Numerical Investigations of an Axial Exhaust Diffuser Coupling the Last Stage of a Generic Gas Turbine

2018 ◽  
Vol 141 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marius Mihailowitsch ◽  
Markus Schatz ◽  
Damian M. Vogt

It is well known that the last stage of a turbine and the subsequent diffuser should be viewed at and designed as a coupled system rather than as single standalone components. The turbine outlet flow imposes the inlet conditions to the diffuser, whereas the recovered dynamic pressure in the diffuser directly controls the turbine back pressure. With changing operating point, the turbine outflow can vary significantly. This results consequently in large variations of the diffuser performance. A major role in the coupled system of turbine and diffuser can be attributed to the tip leakage flow. While it is desirable to minimize the tip leakage with regard to the turbine, a higher leakage mass flow can often be beneficial for the diffuser performance. As there is currently a trend toward aggressive and hence shorter diffusers which are particularly prone to separation, the question arises where the optimum for this tradeoff problem lies. To investigate the performance in the coupled turbine/diffuser system, a generic last stage with shrouded rotor and axial exhaust diffuser has been designed. The components are representative for heavy duty stationary gas turbine applications. Results are presented for three different operating points representing part-load (PL), design-load (DL), and over-load (OL) condition. Three different seal gap widths are taken into account to control the leakage flow. The results indicate that an operating point-dependent optimum gap width can be found for the coupled system efficiency, whereas the maximum turbine performance is always achieved with a minimum gap width.

Author(s):  
Marius Mihailowitsch ◽  
Markus Schatz ◽  
Damian M. Vogt

It is well known that the last stage of a turbine and the subsequent diffuser should be viewed at and designed as a coupled system rather than as single standalone components. The turbine outlet flow imposes the inlet conditions to the diffuser, whereas the recovered dynamic pressure in the diffuser directly controls the turbine back pressure. With changing operating point, the turbine outflow can vary significantly. This results consequently in large variations of the diffuser performance. A major role in the coupled system of turbine and diffuser can be attributed to the tip leakage flow. While it is desirable to minimize the tip leakage with regard to the turbine, a higher leakage mass flow can often be beneficial for the diffuser performance. As there is currently a trend towards aggressive and hence shorter diffusers which are particularly prone to separation, the question arises where the optimum for this tradeoff problem lies. To investigate the performance in the coupled turbine/diffuser system, a generic last stage with shrouded rotor and axial exhaust diffuser have been designed. The components are representative for heavy duty stationary gas turbine applications. Results are presented for three different operating points representing part-load, design-load and over-load condition. Three different seal gap widths are taken into account to control the leakage flow. The results indicate that an operating point dependent optimum gap width can be found for the coupled system efficiency whereas the maximimum turbine performance is always achieved with a minimum gap width.


2017 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. F4IW8S
Author(s):  
Ilias Papagiannis ◽  
Asad Raheem ◽  
Altug Basol ◽  
Anestis Kalfas ◽  
Reza Abhari ◽  
...  

Abstract In this paper, an unsteady investigation of the last two stages of a low-pressure steam turbine with supersonic airfoils near the tip of the last stage’s rotor blade is presented. Goal is the investigation of multistage effects and tip leakage flow in the last stage of the turbine and to provide insight on the stator-rotor flow interaction in the presence of a bow-shock wave. This study is unique in a sense of combining experimental data for code validation and comparison with a numerical simulation of the last two stages of a real steam turbine, including tip-cavity paths and seals, steam modelling and experimental data used as inlet and outlet boundary conditions. Analysis of results shows high unsteadiness close to the tip of the last stage, due to the presence of a bow-shock wave upstream of the rotor blade leading edge and its interaction with the upstream stator blades, but no boundary layer separation on stator is detected at any instant in time. The intensity of the shock wave is weakest, when the axial distance of the rotor leading edge from the upstream stator trailing edge is largest, since it has more space available to weaken. However, a phase shift between the maximum values of static pressure along the suction side of the stator blade is identified, due to the shock wave moving with the rotor blades. Additionally, the bow-shock wave interacts with the blade shroud and the tip leakage flow. Despite the interaction with the incoming flow, the total tip leakage mass flow ingested in the tip-cavity shows a steady behaviour with extremely low fluctuations in time. Finally, traces of upstream stage’s leakage flow have been identified in the last stage, contributing to entropy generation in inlet and outlet of last stage’s stator blade, highlighting the importance of performing multistage simulations.


Author(s):  
J. Tallman ◽  
B. Lakshminarayana

A pressure-correction based, 3D Navier-Stokes CFD code was used to simulate the effects of turbine parameters on the tip leakage flow and vortex in a linear turbine cascade to understand the detailed flow physics. A baseline case simulation of a cascade was first conducted in order to validate the numerical procedure with experimental measurements. The effects of realistic tip clearance spacing, inlet conditions, and relative endwall motion were then sequentially simulated, while maintaining previously modified parameters. With each additional simulation, a detailed comparison of the leakage flow’s direction, pressure gradient, and mass flow, as well as the leakage vortex and its roll-up, size, losses, location, and interaction with other flow features, was conducted. Part I of this two-part paper series focuses on the effect of reduced tip clearance height on the leakage flow and vortex. Reduced tip clearance resulted in less mass flow through the gap, a smaller leakage vortex, and less aerothermal losses in both the gap and the vortex. The shearing of the leakage jet and passage flow to which leakage vortex roll-up is usually attributed to was not observed in any of the simulations. Alternative explanations of the leakage vortex’s roll-up are presented. Additional secondary flows that were seen near the casing were also discussed. A more thorough thesis on the research presented in this paper can be found at the World Wide Web address http://navier.aero.psu.edu/∼jat.


Author(s):  
Jun Li ◽  
Zhigang Li ◽  
Zhenping Feng

The static pressure recovery coefficient of the exhaust hood has significant impact on the aerodynamic performance of the low pressure cylinder for steam turbines. Numerical investigations on the aerodynamic performance of the exhaust hood and full last stage with consideration of the rotor tip leakage were presented in this paper. Three-dimensional Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) solutions and k–ε turbulent model were utilized to analyze the static pressure recovery performance of the exhaust hood using the commercial CFD software ANSYS-CFX. Effect of the last stage rotor tip leakage flow on the aerodynamic performance of the downstream exhaust hood was conducted by comparison of the computational domains for the exhaust hood and full last stage with and without tip clearance. The numerical results show that the last stage rotor tip leakage jet can suppress the flow separation near the diffuser wall of the exhaust hood and improve its static pressure recovery performance. The detailed flow fields of the exhaust hood with and without consideration of the rotor tip leakage flow were also illustrated and corresponding flow mechanism was discussed.


2000 ◽  
Vol 123 (2) ◽  
pp. 324-333 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Tallman ◽  
B. Lakshminarayana

A pressure-correction based, 3D Navier-Stokes CFD code was used to simulate the effects of turbine parameters on the tip leakage flow and vortex in a linear turbine cascade to understand the detailed flow physics. A baseline case simulation of a cascade was first conducted in order to validate the numerical procedure with experimental measurements. The effects of realistic tip clearance spacing, inlet conditions, and relative endwall motion were then sequentially simulated, while maintaining previously modified parameters. With each additional simulation, a detailed comparison of the leakage flow’s direction, pressure gradient, and mass flow, as well as the leakage vortex and its roll-up, size, losses, location, and interaction with other flow features, was conducted. Part II of this two-part paper series focuses on the effect of relative motion of the outer casing on the leakage flow and vortex development. Casing relative motion results in less mass flow through the gap and a smaller leakage vortex. The structure of the aerothermal losses in the passage change dramatically when the outer casing motion was incorporated, but the total losses in the passage remained very similar. Additional secondary flows that are seen near the casing are also discussed.


Author(s):  
J. Tallman ◽  
B. Lakshminarayana

A pressure-correction based, 3D Navier-Stokes CFD code was used to simulate the effects of turbine parameters on the tip leakage flow and vortex in a linear turbine cascade to understand the detailed flow physics. A baseline case simulation of a cascade was first conducted in order to validate the numerical procedure with experimental measurements. The effects of realistic tip clearance spacing, inlet conditions, and relative endwall motion were then sequentially simulated, while maintaining previously modified parameters. With each additional simulation, a detailed comparison of the leakage flow’s direction, pressure gradient, and mass flow, as well as the leakage vortex and its roll-up, size, losses, location, and interaction with other flow features, was conducted. Part II of this two-part paper series focuses on the effect of relative motion of the outer casing on the leakage flow and vortex development. Casing relative motion resulted in less mass flow through the gap and a smaller leakage vortex. The structure of the aerothermal losses in the passage changed dramatically when the outer casing motion was incorporated, but the total losses in the passage remained very similar. Additional secondary flows that were seen near the casing are also discussed. A more thorough thesis on the research presented in this paper can be found at the World Wide Web address http://navier.aero.psu.edu/∼jat.


Author(s):  
Tianrui Sun ◽  
Paul Petrie-Repar ◽  
Di Qi

Blade failure caused by flutter is a major problem in the last stage of modern steam turbines. It is because rotor at this stage always has a large scale in spanwise, which provides low structural frequency as well as supersonic tip speeds. Since most of the unsteady aerodynamic work is done in the tip region, transonic tip-leakage flow that influences the tip region flow could have a remarkable effect on the aerodynamic stability of rotor blades. However, few research had been done on the tip-leakage flow influence on flutter characteristic based on full-scale steam turbine numerical models. In this paper, an open 3D steam turbine stage model designed by Durham University was applied, which was widely analyzed and representative for the last stage of modern industrial steam turbines. The average Mach number at the rotor outlet is 1.1. URANS simulation carried by both numerical software CFX and LUFT code is applied, and the two solvers show an agreement on steady and unsteady results. The numerical results indicate that the influence of tip leakage flow on blade stability is based on two types of flow mechanisms. Both mechanisms act on the suction side of near tip region. The first type of mechanism is produced by the reduction of passage shock near the leading edge, and the other type of mechanism at the rear of blade is caused by the interaction between tip leakage vortex and trailing edge shock of the neighbor blade. In conclusion, tip leakage flow has a significant influence on steam turbine flutter boundary prediction and requires further analysis in the future.


2000 ◽  
Vol 123 (2) ◽  
pp. 314-323 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Tallman ◽  
B. Lakshminarayana

A pressure-correction based, 3D Navier-Stokes CFD code was used to simulate the effects of turbine parameters on the tip leakage flow and vortex in a linear turbine cascade to understand the detailed flow physics. A baseline case simulation of a cascade was first conducted in order to validate the numerical procedure with experimental measurements. The effects of realistic tip clearance spacing, inlet conditions, and relative endwall motion were then sequentially simulated, while maintaining previously modified parameters. With each additional simulation, a detailed comparison of the leakage flow’s direction, pressure gradient, and mass flow, as well as the leakage vortex and its roll-up, size, losses, location, and interaction with other flow features, was conducted. Part I of this two-part paper focuses on the effect of reduced tip clearance height on the leakage flow and vortex. Reduced tip clearance results in less mass flow through the gap, a smaller leakage vortex, and less aerothermal losses in both the gap and the vortex. The shearing of the leakage jet and passage flow to which leakage vortex roll-up is usually attributed to is not observed in any of the simulations. Alternative explanations of the leakage vortex’s roll-up are presented. Additional secondary flows that are seen near the casing are also discussed.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (14) ◽  
pp. 4168
Author(s):  
Botao Zhang ◽  
Xiaochen Mao ◽  
Xiaoxiong Wu ◽  
Bo Liu

To explain the effect of tip leakage flow on the performance of an axial-flow transonic compressor, the compressors with different rotor tip clearances were studied numerically. The results show that as the rotor tip clearance increases, the leakage flow intensity is increased, the shock wave position is moved backward, and the interaction between the tip leakage vortex and shock wave is intensified, while that between the boundary layer and shock wave is weakened. Most of all, the stall mechanisms of the compressors with varying rotor tip clearances are different. The clearance leakage flow is the main cause of the rotating stall under large rotor tip clearance. However, the stall form for the compressor with half of the designed tip clearance is caused by the joint action of the rotor tip stall caused by the leakage flow spillage at the blade leading edge and the whole blade span stall caused by the separation of the boundary layer of the rotor and the stator passage. Within the investigated varied range, when the rotor tip clearance size is half of the design, the compressor performance is improved best, and the peak efficiency and stall margin are increased by 0.2% and 3.5%, respectively.


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