Survey of Twisted Blading Development in Steam Turbines

1969 ◽  
Vol 184 (1) ◽  
pp. 449-474 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Smith

The development of steam turbine blading with high tip to hub diameter ratios over the last 50 years has been traced with particular emphasis on the reasons for adopting twisted blading in low pressure turbines. The aerodynamic concepts of the more generally accepted design bases for twisted blading are discussed and comparisons made between the efficiencies of selected twisted designs and straight blading. Current methods in the development of transonic low pressure blading for large 3000 rev/min central power station units are also described and the paper concludes by comparing the theoretical and measured steam angles across the last stage of a one-third scale model of a 136-in tip diameter low pressure turbine.

Author(s):  
Kevin Cremanns ◽  
Dirk Roos ◽  
Arne Graßmann

In order to meet the requirements of rising energy demand, one goal in the design process of modern steam turbines is to achieve high efficiencies. A major gain in efficiency is expected from the optimization of the last stage and the subsequent diffuser of a low pressure turbine (LP). The aim of such optimization is to minimize the losses due to separations or inefficient blade or diffuser design. In the usual design process, as is state of the art in the industry, the last stage of the LP and the diffuser is designed and optimized sequentially. The potential physical coupling effects are not considered. Therefore the aim of this paper is to perform both a sequential and coupled optimization of a low pressure steam turbine followed by an axial radial diffuser and subsequently to compare results. In addition to the flow simulation, mechanical and modal analysis is also carried out in order to satisfy the constraints regarding the natural frequencies and stresses. This permits the use of a meta-model, which allows very time efficient three dimensional (3D) calculations to account for all flow field effects.


Author(s):  
Lorenzo Cosi ◽  
Jonathon Slepski ◽  
Steven DeLessio ◽  
Michele Taviani ◽  
Amir Mujezinovic´

New low pressure (LP), stages for variable speed, mechanical drive and geared power generation steam turbines have been developed. The new blade and nozzle designs can be applied to a wide range of turbine rotational speeds and last stage blade annulus areas, thus forming a family of low pressure stages—High Speed (HS) blades and nozzles. Different family members are exact scales of each other and the tip speeds of the corresponding blades within the family are identical. Thus the aeromechanical and aerodynamic characteristics of the individual stages within the family are identical as well. Last stage blades and nozzles have been developed concurrently with the three upstream stages, creating optimised, reusable low pressure turbine sections. These blades represent a step forward in improving speed, mass flow capability, reliability and aerodynamic efficiency of the low pressure stages for the industrial steam turbines. These four stages are designed as a system using the most modern design tools applied on Power Generation and Aircraft Engines turbo-machineries. The aerodynamic performance of the last three stage of the newly designed group will be verified in a full-scale test facility. The last stage blade construction incorporates a three hooks, axial entry dovetail with improved load carrying capability over other blade attachment methods. The next to the last stage blade also uses a three hooks axial entry dovetail, while the two front stage blades employ internal tangential entry dovetails. The last and next to the last stage blades utilize continuous tip coupling via implementation of integral snubber cover while a Z-lock integral cover is employed for the two upstream stages. Low dynamic strains at all operating conditions (off and on resonance speeds) will be validated via steam turbine testing at realistic steam conditions (steam flows, temperatures and pressures). Low load, high condenser pressure operation will also be verified using a three stage test turbine operated in the actual steam conditions as well. In addition, resonance speed margins of the four stages have been verified through full-scale wheel box tests in the vacuum spin cell, thus allowing the application of these stages to Power Generation applications. Stator blades are produced with a manufacturing technology, which combines full milling and electro-discharge machining. This process allows machining of the blades from an integral disc, and thus improving uniformity of the throat distribution. Accuracy of the throat distribution is also improved when compared to the assembled or welded stator blade technology. This paper will discuss the aerodynamic and aeromechanical design, development and testing program completed for this new low pressure stages family.


Author(s):  
Ilias Bosdas ◽  
Michel Mansour ◽  
Anestis I. Kalfas ◽  
Reza S. Abhari ◽  
Shigeki Senoo

The largest share of electricity production worldwide belongs to steam turbines. However, the increase of renewable energy production has led steam turbines to operate under part load conditions and increase in size. As a consequence, long rotor blades will generate a relative supersonic flow field at the inlet of the last rotor. This paper presents a unique experiment work that focuses at the top 30% of stator exit in the last stage of an low pressure (LP) steam turbine test facility with coarse droplets and high wetness mass fraction under different operating conditions. The measurements were performed with two novel fast response probes: a fast response probe for three-dimensional flow field wet steam measurements and an optical backscatter probe for coarse water droplet measurements ranging from 30 μm up to 110 μm in diameter. This study has shown that the attached bow shock at the rotor leading edge is the main source of interblade row interactions between the stator and rotor of the last stage. In addition, the measurements showed that coarse droplets are present in the entire stator pitch with larger droplets located at the vicinity of the stator's suction side. Unsteady droplet measurements showed that the coarse water droplets are modulated with the downstream rotor blade-passing period. This set of time-resolved data will be used for in-house computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code development and validation.


Author(s):  
Hiteshkumar Mistry ◽  
Manisekaran Santhanakrishnan ◽  
John Liu ◽  
Alexander Stein ◽  
Subhrajit Dey ◽  
...  

Modern steam turbines often utilize very long last stage buckets (LSB’s) in their low-pressure sections to improve efficiency. Some of these LSB’s can range in the order of 5 feet long. These long buckets (aka “blades”) are typically supported at their tip by a tip-shroud and near the mid span by a part span shroud or part span connector (PSC). The PSC is a structural element that connects all the rotor blades, generally at the mid span. It is primarily designed to address various structural issues, often with little attention to its aerodynamic effects. The objective of the current work is to quantify the impact of PSC on aerodynamic performance of the last stage of a LP steam turbine by using detailed CFD analyses. A commercial CFD solver, ANSYS CFX™, is used to solve the last stage domain by setting steam as the working fluid with linear variation of specific heat ratio with temperature. A tetrahedral grid with prismatic layers near the solid walls is generated using ANSYS WORKBENCH™. The results show a cylindrical PSC reduces the efficiency of the last stage by 0.32 pts, of which 0.20 pts is due to the fillet attaching the PSC to the blade. The results also show insignificant interaction of the PSC with the bucket tip aerodynamics. The work presents a detailed flow field analysis and shows the impact of PSC geometry on the aerodynamic performance of last stage of steam turbine. Present work is useful to turbine designer for trade-off studies of performance and reliability of LSB design with or without PSC.


Author(s):  
Christoph Heinz ◽  
Markus Schatz ◽  
Michael V. Casey ◽  
Heinrich Stu¨er

The last stages of a low-pressure steam turbine, with long freestanding blades, may experience forced response excitation during resonance crossing at start-up and shut-down and this can be responsible for blade failure. This paper presents an experimental investigation of the circumferential blade amplitude distribution at different operating conditions and for different mistuning configurations in a scale model of a state-of-the-art low pressure steam turbine. Five configurations are investigated; two with different intentionally mistuned frequency arrangements, where the blades are placed alternately in different high-low configurations and three randomly mistuned systems. For the randomly mistuned systems the standard deviation of the resonance frequencies of the last stage blades is varied. The maximum blade amplitude and the circumferential blade amplitude distribution of each mistuning configuration are compared at different operating points and at a repeatable rotational speed gradient. The behaviour of the blade amplitude distribution at different operating conditions shows that the vibration levels depend on both the mistuning configuration and the operating points.


2021 ◽  
Vol 1096 (1) ◽  
pp. 012097
Author(s):  
A M Kongkong ◽  
H Setiawan ◽  
J Miftahul ◽  
A R Laksana ◽  
I Djunaedi ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Eric Liese

A dynamic process model of a steam turbine, including partial arc admission operation, is presented. Models were made for the first stage and last stage, with the middle stages presently assumed to have a constant pressure ratio and efficiency. A condenser model is also presented. The paper discusses the function and importance of the steam turbines entrance design and the first stage. The results for steam turbines with a partial arc entrance are shown, and compare well with experimental data available in the literature, in particular, the “valve loop” behavior as the steam flow rate is reduced. This is important to model correctly since it significantly influences the downstream state variables of the steam, and thus the characteristic of the entire steam turbine, e.g., state conditions at extractions, overall turbine flow, and condenser behavior. The importance of the last stage (the stage just upstream of the condenser) in determining the overall flowrate and exhaust conditions to the condenser is described and shown via results.


Author(s):  
Tom Verstraete ◽  
Johan Prinsier ◽  
Alberto Di Sante ◽  
Stefania Della Gatta ◽  
Lorenzo Cosi

The design of the radial exhaust hood of a low pressure (LP) steam turbine has a strong impact on the overall performance of the LP turbine. A higher pressure recovery of the diffuser will lead to a substantial higher power output of the turbine. One of the most critical aspects in the diffuser design is the steam guide, which guides the flow near the shroud from axial to radial direction and has a high impact on the pressure recovery. This paper presents a method for the design optimization of the steam guide of a steam turbine for industrial power generation and mechanical drive of centrifugal compressors. This development is in the frame of a continuous effort in GE Oil and Gas to develop more efficient steam turbines. An existing baseline exhaust and steam guide design is first analyzed together with the last LP turbine stage with a frozen rotor full 3D Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) calculation. The numerical prediction is compared to available steam test turbine data. The new exhaust box and a first attempt new steam guide design are then first analyzed by a CFD computation. The diffuser inlet boundary conditions are extracted from this simulation and used for improving the design of the steam guide. The maximization of the pressure recovery is achieved by means of a numerical optimization method that uses a metamodel assisted differential evolution algorithm in combination with a 3D CFD solver. The profile of the steam guide is parameterized by a Bezier curve. This allows for a wide variety of shapes, respecting the manufacturability constraints of the design. In the design phase it is mandatory to achieve accurate results in terms of performance differences in a reasonable time. The pressure recovery coefficient is therefore computed through the 3D CFD solver excluding the last stage, to reduce the computational burden. Steam tables are used for the accurate prediction of the steam properties. Finally, the optimized design is analyzed by a frozen rotor computation to validate the approach. Also off-design characteristics of the optimized diffuser are shown.


Author(s):  
Bowen Ding ◽  
Liping Xu ◽  
Jiandao Yang ◽  
Rui Yang ◽  
Yuejin Dai

Modern large steam turbines for power generation are required to operate much more flexibly than ever before, due to the increasing use of intermittent renewable energy sources such as solar and wind. This has posed great challenges to the design of LP steam turbine exhaust systems, which are critical to recovering the leaving energy that is otherwise lost. In previous studies, the design had been focused on the exhaust diffuser with or without the collector. Although the interaction between the last stage and the exhaust hood has been identified for a long time, little attention has been paid to the last stage blading in the exhaust system’s design process, when the machine frequently operates at part-load conditions. This study focuses on the design of LP exhaust systems considering both the last stage and the exhaust diffuser, over a wide operating range. A 1/10th scale air test rig was built to validate the CFD tool for flow conditions representative of an actual machine at part-load conditions, characterised by highly swirling flows entering the diffuser. A numerical parametric study was performed to investigate the effect of both the diffuser geometry variation and restaggering the last stage rotor blades. Restaggering the rotor blades was found to be an effective way to control the level of leaving energy, as well as the flow conditions at the diffuser inlet, which influence the diffuser’s capability to recover the leaving energy. The benefits from diffuser resizing and rotor blade restaggering were shown to be relatively independent of each other, which suggests the two components can be designed separately. Last, the potentials of performance improvement by considering both the last stage rotor restaggering and the diffuser resizing were demonstrated by an exemplary design, which predicted an increase in the last stage power output of at least 1.5% for a typical 1000MW plant that mostly operates at part-load conditions.


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