Investigation of a Variable Geometry Turbine Nozzle for Diesel Engine Turbochargers

Author(s):  
Anuj Srivastava ◽  
Kuldeep Kumar ◽  
Ganesh Banda

Abstract High power demand, emission regulations, high efficient design are the prime requirement for the design of turbochargers. VGT (variable geometry turbocharging) is most widely used and explored compared to other available options to deal with today’s market. VGT turbochargers offers several potential benefits when compared to fixed geometry turbochargers, like increased transient response, wide operating range, improved torque characteristics, boost pressure recovery and better fuel economy. In this paper performance variation of compressor and turbine viz, — Pressure ratio, mass flow, and efficiency, and throat area are optimized to reach to the operating point of the engine. Different vane angles (0, +4°, +7°, +10° & +15°) are studied to understand the variation of transient turbine response. Authors also discussed the mechanical conceptualization of the VANT (Variable area nozzle) in thought of having great impact on the performance.

Author(s):  
Anand Mammen Thomas ◽  
Jensen Samuel ◽  
A. Ramesh

Mean-line modelling approach which has generally been applied to fixed geometry turbocharger turbines has been extended to predict the performance of the variable geometry turbine for different inlet blade angles. The model uses an initial assumption of turbine inlet pressure which was iteratively corrected based on outlet pressure boundary condition. The model was implemented in MATLAB and stable and convergent solutions were obtained using relaxation techniques for different operating conditions. Experiments were done on a state of the art transient diesel engine test bed using the same VGT turbine in the turbocharger at different engine torques and speeds. Using experimental data the model was calibrated for the aerodynamic blockage in the fixed nozzle and rotor blade passages. Results revealed that turbine overall pressure ratio can be predicted accurately if a blockage factor varying with nozzle blade orientation is used in the model.


Author(s):  
Srithar Rajoo ◽  
R. F. Martinez-Botas

Variable Geometry Turbines (VGT) are widely used to improve engine-turbocharger matching and currently common in diesel engines. VGT has proven to provide air boost for wide engine speed range as well as reduce turbo-lag. This paper presents the design and experimental evaluation of a variable geometry mixed flow turbocharger turbine. The tests have been carried out with a permanent magnet eddy current dynamometer within a velocity ratio range of 0.47 to 1.09. The peak efficiency of the variable geometry turbine corresponds to vane angle settings between 60° and 65°, for both the lean and straight vanes in the region of 80%. The variable geometry turbine was tested under pulsating flow with straight and lean nozzle vanes for different vane angle settings, 40Hz and 60Hz flow. In general, the range of mass flow parameter is higher in the straight nozzle vanes with an average of 66.4% and 69.7% for 40Hz and 60Hz flow respectively. The straight nozzle vanes also shows increasing pressure ratio range compared to the lean nozzle vanes, which is more apparent in the maximum pressure ratio experienced by the turbine in an unsteady cycle. In overall, the cycle averaged efficiency in the straight vane configuration is marginally higher than the lean vane. Furthermore, the difference to the equivalent quasi-steady is better in the straight vane configuration compared to the lean vane.


Author(s):  
Alok A. Joshi ◽  
Scott James ◽  
Peter Meckl ◽  
Galen King ◽  
Kristofer Jennings

Physics-based models of diesel engines with exhaust gas recirculation and a variable geometry turbine (EGR/VGT) have been developed extensively in the control system design community. However, these models omit the heat transfer effects of the charge-air cooler and the recirculated exhaust gas cooler in order to avoid the added complexity in model order for online implementation. Generally, there is no need to include these effects if the purpose of the model is to control the target variables, such as boost pressure and air-to-fuel ratio. In this paper, after surveying the existing state of physics-based models for the EGR/VGT subsystem, a comprehensive model of the EGR/VGT subsystem is developed. This model includes heat transfer effects in the coolers, pressure drops across air filters and pipes, and mass flow rate calculations for a variable geometry turbine and an exhaust gas recirculation control valve. The purpose and scope of this work is offline modeling-for-diagnostics. Such models, though complex, will assist in the fault sensitivity analysis of a subsystem while avoiding any destructive testing when a major design modification in the EGR/VGT subsystem is proposed. For example, the impact of charge-water or EGR cooler degradation on the boost pressure and the air-to-fuel ratio can be studied with such models to further help in designing diagnostic reasoning strategies. Simulation performed using the proposed physicsbased model demonstrates a dominant failure effect of an EGR cooler coolant leak over a charge-water cooler water leak on the properties of the intake air.


Author(s):  
Ian Thompson ◽  
Stephen Spence ◽  
Charles McCartan ◽  
David Thornhill ◽  
Jonathan Talbot-Weiss

Turbogenerating is a form of turbocompounding whereby a Turbogenerator is placed in the exhaust stream of an internal combustion engine. The Turbogenerator converts a portion of the expelled energy in the exhaust gas into electricity which can then be used to supplement the crankshaft power. Previous investigations have shown how the addition of a Turbogenerator can increase the system efficiency by up to 9%. However, these investigations pertain to the engine system operating at one fixed engine speed. The purpose of this paper is to investigate how the system and in particular the Turbogenerator operate during engine speed transients. On turbocharged engines, turbocharger lag is an issue. With the addition of a Turbogenerator, these issues can be somewhat alleviated. This is done by altering the speed at which the Turbogenerator operates during the engine’s speed transient. During the transients, the Turbogenerator can be thought to act in a similar manner to a variable geometry turbine where its speed can cause a change in the turbocharger turbine’s pressure ratio. This paper shows that by adding a Turbogenerator to a turbocharged engine the transient performance can be enhanced. This enhancement is shown by comparing the turbogenerated engine to a similar turbocharged engine. When comparing the two engines, it can be seen that the addition of a Turbogenerator can reduce the time taken to reach full power by up to 7% whilst at the same time, improve overall efficiency by 7.1% during the engine speed transient.


1980 ◽  
Vol 102 (1) ◽  
pp. 141-147 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. M. Chappie ◽  
P. F. Flynn ◽  
J. M. Mulloy

A design method has been developed to produce nozzleless turbine casings which provide a centrifugal turbine wheel with a uniform inlet state. The analysis includes the effect of wall friction and has been found to accurately predict the mass flow versus pressure ratio characteristics of nozzleless casings. The uniform inlet state provided by this design approach provides turbine wheel/casing configurations with near optimum efficiency and a very low aerodynamic blade vibration excitation level. The model has been extended to produce variable area casings to simulate a simplified variable casing geometry. Testing has verified the accuracy of the approach both in the design point and variable geometry cases. Also depicted are new insights into turbine wheel design constraints discovered when using a variable geometry turbine casing.


Author(s):  
Kang Song ◽  
Devesh Upadhyay ◽  
Hui Xie

Control-oriented models of turbocharger processes such as the compressor mass flow rate, the compressor power, and the variable geometry turbine power are presented. In a departure from approaches that rely on ad hoc empirical relationships and/or supplier provided performance maps, models based on turbomachinery physics and known geometries are attempted. The compressor power model is developed using Euler’s equations of turbomachinery, where the gas velocity exiting the rotor is estimated from an empirically identified correlation for the ratio between the radial and tangential components of the gas velocity. The compressor mass flow rate is modeled based on mass conservation, by approximating the compressor as an adiabatic converging-diverging nozzle with compressible fluid driven by external work input from the compressor wheel. The variable geometry turbine power is developed with Euler’s equations, where the turbine exit swirl and the gas acceleration in the vaneless space are neglected. The gas flow direction into the turbine rotor is assumed to align with the orientation of the variable geometry turbine vane. The gas exit velocity is calculated, similar to the compressor, based on an empirical model for the ratio between the turbine rotor inlet and exit velocities. A power loss model is also proposed that allows proper accounting of power transfer between the turbine and compressor. Model validation against experimental data is presented.


Author(s):  
Calogero Avola ◽  
Alberto Racca ◽  
Angelo Montanino ◽  
Carnell E. Williams ◽  
Alfonso Renella ◽  
...  

Abstract Maximization of the turbocharger efficiency is fundamental to the reduction of the internal combustion engine back-pressure. Specifically, in turbochargers with a variable geometry turbine (VGT), energy losses can be induced by the aerodynamic profile of both the nozzle vanes and the turbine blades. Although appropriate considerations on material limits and structural performance of the turbine wheel are monitored in the design and aero-mechanical optimization phases, in these stages, fatigue phenomena might be ignored. Fatigue occurrence in VGT wheels can be categorized into low and high cycle behaviors. The former would be induced by the change in turbine rotational speed in time, while the latter would be caused by the interaction between the aerodynamic excitation and blades resonating modes. In this paper, an optimized turbine stage, including unique nozzle vanes design and turbine blades profile, has been assessed for high cycle fatigue (HCF) behavior. To estimate the robustness of the turbine wheel under several powertrain operations, a procedure to evaluate HCF behavior has been developed. Specifically, the HCF procedure tries to identify the possible resonances between the turbine blades frequency of vibrations and the excitation order induced by the number of variable vanes. Moreover, the method evaluates the turbine design robustness by checking the stress levels in the component against the limits imposed by the Goodman law of the material selected for the turbine wheel. In conclusion, both the VGT design and the HCF approach are experimentally assessed.


Author(s):  
K Ramesh ◽  
BVSSS Prasad ◽  
K Sridhara

A new design of a mixed flow variable geometry turbine is developed for the turbocharger used in diesel engines having the cylinder capacity from 1.0 to 1.5 L. An equivalent size radial flow variable geometry turbine is considered as the reference for the purpose of bench-marking. For both the radial and mixed flow turbines, turbocharger components are manufactured and a test rig is developed with them to carry out performance analysis. Steady-state turbine experiments are conducted with various openings of the nozzle vanes, turbine speeds, and expansion ratios. Typical performance parameters like turbine mass flow parameter, combined turbine efficiency, velocity ratio, and specific speed are compared for both mixed flow variable geometry turbine and radial flow variable geometry turbine. The typical value of combined turbine efficiency (defined as the product of isentropic efficiency and the mechanical efficiency) of the mixed flow variable geometry turbine is found to be about 25% higher than the radial flow variable geometry turbine at the same mass flow parameter of 1425 kg/s √K/bar m2 at an expansion ratio of 1.5. The velocity ratios at which the maximum combined turbine efficiency occurs are 0.78 and 0.825 for the mixed flow variable geometry turbine and radial flow variable geometry turbine, respectively. The values of turbine specific speed for the mixed flow variable geometry turbine and radial flow variable geometry turbine respectively are 0.88 and 0.73.


1993 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiromu Furukawa ◽  
Hiroshi Yamaguchi ◽  
Kinshi Takagi ◽  
Akihiro Okita

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document