Improving the Accuracy of Tests for Centrifugal Compressor Stage Performance Prediction

Author(s):  
Daniele Fiaschi ◽  
Giampaolo Manfrida ◽  
Libero Tapinassi

A design of experiment approach was used to solve problems on the new centrifugal compressor stage development test beds at the Nuovo Pignone – GE Oil&Gas premises in Florence, Italy. The company is able to provide centrifugal compressor equipment tailored to the user’s requests, with special reference to the oil & gas market. In order to provide this service, an archive of designs is available which can be adapted to different requirements: CFD is widely used to improve the turbomachinery performance, and on each new stage design extensive fluid dynamics test campaigns are routinely run, in order to confirm the expected performance. Recently inadequacy of the accuracy of the measurements became evident: the cause was traced back to thermal effects which introduced a large uncertainty in the test results, with special reference to machines having large operating Mach number, and low pressure ratio. The present work included: a) The development of a heat transfer model capable of predicting the observed trend of the experimental data. b) The improvement of the accuracy of total temperature measurements, needed to confirm the results of the model. The positive results allow the company to guarantee with increased confidence the expected performance levels.

Author(s):  
T. Ch. Siva Reddy ◽  
G. V. Ramana Murty ◽  
Prasad Mukkavilli ◽  
D. N. Reddy

Numerical simulation of impeller and low solidity vaned diffuser (LSD) of a centrifugal compressor stage is performed individually using CFX- BladeGen and BladeGenPlus codes. The tip mach number for the chosen study was 0.35. The same configuration was used for experimental investigation for a comparative study. The LSD vane is formed using standard NACA profile with marginal modification at trailing edge. The performance parameters obtained form numerical studies at the exit of impeller and the diffuser have been compared with the corresponding experimental data. These parameters are pressure ratio, polytropic efficiency and flow angle at the impeller exit where as the parameters those have been compared at the exit of diffuser are the static pressure recovery coefficient and the exit flow angle. In addition, the numerical prediction of the blade loading in terms of blade surface pressure distribution on LSD vane has been compared with the corresponding experimental results. Static pressure recovery coefficient and flow angle at diffuser exit is seen to match closely at higher flows. The difference at lower flows could be due to the effect of interaction between impeller and diffuser combinations, as the numerical analysis was done separately for impeller and diffuser and the effect of impeller diffuser interaction was not considered.


Author(s):  
Chaolei Zhang ◽  
Qinghua Deng ◽  
Zhenping Feng

This paper describes the aerodynamic redesign and optimization of a typical single stage centrifugal compressor, in which the total pressure ratio was improved from the original 4.0 to final 5.0 with the restrictions of keeping the impeller tip diameter, the design rotational speed and the design mass flow rate unchanged. Firstly the backsweep angle and the outlet blade height of the impeller were adjusted and the vaned diffuser was redesigned. Then a sensitivity analysis of the aerodynamic performance correlated to the primary redesign centrifugal compressor stage with respect to the chosen redesign variables was conducted, according to the parameterized results of the impeller and the vaned diffuser. Secondly the impeller and the vaned diffuser were optimized respectively under the stage environment at the design operation condition to improve the stage isentropic efficiency by using a global optimization method which coupled Evolutionary Algorithm (EA) and Artificial Neural Network (ANN), provided by the commercial software NUMECA DESIGN-3D. Subsequently the detailed performance maps of the centrifugal compressor stage corresponding to the primary redesign configuration and the optimum configuration were presented by Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) simulation. Finally the flow fields correlated to the centrifugal compressor configurations before and after optimization at the design operation condition were also compared and analyzed in detail. As a result the design target was achieved after the primary redesign, as a 2.7% gain in stage efficiency and a 3.6% increase in stage pressure ratio were obtained when compared with the primary redesign configuration after optimization. Moreover, the aerodynamic performance of the optimum configuration at the off-design operation conditions was also improved.


2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Hohlweg ◽  
Naresh Amineni

Abstract Test versus CFD predictions are presented for a medium flow coefficient, centrifugal compressor stage with 10% shorter axial stage space. Short axial length is achieved by reducing the shroud radius of curvature of the upstream return channel inlet. Situations often occur in multistage compressor applications where either rotor dynamics on new equipment or existing casing length on revamped units necessitate shorter stage space. The effect of the reduced space on various stage performance parameters is discussed referenced to the original, full length, stage design. CFD analysis for both configurations is also presented to compare with the test results and help explain the aerodynamic source of the increased losses. The complete stage is modeled on the program CFX-TASCflow beginning with a radial inlet and continuing through the impeller, diffuser and return channel.


Author(s):  
Kishore Ramakrishnan ◽  
Simon K. Richards ◽  
Franc¸ois Moyroud ◽  
Vittorio Michelassi

Previous experimental and CFD investigation of a GE Oil and Gas centrifugal compressor stage with a vaneless diffuser revealed a complex excitation mechanism caused by an aero-acoustic interaction between three blade rows. In stages with vaned diffusers, additional sources of aeromechanical excitation on the impeller can be expected. This unsteady CFD investigation is a follow-up from the previous vaneless diffuser study to identify any additional sources of excitation that arise in the presence of a vaned diffuser in preparation for aeromechanic tests to be conducted later. The study confirms that excitation from impeller-diffuser interaction generated acoustic modes can dominate the potential field excitation from the diffuser vanes. In addition, a significant aero-acoustic excitation to the impeller at a vane pass frequency corresponding to the sum of the vane counts in the two downstream vane rows is observed, and its origination is discussed. The latter excitation is different from that observed in the vaneless diffuser stage where the vane pass frequency observed by the impeller corresponds to the sum of the vane counts in the upstream and downstream vane rows.


Author(s):  
Y. Bousquet ◽  
X. Carbonneau ◽  
I. Trebinjac

The most common procedure to obtain the performance of a centrifugal compressor in an industrial development process is based on the use of a steady RANS model with the mixing-plane approach. However some phenomena such as the flow interaction between the impeller and the diffuser can be the source of unsteady effects which can affect the steady model prediction. This paper investigates the ability of a steady simulation to predict the overall performance and the flow structures in a subsonic centrifugal compressor stage by comparison with time-dependent results. Simulations are performed considering three operating points: peak efficiency, close to the stability limit and close to the blockage. The results show that the steady model is accurate enough to predict the stage static-to-total pressure ratio. However, in location where high level of fluctuation is expected, the steady model shows some weakness to predict the time-averaged quantities of the flow structure.


2009 ◽  
Vol 131 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Isabelle Trébinjac ◽  
Pascale Kulisa ◽  
Nicolas Bulot ◽  
Nicolas Rochuon

Numerical and experimental investigations were conducted in a transonic centrifugal compressor stage composed of a backswept splittered unshrouded impeller and a vaned diffuser. The characteristic curves of the compressor stage resulting from the unsteady simulations and the experiments show a good agreement over the whole operating range. On the contrary, the total pressure ratio resulting from the steady simulations is clearly overestimated. A detailed analysis of the flow field at design operating point led to identify the physical mechanisms involved in the blade row interaction that underlie the observed shift in performance. Attention was focused on the deformation in shape of the vane bow shock wave due its interaction with the jet and wake flow structure emerging from the impeller. An analytical model is proposed to quantify the time-averaged effects of the associated entropy increase. The model is based on the calculation of the losses across a shock wave at various inlet Mach numbers corresponding to the moving of the jet and wake flow in front of the shock wave. The model was applied to the compressor stage performance calculated with the steady simulations. The resulting curve of the overall pressure ratio as a function of the mass flow is clearly shifted toward the unsteady results. The model, in particular, enhances the prediction of the choked mass flow.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Hermann ◽  
Manfred Wirsum ◽  
Douglas Robinson ◽  
Philipp Jenny

Abstract State-of-the-art centrifugal compressor stages are required to provide both a flexible and a highly efficient operation. To extend the stable operating range and to improve the design-point polytropic total-to-total efficiency of an open impeller centrifugal compressor stage, three vaned contoured diffusers characterized by geometric modifications of the hub and shroud wall in the vaneless space upstream the diffuser vanes and within the diffuser passages were designed. In this paper, a shroud wall, a hub wall and a hub and shroud wall contoured diffuser and a state-of-the-art baseline diffuser are experimentally examined. For the hub-contoured diffuser an operating range extension of 5.3% was measured at design stage Mach number. For the shroud-contoured diffuser an improvement of polytropic total-to-total efficiency by up to 0.3% is observed. The experimental data including normalized total-to-static pressure ratio and 5-hole-probe data is utilized to validate the numerical setup. By means of the CFD simulations the hub- and the shroud-contoured diffuser designs are analyzed and the hub-contoured diffuser’s effect on the local flow at diffuser vane leading edge is investigated. The results illustrate the local effect of the hub-contoured diffuser design on the flow field in the examined centrifugal compressor stage.


Author(s):  
Isabelle Tre´binjac ◽  
Pascale Kulisa ◽  
Nicolas Bulot ◽  
Nicolas Rochuon

Numerical and experimental investigations were conducted in a transonic centrifugal compressor stage composed of a backswept splittered unshrouded impeller and a vaned diffuser. The characteristic curves of the compressor stage resulting from the unsteady simulations and the experiments show a good agreement over the whole operating range. On the contrary, the total pressure ratio resulting from the steady simulations is clearly overestimated. A detailed analysis of the flow field at design operating point led to identify the physical mechanisms involved in the blade row interaction that underlie the observed shift in performance. Attention was focused on the deformation in shape of the vane bow shock wave due its interaction with the jet and wake flow structure emerging from the impeller. An analytical model is proposed to quantify the time-averaged effects of the associated entropy increase. The model is based on the calculation of the losses across a shock wave at various inlet Mach numbers corresponding to the moving of the jet and wake flow in front of the shock wave. The model was applied to the compressor stage performance calculated with the steady simulations. The resulting curve of the overall pressure ratio as a function of the mass flow is clearly shifted towards the unsteady results. The model in particular enhances the prediction of the choked mass flow.


2013 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 113-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. H. Jawad ◽  
S. Abdullah ◽  
R. Zulkifli ◽  
W. M. F. W. Mahmood

ABSTRACTThis paper is a numerical simulation that was made in the three-dimensional flow, carried out in a modified centrifugal compressor, having vaned diffuser stage, used as an auto-motive turbo charger. Moreover, the performance of the centrifugal compressor was dependent on the proper matching between compressor impeller and vaned diffuser, influencing significantly surge and the efficiency of centrifugal compressor stages. In addition, a modified compressor impeller, coupled with vane and vaneless diffuser, has been found to have similar internal flow patterns for both the vaneless and vaned diffuser design. The vaned diffuser effect has been paid particular attention in terms of better analysis where the diffuser was designed for high sub-sonic inlet conditions. Another aim of this research was to study and simulate the effect of vaned diffuser on the performance of a centrifugal compressor. The simulation was undertaken by using a commercial software, the so-called ANSYS CFX, to predict numerically the performance in terms of pressure ratio, poly tropic efficiency and mass flow rate for the centrifugal compressor stage. The results were generated from CFD and were analyzed for better understanding of the fluid flow through centrifugal compressor stage. Conclusively, it was observed that the effect of the vaned diffuser is to convert the kinetic energy into a high static pressure after analyzing the results of the simulation.


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