been completed using laser transit anemometry. Measurements at the inlet and discharge of an impeller have been made while recording data relative to a blade passage. Classical primary and secondary flow regimes within the rotor have been shown plus several compact “cell-like” regions. Various components of velocity and turbulence intensity are presented. This study has demonstrated the capability of using the laser transit anemometer for investigating the kinematics of small, high speed turbomachinery components.


Author(s):  
T Sato ◽  
J M Oh ◽  
A Engeda

The flow in a radial vaneless diffuser downstream of a centrifugal compressor is highly complex, as the flow is turbulent, unsteady, viscous, and three-dimensional. Depending on the initial state of the end-wall boundary layers and the diffuser length, the flow may become fully developed or may separate from one of the walls. Therefore, to improve the diffuser performance, it is important to understand the flow field in the diffuser in detail. As the diffuser width is generally very small for most radial stages and an adverse pressure gradient exists, secondary flows are generated, making the flow fields more complicated. In addition, skewed boundary layers form on the wall surfaces. As flowrate is reduced, the flow field becomes more complicated and leads to rotating stall. This article presents detailed flow measurements in a vaneless diffuser of a centrifugal compressor stage with a very high flow coefficient radial impeller. Usually, centrifugal compressors with radial impellers are designed in the flow coefficient (ϕ) range ϕ = 0.01 - 0.16. Often, the need arises to design higher flow coefficient, ϕ, radial stages. Detailed measurements were carried out in the vaneless diffuser at seven radial positions downstream of a radial impeller designed for a very high flow coefficient of ϕ = 0.2. The experimental investigation was carried at four rotational speeds 13 000, 15 500, 18 000, and 20 500 r/min, but only the result of 20 500 r/min at near-design-point flowrate (5.11 kg/s) is reported in this article.


Author(s):  
Jiangnan Zhang ◽  
Pedro Gomes ◽  
Mehrdad Zangeneh ◽  
Benjamin Choo

It is found that the ideal gas assumption is not proper for the design of turbomachinery blades using supercritical CO2 (S-CO2) as working fluid especially near the critical point. Therefore, the inverse design method which has been successfully applied to the ideal gas is extended to applications for the real gas by using a real gas property lookup table. A fast interpolation lookup approach is implemented which can be applied both in superheated and two-phase regimes. This method is applied to the design of a centrifugal compressor blade and a radial-inflow turbine blade for a S-CO2 recompression Brayton cycle. The stage aerodynamic performance (volute included) of the compressor and turbine is validated numerically by using the commercial CFD code ANSYS CFX R162. The structural integrity of the designs is also confirmed by using ANSYS Workbench Mechanical R162.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Hermann ◽  
Manfred Wirsum ◽  
Douglas Robinson ◽  
Philipp Jenny

Abstract State-of-the-art centrifugal compressor stages are required to provide both a flexible and a highly efficient operation. To extend the stable operating range and to improve the design-point polytropic total-to-total efficiency of an open impeller centrifugal compressor stage, three vaned contoured diffusers characterized by geometric modifications of the hub and shroud wall in the vaneless space upstream the diffuser vanes and within the diffuser passages were designed. In this paper, a shroud wall, a hub wall and a hub and shroud wall contoured diffuser and a state-of-the-art baseline diffuser are experimentally examined. For the hub-contoured diffuser an operating range extension of 5.3% was measured at design stage Mach number. For the shroud-contoured diffuser an improvement of polytropic total-to-total efficiency by up to 0.3% is observed. The experimental data including normalized total-to-static pressure ratio and 5-hole-probe data is utilized to validate the numerical setup. By means of the CFD simulations the hub- and the shroud-contoured diffuser designs are analyzed and the hub-contoured diffuser’s effect on the local flow at diffuser vane leading edge is investigated. The results illustrate the local effect of the hub-contoured diffuser design on the flow field in the examined centrifugal compressor stage.


Author(s):  
Mahdi Nili-Ahmadabadi ◽  
Farzad Poursadegh ◽  
Majid R. Shahhosseini

This paper is concerned with performance improvement of a centrifugal compressor by evolution of an inverse design method for 3D design approaches. The design procedure encompasses two major steps. Firstly, using the BSA inverse design algorithm on the meridional plane of the impellers, the meridional geometries for impellers are defined based on modified pressure distribution. Furthermore, an original and progressive algorithm is developed for 3D design of angular coordinates of the impellers on the blade to blade planes of them based on blades loading improvements. Full 3D analysis of the designed compressor using Reynolds Average Navier-Stokes equations, and its comparison with the analysis results of the current compressor, shows that the total pressure ratio of the designed compressor at the same operation condition is enhanced more than 5 percent.


Author(s):  
Robert Kunte ◽  
Peter Jeschke ◽  
Caitlin Smythe

The subject of this paper is the experimental investigation of three different geometric configurations of the diffusing system in a high pressure centrifugal compressor stage for a jet engine application. The objective of this study is twofold. On the one hand, it seeks to explain the impact of truncating a diffuser and a redesigned tandem deswirler on the global stage performance; on the other hand, it aims to correlate the performance differences with local flow phenomena. For this purpose, a state-of-the-art centrifugal compressor test rig was used. Particle image velocimetry measurements visualize the separation behavior in the pipe diffuser passage. Thereby it is shown that the truncation of the diffuser changed the boundary conditions for the downstream deswirler including a high incidence. Thus, a new tandem deswirler design was implemented and measured. Moreover, the relative position of the two tandem rows is investigated. An optimal relative circumferential position for the stage efficiency and static pressure rise was found. This paper gives fundamental insight into the physical mechanisms of the influence of three geometric configurations in a centrifugal compressor stage, especially in the pipe diffuser and the deswirler. Hence, this study contributes in furthering knowledge of the fundamental principles of flow phenomena in the diffusing system of a centrifugal compressor.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document