scholarly journals Flow Control of Radial Inlet Chamber and Downstream Effects on a Centrifugal Compressor Stage

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 2168
Author(s):  
Fenghui Han ◽  
Zhe Wang ◽  
Yijun Mao ◽  
Jiajian Tan ◽  
Wenhua Li

Radial inlet chambers are widely used in various multistage centrifugal compressors, although they induce extra flow loss and inlet distortions. In this paper, the detailed flow characteristics inside the radial inlet chamber of an industrial centrifugal compressor have been numerically investigated for flow control and performance improvement. First, the numerical results are validated against the experimental data, and flow conditions inside the inlet chambers with different structures are compared. They indicate that, in the non-guide vane scheme, sudden expansions, tangential flows and flow separations in the spiral and annular convergent channels are the major causes of flow loss and distortions, while using guide vanes could introduce additional flow impacts, separations and wakes. Based on the flow analysis, structure improvements have been carried out on the radial inlet chamber, and an average increase of 4.97% has been achieved in the inlet chamber efficiencies over different operating conditions. However, the results further reveal that the increases in the performance and overall flow uniformity just in the radial inlet chamber do not necessarily mean a performance improvement in the downstream components, and the distribution of the positive tangential velocity at the impeller inlet might be a more essential factor for the efficiency of the whole compressor.

2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
pp. 168781402097490
Author(s):  
Fenghui Han ◽  
Zhe Wang ◽  
Yijun Mao ◽  
Jiajian Tan ◽  
Wenhua Li

Inlet chambers (IC) are the typical upstream component of centrifugal compressors, and inlet guide vanes in the IC have a great impact on its internal flow and aerodynamic loss, which will significantly influence the performance of the downstream compressor stages. In this paper, an experimental study was carried out on the flow characteristics inside a radial IC of an industrial centrifugal compressor, including five testing sections and 968 measuring points for two schemes with and without guide vanes. Detailed distributions of flow parameters on each section were obtained as well as the overall performance of the radial IC, and the causes of the flow loss inside the IC and the non-uniformity of flow parameters at the outlet section were investigated. Besides, numerical simulations were performed to further analyze the flow characteristics inside the radial IC. The experimental and numerical results indicate that, in the scheme without guide vanes, sudden expansions in the spiral channel and flow separations in the annular convergence channel are the major sources of flow loss and distortions generated in the radial IC; while in the scheme with guide vanes, the flow impacts, separations and wakes caused by the inappropriate design of guide vanes are the main reasons for the flow loss of the IC itself and the uneven flow distributions at the IC outlet.


Author(s):  
Levi André B. Vigdal ◽  
Lars E. Bakken

The introduction of variable inlet guide vanes (VIGVs) upfront of a compressor stage affects performance and permits tuning for off-design conditions. This is of great interest for emerging technology related to subsea compression. Unprocessed gas from the wellhead will contain liquid condensate, which affects the operational condition of the compressor. To investigate the effect of guide vanes on volume flow and pressure ratio in a wet gas compressor, VIGVs are implemented upfront of a centrifugal compressor stage to control the inlet flow direction. The guide vane geometry and test rig setup have previous been presented. This paper documents how changing the VIGV setting affects compressor performance under dry and wet operating conditions. The reduced performance effect and operating range at increased liquid content are of specific interest. Also documented is the change in the VIGV effect relative to the setting angle.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 1360
Author(s):  
Wei Wang ◽  
Xi Wang ◽  
Zhengwei Wang ◽  
Mabing Ni ◽  
Chunan Yang

The instability of the no-load working condition of the pump turbine directly affects the grid connection of the unit, and will cause vibration and damage to the components of the unit in severe cases. In this paper, a three-dimensional full flow numerical model including the runner gap and the pressure-balance pipe was established. The method SST k-ω model was used to predict the internal flow characteristics of the pump turbine. The pressure pulsation of the runner under different operating conditions during the no-load process was compared. Because the rotation speed, flow rate, and guide vane opening of the unit change in a small range during the no-load process, the pressure pulsation characteristics of the runner are basically the same. Therefore, a working condition was selected to analyze the transient characteristics of the flow field, and it was found that there was a high-speed ring in the vaneless zone, and a stable channel vortex was generated in the runner flow passage. Analyzing the axial water thrust of each part of the runner, it was found that the axial water thrust of the runner gap was much larger than the axial water thrust of the runner blades, and it changed with time periodically. It was affected by rotor stator interaction. The main frequency was expressed as a multiple of the number of guide vanes, that is, vanes passing frequency, 22fn. During the entire no-load process, the axial water thrust of the runner changed slowly with time and fluctuated slightly.


2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Seung-Jun Kim ◽  
Young-Seok Choi ◽  
Yong Cho ◽  
Jong-Woong Choi ◽  
Jin-Hyuk Kim

Abstract Francis turbines are often used for generating hydroelectric power, but their performance characteristics significantly depend on the operating conditions. In particular, interblade vortices in the passages between runner blades can occur at low flowrates, which can degrade performance, and increase vibrations and instability during operation. In a previous study, we showed that the hydraulic performance and flow characteristics depend on the flow passage area of runner blades under low-flowrate conditions. Under such operating conditions, the runner blade thickness can affect the interblade vortex characteristics, and in turn, affect the performance of the turbine. In this study, we investigated the effect of runner blade thicknesses in the presence of interblade vortices under low flowrates; steady- and unsteady-state Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes equations were solved using a shear stress transport as a turbulence model. The interblade vortices were described well at the near leading and trailing edges near the hub. These vortex regions showed flow separation and stagnation flow, and the interblade vortex characteristics were dependent on the high-magnitude unsteady pressures at the low-frequency region. For the same guide vane opening, at lower flowrates, higher blockage ratios reduced interblade vortex formation and unsteady pressure.


1980 ◽  
Vol 102 (1) ◽  
pp. 193-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Khalil ◽  
W. Tabakoff ◽  
A. Hamed

A method for analyzing the viscous flow through turbomachine rotors is presented. The field analysis is based on the solution of the full Navier-Stokes equations over the rotor blade-to-blade stream channels. An Alternating-Direction-Implicit method is employed to carry out the necessary numerical integration of the elliptic governing equations. The flow analysis may be applied to various types of turbomachine rotors. Preliminarily, only the case of laminar flows are considered in this paper. The flow characteristics within the rotors of a radial inflow turbine and a radial bladed compressor are investigated over a wide range of operating conditions. Excellent results are obtained when compared with existing experimental data. The method of this analysis is quite general and can deal with wide range of applications. Possible modification of the present study to deal with turbulent flow cases are also identified.


Author(s):  
David May ◽  
John W. Chew ◽  
Timothy J. Scanlon

De-swirl nozzles are sometimes used in turbomachinery to reduce the pressure drop when air is drawn radially inwards through a rotating cavity. However, this can lead to non-unique steady state solutions with operating conditions achieved depending on how the steady point is approached. In the present study, a transient, 1D model of flow in a rotating cavity has been created. The model allows the vortex profile to change with through flow rate, and links this to estimates of disk windage, tangential velocity and, consequently, the vortex pressure gradient. The model was applied to the simulation of de-swirl nozzle fed, rotating cavities with radial inflow. The steady vortex flow characteristics (non-dimensional flow versus pressure ratio) predicted by the model were validated for 2 distinct cases. For a smooth rectangular cavity the flow characteristic was predicted using the model’s default parameters. For an engine-representative case with non-axisymmetric geometric features, the flow characteristic of the cavity was reproduced with some alignment of the model. The transient model reproduced experimentally observed hysteresis, discontinuity in operating characteristics, and regions where no steady-state solution could be found. A transient model is required as a steady state model would choose one of the possible solutions without physical justification. In the case of the engine-representative rig, part of the flow characteristic could not be obtained in testing. This is determined to be due to the interaction of the negative resistance region of the vortex and the flow modulating valve characteristic. Measures that allow the full capture of the flow characteristic in rig testing are identified.


1988 ◽  
Vol 110 (3) ◽  
pp. 293-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
U. Haupt ◽  
U. Seidel ◽  
A. N. Abdel-Hamid ◽  
M. Rautenberg

Experiments were conducted to investigate the characteristics of self-excited flow oscillations in a high-performance centrifugal compressor system with a straight channel radial vaned diffuser. Fast response dynamic pressure transducers on the shroud wall and blade-mounted strain gages were used to identify the onset of the oscillations and their characteristics in space and time. In addition, flow characteristics near the shroud wall were visualized by an oil injection method, showing the extent of upstream directed reverse flow in the impeller range during significant unsteady flow compressor operation. Rotating nonuniform flow patterns were found in a wide range of operating speeds before the occurrence of surge. The number of lobes in the nonuniform flow patterns was dependent on the operating conditions and varied from two to four. Results of this experimental investigation were compared with those obtained from a previous investigation of the same compressor but with a cambered vane diffuser. Considerable similarity between the two configurations was found in the spatial distribution of the unsteady pressure field and in the frequencies of the fluctuations. The stability margin before the occurrence of surge and the operating regimes in which very intense pressure fluctuations were found were however different. In both cases, flow visualization techniques revealed the occurrence of reversed flow near the shroud wall of the impeller. Reverse flow extent up to the leading edge of the splitter blades systematically correlated with the occurrence of a nonuniform pressure pattern rotating with relatively high speed. Low rotational speed pressure patterns were observed when the extent of the reverse flow was up to the leading edge of the long blade. These different flow characteristics can be related to the occurrence of distinct rotating stall cell numbers. This result could be confirmed by unsteady pressure and blade vibration measurements.


Author(s):  
Hang Zhao ◽  
Qinghua Deng ◽  
Kuankuan Zheng ◽  
Hanzhen Zhang ◽  
Zhenping Feng

Supercritical CO2 closed-loop Brayton cycles offer the potential of better economical and practical efficiency due to its compact size and smaller compression work as compared with some traditional working fluids cycles, in which compressor is the key component. In this paper, the aerodynamic design and impeller aerodynamic optimization were conducted for a single stage centrifugal compressor with a combined vaneless and vaned diffuser, operating with CO2 slightly above the vapor-liquid critical point. The NIST REFPROP database was used for the computation of supercritical CO2 properties in design analysis and numerical investigation. The flow characteristics of the supercritical CO2 compressor were investigated by NUMECA FINE/Turbo. In order to weaken the low pressure regions, a vaneless diffuser was applied in this design, which would control and reduce the distribution differences of fluid thermodynamic states and increase fluid static pressure. The results indicate that there are no obvious low pressure regions occurring close to the leading edge of vaned diffuser. So it is observed in the design process that the vaneless diffuser could improve the aerodynamic performance of supercritical CO2 compressor. Compared with the operating conditions of the compressor only under centrifugal force, the pressure load from the aerodynamic analysis and the centrifugal load due to high speed of rotation were considered in the study of the stress and deformation of the structure of impeller by ANSYS/Mechanical. It can be concluded that supercritical CO2 provides unique properties for the compressor working process, which have a significant influence on finite element modeling in structural analysis. For the present design the maximum von Mises stress and total deformation are shown much smaller than the maximum allowable values, and thus the compressor could work in a wide range of operating conditions.


Author(s):  
J. Ferna´ndez Oro ◽  
K. Argu¨elles Di´az ◽  
C. Santolaria Morros ◽  
R. Ballesteros Tajadura

In the usual operation of turbomachinery, some unsteady flow phenomena appear due to the non uniformity of the flow inside the rotor, when observed in the fixed reference frame. These phenomena are often related to the unsteady character of the pressure and velocity fields, which produce oscillating forces on the blades, superimposed to the steady force. These oscillating forces are the main mechanism of noise generation, which appear even at a constant rotational speed and at flow rates where the performance curves are stable. In axial turbomachines, the interaction is due to relative motion between the static and rotating blade rows. Considering the case of a fixed blade row (stator) placed upstream of the rotor, the non uniform flow leaving those blades (usually referred as IGV blades) is observed as an unsteady flow by the rotor blades. The effect of this interaction is the generation of unsteady forces on the rotor blades, which generate vibrations (risk of fatigue failure) and noise, and non-uniformity and unsteadiness of the pressure field, that propagates as an acoustic wave. The first part of this work is a brief description of a URANS numerical modeling of the unsteady flow characteristics of a one-stage subsonic axial flow fan with a reaction degree greater than 1. The focus is placed on the statorrotor interaction performance. Both 2D and 3D models of the fan, with 13 IGV’s and 9 rotor blades, were developed and an unsteady simulation was achieved to carry out the main characteristics of the flow inside the turbomachine. Once the actuating forces are determined, the influence of the radial position, the operating conditions and the distance of the fixed and the rotating blade rows is also analyzed. The final part of the paper is focused over the identification, through the definition of deterministic stresses — related to the characteristic blade-passage frequency of every row — that provoke the interaction between fixed and rotating blade rows and its evolution through time. The object is to obtain, in a stress tensor form, the contribution of the velocity field, that is changing because of the sucessive relative positions between blade rows, to the pressure distribution over the blade surfaces in the interior of the stage. Finally, a map of deterministic stresses and even, deterministic kinetic energy, can be obtained to show the influence of the blade rows in the interaction, unsteady phenomena.


1987 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. N. Abdel-Hamid ◽  
U. Haupt ◽  
M. Rautenberg

Self-excited flow oscillations in a high performance centrifugal compressor with vaned diffuser have been experimentally investigated over a wide range of operating conditions. The space and time characteristics of the flow oscillations in the compressor from inlet to outlet were measured using fast response dynamic pressure transducers on the shroud wall and blade mounted straingages. Multi-channel signal analysis techniques in the frequency domain clearly identified the onset of the oscillations and its type. Rotating stall was found to exist in certain regimes of the compressor map but did not necessarily preceed the occurrence of the surge phenomena. At compressor speeds below 13600 rpm the rotating non-uniform flow when it occurred was composed of three lobes and rotated at approximately 5–6 % of the impeller speed. Above 13600 rpm the rotating pattern changed to two lobes and rotated at approximately 16–20 % of the impeller speed. The direction of rotation of both patterns was opposite to that of the impeller. Analysis of the performance characteristics of the compressor components prior to and during flow oscillations indicates that the relative magnitude of the flow fluctuations in the semi-vaneless space downstream of the impeller are the largest which points towards the close relationship between the conditions leading to the onset of the oscillations and the flow details in this region of the compressor. Additional confirmation of this relationship is obtained from comparison between the results obtained in this study and those obtained when the same compressor was operated with a vaneless diffuser.


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