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Article
Three-Dimensional Flow Simulation by a Hybrid Two-Phase Solver for the Assessment of Liquid/Gas Transport in a Volute-Type Centrifugal Pump with Twisted Blades
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2023, 8(3), 28; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp8030028 - 30 Aug 2023
Viewed by 160
Abstract
A hybrid two-phase flow solver is proposed, based on an Euler–Euler two-fluid model with continuous blending of a Volume-of-Fluid method when phase interfaces of coherent gas pockets are to be resolved. In a preceding study on a two-dimensional bladed research pump with reduced [...] Read more.
A hybrid two-phase flow solver is proposed, based on an Euler–Euler two-fluid model with continuous blending of a Volume-of-Fluid method when phase interfaces of coherent gas pockets are to be resolved. In a preceding study on a two-dimensional bladed research pump with reduced rotational speed, the transition from bubbly flow to coherent steady gas pockets observed in optical experiments with liquid/gas flow could be well captured by the hybrid solver. In the present study, the experiments and solver validation are extended to an industrial-scale centrifugal pump with twisted three-dimensional blades and elevated design rotational speed. The solver is combined with a population balance model, and a scale-adaptive turbulence model is employed. Compared to the two-dimensional bladed pump, the transition from agglomerated bubbles flow to attached gas pockets is shifted to larger gas loading, which is well captured by the simulation. The pump head drop with increasing gas load is also reproduced, showing the hybrid solver’s validity for realistic pump operation conditions. Full article
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Article
Effect of the von Karman Shedding Frequency on the Hydrodynamics of a Francis Turbine Operating at Nominal Load
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2023, 8(3), 27; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp8030027 - 07 Aug 2023
Viewed by 377
Abstract
This paper presents a numerical analysis of the influence of the von Karman vortex shedding at the blade trailing edge on the hydrodynamics of a recently installed small hydro Francis turbine manifesting very loud and high-frequency acoustic pulsations when operating close to the [...] Read more.
This paper presents a numerical analysis of the influence of the von Karman vortex shedding at the blade trailing edge on the hydrodynamics of a recently installed small hydro Francis turbine manifesting very loud and high-frequency acoustic pulsations when operating close to the nominal load. A reduced single-passage numerical model is developed to reduce the computational effort of the simulation while ensuring high accuracy in the assessment of fluid flow. The accuracy of the proposed numerical approach is investigated by comparing the frequency spectrum of the experimentally acquired acoustic frequency and the numerical pressure signals, confirming the nature of the machine’s vibrations. The validated numerical model represents a useful tool for an in-depth analysis of the machine’s hydrodynamics in the preliminary design phases. The proposed approach represents a valid alternative to the traditional correlation-based approach for the evaluation of the von Karman shedding frequency with less computational effort compared with a transient simulation of the entire machine. Full article
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Article
Scale-Resolving Hybrid RANS-LES Simulation of a Model Kaplan Turbine on a 400-Million-Element Mesh
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2023, 8(3), 26; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp8030026 - 02 Aug 2023
Viewed by 314
Abstract
Double-regulated Kaplan turbines with adjustable guide vanes and runner blades offer a high degree of flexibility and good efficiency for a wide range of operating points. However, this also leads to a complex geometry and flow guidance with, for example, vortices of different [...] Read more.
Double-regulated Kaplan turbines with adjustable guide vanes and runner blades offer a high degree of flexibility and good efficiency for a wide range of operating points. However, this also leads to a complex geometry and flow guidance with, for example, vortices of different sizes and strengths. The flow in a draft tube is especially challenging to simulate mainly due to flow phenomena, like swirl, separation and strong adverse pressure gradients, and a strong dependency on the upstream flow conditions. Standard simulation approaches with RANS turbulence models, a coarse mesh and large time step size often fail to correctly predict performance and can even lead to wrong tendencies in the overall behavior. To reveal occurring flow phenomena and physical effects, a scale-resolving hybrid RANS-LES simulation on a block structured mesh of about 400 million hexahedral elements of a double-regulated five-blade model Kaplan turbine is carried out. In this paper, first, the results of the ongoing simulation are presented. The major part of the simulation domain is running in LES mode and seems to be properly resolved. The validation of the simulation results with the experimental data shows mean deviations of less than 0.8% in the global results, i.e., total head and power, and a good visual agreement with the three-dimensional PIV measurements of the velocity in the cone and both diffuser channels of the draft tube. In particular, the trend of total head and the results for the draft tube differ significantly between the scale-resolving simulation and a standard RANS simulation. The standard RANS simulation exhibits a highly unsteady behavior of flow, which is not observed in the experiments or scale-resolving simulation. Full article
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Article
Numerical Investigation of Rotating Instability Development in a Wide Tip Gap Centrifugal Compressor
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2023, 8(3), 25; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp8030025 - 01 Aug 2023
Viewed by 434
Abstract
In the current study, full-stage unsteady simulations were performed to investigate rotating instability inception mechanisms in a particularly large tip clearance centrifugal compressor with a vaneless diffuser and a volute. Four operating points along a speed line were analysed to understand the influence [...] Read more.
In the current study, full-stage unsteady simulations were performed to investigate rotating instability inception mechanisms in a particularly large tip clearance centrifugal compressor with a vaneless diffuser and a volute. Four operating points along a speed line were analysed to understand the influence of the mass flow reduction on flow structures. Close to the peak efficiency, an unsteady interaction between the tip clearance vortices and splitter blades was observed. Considering other studies, the influence of the tip gap size was analysed. Then, a large-scale vortex shedding from the leading edges of the main blades was detected when the stage operated near the maximum pressure ratio. It was demonstrated that shed vortices were caused by the combination of the radial gradient of the tangential velocity under the tip vortex and the reverse backflow near the casing. Previous studies on axial compressors refer to these vortical structures as backflow vortices. These vortices cause a significant increase in the incidence angle in the tip region. Full article
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Article
Heat Transfer Analysis of Damaged Shrouded High-Pressure Turbine Rotor Blades
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2023, 8(3), 24; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp8030024 - 01 Aug 2023
Viewed by 350
Abstract
Due to the increasingly high turbine inlet temperatures, heat transfer analysis is now, more than ever, a vital part of the design and optimization of high-pressure turbine rotor blades of a modern jet engine. The present study aimed to find out how shape [...] Read more.
Due to the increasingly high turbine inlet temperatures, heat transfer analysis is now, more than ever, a vital part of the design and optimization of high-pressure turbine rotor blades of a modern jet engine. The present study aimed to find out how shape deviation and in-service deterioration affect heat exchange patterns on the rotor blade. The rotor geometries used for this analysis are represented by a set of high-resolution 3D structured light scans of blades with the same number of in-service hours. An automatic meshing technique was employed to generate high-resolution meshes directly on the scanned rotor geometries, which captured all the surface features with high fidelity. Steady-state 3D RANS flow simulations with a k-ω SST turbulence model were conducted on a one-and-a-half stage computational domain of the scanned geometries. First, the distribution of the heat transfer coefficient was calculated for each blade; then, a correlation was sought between the heat transfer coefficient and parametrized shape deviation, to assess the impact of each parameter on HTC levels. Full article
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Article
Rotor Cascade Assessment at Off-Design Condition: An Aerodynamic Investigation on Platform Cooling
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2023, 8(3), 23; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp8030023 - 22 Jul 2023
Viewed by 375
Abstract
Off-design condition of a rotor blade cascade with and without platform cooling was experimentally investigated. The ability of the gas turbine to operate down to 50% to 20% of its nominal intake air flow rate has an important consequence in the change in [...] Read more.
Off-design condition of a rotor blade cascade with and without platform cooling was experimentally investigated. The ability of the gas turbine to operate down to 50% to 20% of its nominal intake air flow rate has an important consequence in the change in the inlet incidence angle, which varied from nominal to −20°. Platform cooling through an upstream slot simulating the stator-to-rotor interface gap was considered. The impact of rotation on purge flow injection was simulated by installing fins inside the slot to give the coolant flow a tangential direction. Aerodynamic measurements to quantify the cascade aerodynamic loss and secondary flow structures were performed at Ma2is = 0.55, varying the coolant to main flow mass flow ratio (MFR%) and the incidence angle. The results show that losses strongly increase with MFR. A negative incidence allows a reduction in the overall loss even when coolant is injected with a high MFR. The more negative the incidence, the greater the loss reduction. Full article
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Article
Performance Evaluation in a Fully Purged High-Pressure Turbine Stage Using Seed Gas Concentration Measurements
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2023, 8(3), 22; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp8030022 - 17 Jul 2023
Viewed by 319
Abstract
The efficiency assessment of a high-pressure turbine (HPT) stage is complicated by the presence of upstream and downstream purge flows. In fact, the efficiency calculation is often based on mass flow-averaged values of total temperature at the stage inlet and outlet planes. Moreover, [...] Read more.
The efficiency assessment of a high-pressure turbine (HPT) stage is complicated by the presence of upstream and downstream purge flows. In fact, the efficiency calculation is often based on mass flow-averaged values of total temperature at the stage inlet and outlet planes. Moreover, the purge flow distribution in the annulus is usually unknown and therefore assumed to be uniform. This paper presents and applies an alternative method to calculate the efficiency of a fully purged HPT stage. Such a definition relies on seed gas concentration measurements at the HPT stage outlet plane to determine the outlet purge flow distribution. After comparing the alternative method to the standard definition (based on the assumption of uniform purge) for the nominal purge case, the efficiency variation between the case with nominal purge and the case without purge is investigated. Full article
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Article
Experimental Analysis of the Three Dimensional Flow in a Wells Turbine Rotor
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2023, 8(3), 21; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp8030021 - 16 Jul 2023
Viewed by 424
Abstract
An experimental investigation of the local flow field in a Wells turbine has been conducted, in order to produce a detailed analysis of the aerodynamic characteristics of the rotor and support the search for optimized solutions. The measurements were conducted with a hot-wire [...] Read more.
An experimental investigation of the local flow field in a Wells turbine has been conducted, in order to produce a detailed analysis of the aerodynamic characteristics of the rotor and support the search for optimized solutions. The measurements were conducted with a hot-wire anemometer (HWA) probe, reconstructing the local three-dimensional flow field both upstream and downstream of a small-scale Wells turbine. The multi-rotation technique has been applied to measure the three velocity components of the flow field for a fixed operating condition. The results of the investigation show the local flow structures along a blade pitch, highlighting the location and radial extension of the vortices which interact with the clean flow, thus degrading the turbine’s overall performance. Some peculiarities of this turbine have also been shown, and need to be considered in order to propose modified solutions to improve its performance. Full article
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Article
Aerodynamics and Sealing Performance of the Downstream Hub Rim Seal in a High-Pressure Turbine Stage
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2023, 8(3), 20; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp8030020 - 10 Jul 2023
Viewed by 437
Abstract
The purpose of the paper is to characterize the aerodynamic behavior of a rotor-downstream hub cavity rim seal in a high-pressure turbine (HPT) stage. The experimental data are acquired in the Transonic Test Turbine Facility at the Graz University of Technology: the test [...] Read more.
The purpose of the paper is to characterize the aerodynamic behavior of a rotor-downstream hub cavity rim seal in a high-pressure turbine (HPT) stage. The experimental data are acquired in the Transonic Test Turbine Facility at the Graz University of Technology: the test setup includes two engine-representative turbine stages (the last HPT stage and first LPT stage), with the intermediate turbine duct in between. All stator-rotor cavities are supplied with purge flows by a secondary air system, which simulates the bleeding air from the compressor stages of the real engine. The HPT downstream hub cavity is provided with wall taps and pitot tubes at different radial and circumferential locations, which allows the performance of steady pressure and seed gas concentration measurements for different purge mass flows and HPT vanes clocking positions. Moreover, miniaturized pressure transducers are adopted to evaluate the unsteady pressure distribution, and an oil flow visualization is performed to retrieve additional information on the wheel space structures. The annulus pressure asymmetry depends on the HPT vane clocking, but this is shown to have negligible impact on the minimum purge mass flow required to seal the cavity. However, the hub pressure profile drives the distribution of the cavity egress in the turbine channel. The unsteady pressure field is dominated by blade-synchronous oscillations. No non-synchronous components with comparable intensity are detected. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Critical Aspects of Turbomachinery Components and Systems)
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Review
Advanced Gas Turbine Cooling for the Carbon-Neutral Era
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2023, 8(3), 19; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp8030019 - 24 Jun 2023
Viewed by 1101
Abstract
In the coming carbon-neutral era, industrial gas turbines (GT) will continue to play an important role as energy conversion equipment with high thermal efficiency and as stabilizers of the electric power grid. Because of the transition to a clean fuel, such as hydrogen [...] Read more.
In the coming carbon-neutral era, industrial gas turbines (GT) will continue to play an important role as energy conversion equipment with high thermal efficiency and as stabilizers of the electric power grid. Because of the transition to a clean fuel, such as hydrogen or ammonia, the main modifications will lie with the combustor. It can be expected that small and medium-sized gas turbines will burn fewer inferior fuels, and the scope of cogeneration activities they are used for will be expanded. Industrial gas turbine cycles including CCGT appropriate for the carbon-neutral era are surveyed from the viewpoint of thermodynamics. The use of clean fuels and carbon capture and storage (CCS) will inevitably increase the unit cost of power generation. Therefore, the first objective is to present thermodynamic cycles that fulfil these requirements, as well as their verification tests. One conclusion is that it is necessary to realize the oxy-fuel cycle as a method to utilize carbon-heavy fuels and biomass and not generate NOx from hydrogen combustion at high temperatures. The second objective of the authors is to show the required morphology of the cooling structures in airfoils, which enable industrial gas turbines with a higher efficiency. In order to achieve this, a survey of the historical development of the existing cooling methods is presented first. CastCool® and wafer and diffusion bonding blades are discussed as turbine cooling technologies applicable to future GTs. Based on these, new designs already under development are shown. Most of the impetus comes from the development of aviation airfoils, which can be more readily applied to industrial gas turbines because the operation will become more similar. Double-wall cooling (DWC) blades can be considered for these future industrial gas turbines. It will be possible in the near future to fabricate the DWC structures desired by turbine cooling designers using additive manufacturing (AM). Another conclusion is that additively manufactured DWC is the best cooling technique for these future gas turbines. However, at present, research in this field and the data generated are scattered, and it is not yet possible for heat transfer designers to fabricate cooling structures with the desired accuracy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Critical Aspects of Turbomachinery Components and Systems)
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Article
Development of Sewage Pumps with Numerical and Experimental Support
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2023, 8(2), 18; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp8020018 - 02 Jun 2023
Viewed by 767
Abstract
Especially in the field of sewage pumps, the design of radial impellers focuses not only on maximum efficiency but also on functionality in terms of susceptibility to clogging by fibrous media. In general, the efficiency of sewage impellers is significantly lower than that [...] Read more.
Especially in the field of sewage pumps, the design of radial impellers focuses not only on maximum efficiency but also on functionality in terms of susceptibility to clogging by fibrous media. In general, the efficiency of sewage impellers is significantly lower than that of clear water impellers. These sewage impellers are designed with a low number of blades to ensure that fibrous media can be pumped. This paper describes the methodology of an optimisation for a sewage impeller. The optimisation is carried out on a semi-open two-channel impeller as an example. Therefore, a new impeller is designed for a given volute casing. Based on a basic design for given boundary conditions, the impeller is verified by means of numerical simulation. The manufactured impeller is then tested on the test rig to verify the simulation. With regard to the optical investigations, the clogging behaviour of the impeller is specifically improved over three different modifications in order to finally present an impeller with good efficiency and a low clogging tendency. Full article
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Article
Effects of Tip Leakage Vortex Cavitation on Flow Field under Cavitation Instability
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2023, 8(2), 17; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp8020017 - 01 Jun 2023
Viewed by 658
Abstract
Cavitation instabilities can induce axial and circumferential vibrations, as well as noise in turbopump inducers. Therefore, the purpose of the present study is to investigate the mechanism of cavitation instability. The flow field near the two-bladed inducer leading edge under alternate blade cavitation [...] Read more.
Cavitation instabilities can induce axial and circumferential vibrations, as well as noise in turbopump inducers. Therefore, the purpose of the present study is to investigate the mechanism of cavitation instability. The flow field near the two-bladed inducer leading edge under alternate blade cavitation was experimentally investigated using particle image velocimetry (PIV). It was found that the tip leakage vortex cavitation draws the flow toward its region of collapse and induces a negative change in the incidence to the adjacent blade. Moreover, this blade-to-blade interaction was identified as the main cause of alternate blade cavitation. Furthermore, it was demonstrated that this blade-to-blade interaction is strongest when the cavity collapse occurs in the inducer throat area, where the leading edge of the following blade is located. Full article
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Review
State of the Art on Two-Phase Non-Miscible Liquid/Gas Flow Transport Analysis in Radial Centrifugal Pumps-Part A: General Considerations on Two-Phase Liquid/Gas Flows in Centrifugal Pumps
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2023, 8(2), 16; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp8020016 - 10 May 2023
Viewed by 806
Abstract
Gas–liquid mixtures are present in numerous industrial applications, such as in the process industry, oil production and transport with natural gas, deep-sea extraction, and irrigation. Any pump may have to carry multiphase flows. However, the present document is related to non-miscible liquid/gas flow [...] Read more.
Gas–liquid mixtures are present in numerous industrial applications, such as in the process industry, oil production and transport with natural gas, deep-sea extraction, and irrigation. Any pump may have to carry multiphase flows. However, the present document is related to non-miscible liquid/gas flow transport analysis in centrifugal pumps because which topic can be a more challenging task compared with axial and mixed flow machines due to specific body force and buoyancy actions and large density differences between the phases. The present document first introduces the main usual gas–liquid two-phase definitions and simplifications. A dimensional analysis introduces the main flow variables and parameters that are used for pumps. Basic physical aspects of flow motion in an impeller channel are explained, and a rapid description of two-phase flow patterns in radial flow pumps is described. Finally, a review of simplified empirical and semi-empirical analytical models is proposed with their limitations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Critical Aspects of Turbomachinery Components and Systems)
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Review
State of the Art on Two-Phase Non-Miscible Liquid/Gas Flow Transport Analysis in Radial Centrifugal Pumps Part C: CFD Approaches with Emphasis on Improved Models
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2023, 8(2), 15; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp8020015 - 04 May 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1458
Abstract
Predicting pump performance and ensuring operational reliability under two-phase conditions is a major goal of three-dimensional (3D) computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis of liquid/gas radial centrifugal pump flows. Hence, 3D CFD methods are increasingly applied to such flows in academia and industry. The [...] Read more.
Predicting pump performance and ensuring operational reliability under two-phase conditions is a major goal of three-dimensional (3D) computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis of liquid/gas radial centrifugal pump flows. Hence, 3D CFD methods are increasingly applied to such flows in academia and industry. The CFD analysis of liquid/gas pump flows demands careful selection of sub-models from several fields in CFD, such as two-phase and turbulence modeling, as well as high-quality meshing of complex geometries. This paper presents an overview of current CFD simulation strategies, and recent progress in two-phase modeling is outlined. Particular focus is given to different approaches for dispersed bubbly flow and coherent gas accumulations. For dispersed bubbly flow regions, Euler–Euler Two-Fluid models are discussed, including population balance and bubble interaction models. For coherent gas pocket flow, essentially interface-capturing Volume-of-Fluid methods are applied. A hybrid model is suggested, i.e., a combination of an Euler–Euler Two-Fluid model with interface-capturing properties, predicting bubbly flow regimes as well as regimes with coherent gas pockets. The importance of considering scale-resolving turbulence models for highly-unsteady two-phase flow regions is emphasized. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Critical Aspects of Turbomachinery Components and Systems)
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Article
Numerical Analysis of the Flow by Using a Free Runner Downstream the Francis Turbine
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2023, 8(2), 14; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp8020014 - 04 May 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 833
Abstract
The current requirements of industrialized countries require the use of as much renewable energy as possible. One significant problem with renewable energy is that the produced power fluctuates. Currently, the only method available for energy compensation in the shortest time is given by [...] Read more.
The current requirements of industrialized countries require the use of as much renewable energy as possible. One significant problem with renewable energy is that the produced power fluctuates. Currently, the only method available for energy compensation in the shortest time is given by hydroelectric power plants. Instead, hydroelectric power plants (especially the plants equipped with hydraulic turbines with fixed blades) are designed to operate in the vicinity of the optimal operating point with a maximum ±10% deviation. The energy market requires that hydraulic turbines operate in an increasingly wide area between −35% to 20% from the optimum operating point. Operation of hydraulic turbines far from the optimum operating point involves the appearance downstream of the turbine of a decelerated swirling flow with hydraulic instabilities (known in the literature as the vortex rope). The main purpose of this paper is to investigate numerically a new concept by using a free runner downstream on the main hydraulic runner turbine more precisely in the draft tube cone. The free runner concept requires rotations at the runaway speed with vanishing mechanical torque. The main purpose is to redistribute the total pressure and the moment between the shaft and the periphery. In addition, the free runner does not modify the operating point of the main hydraulic turbine runner. Full article
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