Experimental Testing Techniques for Kevlar® Fiber Brush Seals

Author(s):  
Eric J. Ruggiero ◽  
Jason Allen ◽  
Mark Lusted

Non-metallic brush seals, and more specifically, Kevlar® (aramid) fiber brush seals, are an emerging sealing technology in low-pressure, low temperature applications. Compared to metallic brush seals, aramid fibers are an order of magnitude smaller in diameter and consequently offer much tighter sealing capability. Further, their compliant nature requires minimal pressure drops across the seal to encourage blow-down of the bristle pack onto the rotor during operation. Similarly, their compliant nature also enables the bristle pack to correct for alignment issues and to recover from radial growth transients of the rotor. Proper design of the bristle pack stiffness is critical to the successful operation of the seal. If the seal is designed to be too soft, frictional forces prohibit the recovery of the bristle pack if pressed away from the rotor. Conversely, if designed too stiffly, then the heat generation at the sliding interface of the seal accelerates the degradation of the seal. The goal of the present paper is to present the experimental techniques developed to guide the design of aramid fiber brush seals. Two experimental test methodologies will be presented: a direct stiffness measurement and a heat generation measurement. Both testing procedures have been used to successfully design seals for various GE turbomachinery products.

Author(s):  
Eric J. Ruggiero

Aramid fiber brush seals are ultra-low leakage, compliant sealing elements for turbomachinery applications. Such seals are applicable in the Aviation, Energy, and Oil and Gas markets as either air-air seals or air-oil seals. In the present study, the influence of friction present between the front plate and upstream side of the bristle pack of an aramid fiber brush seal is experimentally investigated. With the bristle pack fully exposed on the upstream side of the seal, the bristles are shown to blow down and create a better seal compared to the same brush seal with a front plate installed.


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

Within this paper a continuation in brush seal testing for flexible load regimes in a steam turbine is given. Besides the well-known main design parameters of brush seals, e.g. the bristle pack thickness, the bristle diameter or the lay angle of the bristle pack, this paper focuses on the axial inclination of the bristle pack and particularly the affinity of bristle pack oscillations at low inclined bristle packs and small pressure differences. As it was presented in GT2014-26330, the axial inclination of the bristle pack is an important design parameter for brush seals. Along with a clearly increased blow-down capability and a reduced stiffness the seals tend to exhibit an enhanced axial bristle pack width during pressurization. It was previously shown that a low axial inclination of the bristle pack results in a loose package and in bristle pack oscillations until pressure differences of 10 bar. Above pressure drops of 10 bar the resulting higher abrasive behavior stops and a well sealing brush seal with a loose bristle pack is given. Regarding the renewable energy sources for necessary changes in steam turbine operations, a flexible sealing system with an enhanced wide operating range is requested. To capture all positive behaviors of low inclined brush seals for pressure differences until 10 bar, a design to safely avoid bristle pack oscillations is required. With this background low inclined brush seals with a new back plate design were tested at the Institute’s cold air test facility in Braunschweig up to a pressure difference of 4 bar. The facility allows detailed sealing performance investigations including real time bristle pack observations. The present paper shows and discusses overall experimental results of brush seals with different axial inclinations mounted with an adjustable back plate to determine the influence of the back plate design on the bristle pack oscillations. Furthermore, these new results together with older measurements from 2012 were used to develop a theory regarding the changes that result from contact between the bristle pack and the adjusted back plate. Finally, the design for a pressure balanced back plate will be shown.


Author(s):  
Karl E. Barth ◽  
Gregory K. Michaelson ◽  
Adam D. Roh ◽  
Robert M. Tennant

This paper is focused on the field performance of a modular press-brake-formed tub girder (PBFTG) system in short span bridge applications. The scope of this project to conduct a live load field test on West Virginia State Project no. S322-37-3.29 00, a bridge utilizing PBFTGs located near Ranger, West Virginia. The modular PBFTG is a shallow trapezoidal box girder cold-formed using press-brakes from standard mill plate widths and thicknesses. A technical working group within the Steel Market Development Institute’s Short Span Steel Bridge Alliance, led by the current authors, was charged with the development of this concept. Research of PBFTGs has included analyzing the flexural bending capacity using experimental testing and analytical methods. This paper presents the experimental testing procedures and performance of a composite PBFTG bridge.


Author(s):  
Xinwei Shen ◽  
Shuting Lei

This study is motivated by the fact that temperature control is very important for the success of laser assisted milling. A transient three-dimensional thermal model is developed using finite element analysis for laser assisted milling (LAMill) of silicon nitride ceramics, and then validated through a series of experiments of laser assisted face milling. This study aims to explore the thermal characteristics in LAMill of silicon nitride ceramics and thus provide guidelines on parameter selection for future operations. In addition, heat generation associated with machining is considered, and the effects of laser power, feed, and cutting speed on temperature are investigated. Simulation results show that heat generation associated with machining can be neglected. Laser power is one critical parameter for successful operation of LAMill. Moreover, both feed and cutting speed can affect the operating temperatures by varying feed rate; however, once feed rate is fixed, they have a little impact on the operating temperatures.


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.


Author(s):  
M. W. Horner

Experimental testing and data analysis performed for simulated simplified IGCC system components have been completed. Earlier papers presented the program description and preliminary testing operations. This paper presents a review of the testing accomplishments and the results of data analysis. An air-blown, fixed-bed coal gasifier, and downstream cyclone particle separator were found to retain or remove coal ash particles and alkali metals very effectively. The low calorific fuel gas delivered to a gas turbine combustor was found to be significantly closer to the current “clean fuel” specification than had been anticipated. These results are very encouraging for the further development of simplified IGCC systems utilizing hot gas cleanup. Observed ash deposition rates imply that turbine cleaning would be less frequent by at least an order of magnitude as compared to operation on treated ash-forming petroleum fuels.


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

During the last decades a large effort has been made to continuously improve turbomachine efficiency. Besides the optimization of the primary flow path, also the secondary flow losses have been reduced considerably, due to the use of more efficient seals. Brush seals, as a compliant contacting filament seal, have become an attractive alternative to conventional labyrinth seals in the field of aircraft engines as well as in stationary gas and steam turbines. The aim of today’s research related to brush seals is to understand the characteristics and their connections, in order to be able to make performance predictions, and to ensure the reliability over a defined operating period. It is known that inevitable frictional contacts lead to an abrasive wear on the rotor side as well as on the bristle side. The wear situation is essentially influenced by the resulting contact force at the seal-to-rotor interface during the operating time. This contact force depends on the seal’s blow down capability, which is mainly determined by the geometrical design of the bristle pack, e.g. the axial inclination of the investigated seal design, in combination with the design and material of the surrounding parts, as well as the thermal boundary conditions. For realistic investigations with representative circumferential velocities the TU Braunschweig operates a specially developed steam test rig which enables live steam investigations under varying operating conditions up to 50 bar and 450 °C. Wear measurements and the determination of seal performance characteristics, such as blow down and bristle stiffness, were enabled by an additional test facility using pressurized cold air up to 8 bar as working fluid. This paper presents the chronological wear development on both rotor and seal side, in a steam test lasting 25 days respectively 11 days. Interruptions after stationary and transient intervals were made in order to investigate the wear situation. Two different seal arrangements, a single tandem seal and a two-stage single seal arrangement, using different seal elements were considered. The results clearly show a continuous wear development and that the abrasive wear of the brush seal and rotor is mainly due to the transient test operation, particularly by enforced contacts during shaft excursions. Despite the increasing wear to the brushes, all seals have shown a functioning radial-adaptive behavior over the whole test duration with a sustained seal performance. Thereby, it could be shown that the two-stage arrangement displays a load shift during transients, leading to a balanced loading and unloading status for the two single brush seals. From load sharing and in comparison with the wear data of the tandem seal arrangement, it can be derived that the two-stage seal is less prone to wear. However, the tandem seal arrangement, bearing the higher pressure difference within one configuration, shows a superior sealing performance under constant load, i.e. under stationary conditions.


1975 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 233-239
Author(s):  
C. A. ST-PIERRE ◽  
J. P. DUBUC ◽  
F. M. GAUTHIER ◽  
H. R. KLINCK

The differential response of a number of cultivars of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and oats (Avena sativa L.) to different methods of seeding was studied. Results of eight station–years with wheat show significant differences in yield among the cultivars and among seeding methods. The highest rate of seeding of wheat, 118 kg/ha, resulted in a significant yield increase, but the yield increase was smaller with narrower rows. The interaction of methods of seeding × cultivars was not significant, indicating that the presently used testing procedures give adequate evaluation of yield potential of wheat cultivars. The stable cultivar performance at the various rates of seeding suggests that efficient individual plant selection could be made at lower rates of seeding in rows 15 cm apart. Results of eight station–years with barley and 12 station–years with oats show that the experimental testing procedures used are adequate to evaluate oats and barley cultivars for yield.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 166-176
Author(s):  
A. A. Kovel

The ground-experimental testing of the elements of space technology is a crucial stage in the creation of space products, in fact, this is the ground «flight» of the devices being created. And how well the operating conditions will be reproduced at this stage and the successful functioning of the devices under the expected conditions is ensured, its successful operation in real flight during the service life depends. The radio electronic devices of the onboard equipment of the spacecraft are one of the essential elements that ensure the fulfillment of target tasks, which should confirm their readiness for the forthcoming work at the stage of groundbased experimental testing. The article discusses the stages of information support for the development of spacecraft onboard equipment, showing the ways to improve the technology of ground-based experimental testing of spacecraft onboard equipment. It is shown that at the present stage of development of the space industry, it has become possible to introduce the methodology of mathematical planning of an experiment into engineering practice. A backlog of applied work on radio-electronic topics h as appeared, showing the possibility of revealing in a full factorial experiment the influence of internal uncontrollable parameters (factors) of electronic components on the experimental results. This removed the obstacle to the implementation of the capabilities of the method in research and improvement of radio electronic devices onboard equipment.


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