Shock Induced Vortices in Transonic Compressors: Aerodynamic Effects and Design Correlations

Author(s):  
Henry Knobbe ◽  
Eberhard Nicke

Gas turbine total pressure ratio, efficiency and accurate stage matching prediction are of increasing importance in multi-stage compressor design. These highly challenging objectives can only be met if all components are highly loaded and optimally designed. Stage matching and efficiency improvements still depend on the designer’s experience and on empirical correlations. The upper blade part in highly loaded transonic compressors is especially difficult to design because of complex flow phenomena like compression shocks. On the one hand this region is of major interest, because of the high pressure ratios. On the other hand it is the most difficult area for the designer because of blade row interaction effects, tip leakage flows and high gradients in general. Recent publications investigated shock induced vortices (SIV), caused by the rotor bow shock. The shock interacts with the trailing edge of the upstream stator/IGV blade row. These vortices convect downstream through the rotor passage. But the unsteady flow phenomena inside transonic compressors are still worthwhile endeavor because of insufficient understanding regarding the unsteady effects onto the overall compressor performance. The vortex trajectory is predictable inside the rotor-passage. However, correlations for vorticity magnitude, vortex-frequency (number of vortices) and vortex-trajectory on the overall compressor performance were never described by equations. Furthermore it has not yet been clarified whether a small or a wide axial spacing is beneficial in highly loaded axial compressors. Therefore a transonic front stage (DLR Test Rig 250, 4 front stages of a state of the art gas turbine compressor) was chosen. The Q3D (quasi 3D) planes were extracted from 3D-Simulations for IGV/Rotor1 and Stator1/Rotor2. The approach is to separate the blade to blade effects from 3D effects, like tip leakage flow. This was achieved by different Q3D streamtubes in the upper blade part. These streamtubes allow a variation of the axial spacing without changing the steady flow solution. A wide range of the axial spacings have been simulated to get an overview about the resulting performance change. Furthermore a change of blade count ratio, inlet condition, outlet conditions and computational domain should lead to a better understanding. Physical relations between the shedded vortices and compressor overall performance should be derived. The results show a wide spreading of the compressor performance speedlines. This spreading indicates the unsteady effects caused by interaction effects. The spreading becomes wider towards the surge margin. The reduced number of IGVs result into a smaller spreading. The higher inlet temperature result into a neglectable change in data spreading. The changed computational domain (stator/rotor) result into a very small data spreading, compared to the front stage data distribution. The change of performance data is periodic to the established B3-factor [1]. This factor predicts the vortex trajectory inside the rotor passage. The analysis of rotor pre shock Mach number and blade count ratio leads to a systematic correlation factor (HK). This correlation takes the pre shock Mach number, the blade count ratio, the B3-factor and some algebraic elements into account to make a prediction of the unsteady effects regarding the total pressure ratio: HK = pt, unsteady−pt, steady. The developed correlations may be useful in 3D to calculate optimal axial spacings at a specific blade to blade plane or to make compressor performance prediction during the design process based on RANS-Simulations (reduced gap between simulation and measurement). Furthermore it was identified that neither a wide nor a short axial spacing is beneficial for a transonic compressor inside a blade to blade plane.

2014 ◽  
Vol 137 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Ubben ◽  
Reinhard Niehuis

Adjustable diffuser vanes offer an attractive design option for centrifugal compressors applied in industrial applications. However, the knowledge about the impact on compressor performance of a diffuser vane clearance between vane and diffuser wall is still not satisfying. This two-part paper summarizes results of experimental investigations performed with an industrial-like centrifugal compressor. Particular attention was directed toward the influence of the diffuser clearance on the operating behavior of the entire stage, the pressure recovery in the diffuser, and on the diffuser flow by a systematic variation of the parameters diffuser clearance height, diffuser vane angle, radial gap between impeller exit and diffuser inlet, and rotor speed. Compressor map measurements provide a summary of the operating behavior related to diffuser geometry and impeller speed, whereas detailed flow measurements with temperature and pressure probes allow a breakdown of the losses between impeller and diffuser and contribute to a better understanding of relevant flow phenomena. The results presented in Part I show that an one-sided diffuser clearance does not necessarily has a negative impact on the operation and loss behavior of the centrifugal compressor, but instead may contribute to an increased pressure ratio and improved efficiency as long as the diffuser passage is broad enough with respect to the clearance height. The flow phenomena responsible for this detected performance behavior are exposed in Part II, where the results of detailed measurements with pressure probes at diffuser exit and particle image velocimetry (PIV) measurements conducted inside the diffuser channel are discussed. The experimental results are published as an open computational fluid dynamics (CFD) testcase “Radiver 2.”


1993 ◽  
Vol 115 (4) ◽  
pp. 687-698 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. Collie ◽  
H. L. Moses ◽  
J. A. Schetz ◽  
B. A. Gregory

High-pressure-ratio turbines have flows dominated by shock structures that pass downstream into the next blade row in an unsteady fashion. Recent numerical results have indicated that these unsteady shocks may significantly affect the aerodynamic and mechanical performance of turbine blading. High cost and limited accessibility of turbine rotating equipment severely restrict the quantitative evaluation of the unsteady flowfield in that environment. Recently published results of the Virginia Tech transonic cascade facility indicate high integrity in simulation of the steady-state flow phenomena. The facility has recently been modified to study the unsteady effects of passing shock waves. Shock waves are generated by a shotgun blast upstream of the blade row. Shadowgraph photos and high-response pressure data are compared to previously published experimental and numerically predicted results. Plots are included that indicate large fluctuations in estimated blade lift and cascade loss.


Author(s):  
J. C. Collie ◽  
H. L. Moses ◽  
J. A. Schetz ◽  
B. A. Gregory

High-pressure ratio turbines have flows dominated by shock structures that pass downstream into the next blade row in an unsteady fashion. Recent numerical results have indicated that these unsteady shocks may significantly affect the aerodynamic and mechanical performance of turbine blading. High cost and limited accessibility of turbine rotating equipment severely restrict the quantitative evaluation of the unsteady flowfield in that environment. Recently published results of the Virginia Tech transonic cascade facility indicate high integrity in simulation of the steady state flow phenomena. The facility has recently been modified to study the unsteady effects of passing shock waves. Shock waves are genarated by a shotgun blast upstream of the blade row. Shadowgraph photos and high-response pressure data are compared to previously published experimental and numerically predicted results. Plots are included which indicate large fluctuations in estimated blade lift and cascade loss.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazutoyo Yamada ◽  
Kosuke Kubo ◽  
Kenichiro Iwakiri ◽  
Yoshihiro Ishikawa ◽  
Hirotaka Higashimori

Abstract This paper discusses the unsteady effects associated with the impeller/diffuser interaction on the internal flow field and aerodynamic performance of a centrifugal compressor. In centrifugal compressors with a vaned diffuser, the flow field is inherently unsteady due to the influence of interaction between the impeller and the diffuser, and the unsteadiness of the flow field can often have a great influence on the aerodynamic performance of the compressor. Especially in high-load compressors, it is considered that large unsteady effects are produced on the compressor performance with a strong flow unsteadiness. The unsteady effect on aerodynamic performance of the compressor has not been fully revealed yet, and sometimes the steady-state RANS simulation finds it difficult to predict the compressor performance. In this study, numerical simulations have been conducted for a transonic centrifugal compressor with a vaned diffuser. The unsteady effects were clarified by comparing the numerical results between a single-passage steady-state RANS analysis and a full-annulus unsteady RANS analysis. The comparison of simulation results showed the difference in entropy generation in the impeller. The impingement of diffuser shock wave with the impeller pressure surface brought about a cyclic increase in the blade loading near the impeller trailing edge. Accordingly, with increasing tip leakage flow rate, a second tip leakage vortex was newly generated in the aft part of the impeller, which resulted in additional unsteady loss generation inside the impeller.


Author(s):  
Xiaoshi Zhang

Abstract The influence of Reynolds number on performance of a highly loaded 10-stage axial compressor has been experimentally investigated. The experiment was performed by applying different inlet Reynolds numbers at several operating speeds. Reynolds number variation was achieved by throttling the inlet pressure. Both compressor total aerodynamic characteristics and detailed single stage performance were measured and analyzed. Test results show that all the compressor performance parameters including efficiency, mass flow and pressure ratio are reduced by decreasing Reynolds number. And the influence is higher at lower operating speed. Regarding to single stage characteristics, stage matching is less affected by Reynolds number at design speed, while all single stage chics are changed at low speed. The correlation between Reynolds number and compressor performance was obtained. Then the Wassell semi-empirical correlation method was applied to predict the Reynolds number influences for the same compressor. Comparison was made between experimental results and calculating results based on Wassell correlation. Results indicate that Wassell correlation is reliable for predicting trends. Wassell correlation works well for efficiency at design speed, but providing calculating inaccuracy at low speed. For mass flow correlation, Wassell correlation overestimated the influence of Reynolds number. Test results from this compressor are added to Wassell correlation curve, that provide reference for modern design application.


2016 ◽  
Vol 138 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mert Cevik ◽  
Huu Duc Vo ◽  
Hong Yu

This paper presents the development of a novel casing treatment to reduce compressor performance and stall margin sensitivities to tip clearance increase. A linked research project on blade design strategies for desensitization had discovered two flow features that reduce sensitivity to tip clearance, namely increased incoming meridional momentum in the rotor tip region and reduction/elimination of double tip leakage flow. Double tip leakage flow is the flow that exits one tip clearance and enters the tip clearance of the circumferentially adjacent blade instead of convecting downstream out of the blade passage. A new and practical casing treatment was developed and analyzed through Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes (RANS) computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations to decrease double tip leakage and reduce or even eliminate performance and stall margin sensitivity to tip clearance size. The casing treatment design consists of sawtooth-shaped circumferential indentations placed on the shroud over the rotor with a depth on the order of the tip clearance size. A detailed analysis of the flow field allowed for the elucidation of the flow mechanism associated with this casing treatment. A computational parametric study gave preliminary design rules for minimizing both performance/stall margin sensitivity to tip clearance and nominal performance loss. An improved casing indentation design was produced for which CFD simulations showed a complete desensitization of pressure ratio and stall margin while reducing efficiency sensitivity significantly for the tip clearance range studied with only a very small penalty in nominal pressure ratio. Further simulations showed that this casing treatment can be combined with desensitizing blade design strategies to further reduce tip sensitivity and reduce/eliminate/reverse nominal performance penalty. Lastly, preliminary CFD simulations on an axial compressor stage indicate that this shallow indentations' casing treatment strategy remains effective in a stage environment.


Author(s):  
Stefan Ubben ◽  
Reinhard Niehuis

The combination of variable speed control and adjustable diffuser vanes offers an attractive design option for centrifugal compressors applied in industrial applications where a wide operating range at high efficiency level and a favorable surge line is required. However, the knowledge about the impact on compressor performance of a diffuser vane clearance between vane and diffuser wall which is mandatory since the diffuser geometry adjustment has to take place during operation, is still not satisfying. This two-part paper summarizes results of investigations performed at the Institute of Jet Propulsion and Turbomachinery at RWTH Aachen with an industrial-like centrifugal compressor, featuring a design pressure ratio of 4 and a design speed of 35200 rpm. Particular attention was directed to the influence of the diffuser clearance on the operating behavior of the entire stage, the pressure recovery in the diffuser and on the diffuser flow by a systematic variation of the parameters diffuser clearance height, diffuser vane angle, radial gap between impeller exit and diffuser inlet, and rotor speed. Compressor map measurements provide a summary of the operating behavior related to diffuser geometry and impeller speed, whereas detailed flow measurements with temperature and pressure probes allow a breakdown of the losses between impeller and diffuser and contribute to a better understanding of relevant flow phenomena. The results presented in Part I show that an one-sided diffuser clearance does not necessarily has a negative impact on the operation and loss behavior of the centrifugal compressor, but instead may contribute to an increased pressure ratio and improved efficiency. The flow phenomena responsible for this detected performance behavior are exposed in Part II [28], where the results of detailed measurements with pressure probes at diffuser exit and Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) measurements conducted inside the diffuser channel, revealing the complex and unsteady flow leaving the impeller and passing the diffuser channel, are discussed. The experimental results are published as an open CFD testcase “Radiver 2” [26], extending the experimental data base of the testcase “Radiver” published in 2003 by Ziegler [31].


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 780
Author(s):  
Dong Liang ◽  
Xingmin Gui ◽  
Donghai Jin

In order to investigate the effect of seal cavity leakage flow on a compressor’s performance and the interaction mechanism between the leakage flow and the main flow, a one-stage compressor with a cavity under the shrouded stator was numerically simulated using an inhouse circumferentially averaged through flow program. The leakage flow from the shrouded stator cavity was calculated simultaneously with main flow in an integrated manner. The results indicate that the seal cavity leakage flow has a significant impact on the overall performance of the compressor. For a leakage of 0.2% of incoming flow, the decrease in the total pressure ratio was 2% and the reduction of efficiency was 1.9 points. Spanwise distribution of the flow field variables of the shrouded stator shows that the leakage flow leads to an increased flow blockage near the hub, resulting in drop of stator performance, as well as a certain destructive effect on the flow field of the main passage.


2021 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 1388-1405
Author(s):  
Zhiyuan Cao ◽  
Cheng Song ◽  
Xiang Zhang ◽  
Xi Gao ◽  
Bo Liu

Author(s):  
J. T. Schmitz ◽  
S. C. Morris ◽  
R. Ma ◽  
T. C. Corke ◽  
J. P. Clark ◽  
...  

The performance and detailed flow physics of a highly loaded, transonic, low-pressure turbine stage has been investigated numerically and experimentally. The mean rotor Zweifel coefficient was 1.35, with dh/U2 = 2.8, and a total pressure ratio of 1.75. The aerodynamic design was based on recent developments in boundary layer transition modeling. Steady and unsteady numerical solutions were used to design the blade geometry as well as to predict the design and off-design performance. Measurements were acquired in a recently developed, high-speed, rotating turbine facility. The nozzle-vane only and full stage characteristics were measured with varied mass flow, Reynolds number, and free-stream turbulence. The efficiency calculated from torque at the design speed and pressure ratio of the turbine was found to be 90.6%. This compared favorably to the mean line target value of 90.5%. This paper will describe the measurements and numerical solutions in detail for both design and off-design conditions.


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