Blade vibrations resulting in alternating stresses are often the critical factor in determining blade life. Indeed, many of the failures experienced by turbomachinery blades occur due to high-cycle fatigue caused by blade vibrations. These vibrations can arise either through self-excited oscillations known as flutter or through aerodynamic forcing of the blades from factors such as periodic wakes from up and/or downstream vanes or unsteady flow phenomena such as compressor surge. The current paper deals with the design and the analytical and experimental verification of the axial blading for a new generation of industrial compressors, a hybrid axial compressor that combines the advantages of conventional industrial compressors — broad operating range and high efficiency — with the advantages of gas turbine compressors — high power-density and high stage pressure ratios. Additionally, the surge robustness of this novel compressor blading has been greatly improved. During the development phase extensive efforts were made to ensure safe operation for future service life. This was achieved by designing blades that will not flutter, do not have high resonance amplitudes throughout their entire operating range and are extremely robust against surge. This strongly increased robustness of the new compressor blading was achieved by the implementation of a “wide-chord” blade design in all rotor blade rows in combination with a proper tuning of resonance frequencies throughout the entire operating range. For the verification of the new blading well-established methods accepted by industry were used such as CFD and FEA. Furthermore, coupling of the two into a method referred to as Fluid Structure Interaction (FSI) was used to more closely investigate the interaction of flow and structural dynamics phenomena. These analytical techniques have been used in conjunction with extensive testing of a scaled test compressor, which was operated at conditions of dynamic similitude (matching of scaled blade vibration frequencies, flow conditions, and Mach number) with full-scale operational conditions. Strain gauges placed on the blades and a state of the art technique known as “tip timing” were used to verify blade vibrations over a wide range of combinations of guide vane positions and rotational speeds. No propensity was found of any of the blades to develop high vibration amplitudes at any of the operating conditions investigated in the rig tests. The comparison of non-linear forced response analyses and the rig test results from strain gauges and tip timing showed close agreement, verifying the analysis techniques used. In conclusion it can be stated that the blade design exhibits a very high level of safety against vibrations within the entire operating range and during surge.
An industrial axial compressor has to meet a wide range of operation requirements and therefore must run within the whole compressor map without restrictions at an overall high level of efficiency. Additionally a robust design is required allowing a continuous operation of up to five years under industrial boundary conditions without inspection. These requirements led the industrial turbomachinery market to be generally conservative and sensitive to every single change through modern compressor development. The consequence for industrial compressor designs are, that these have made only moderate development steps during the last 50 years. This paper deals with a novel hybrid axial flow compressor, which combines the advantages of an conventional industrial compressor, such as good operating range and efficiency, with the advantages of gas turbine compressors, mainly the higher power density resulting in a higher stage pressure ratio. Furthermore, the surge robustness of the novel compressor blading has been strongly improved. Starting from scratch, the development began with comprehensive matrix studies in all areas of the design, taking into account aerodynamics, mechanics, rotor dynamics and power density in order to ascertain the overall optimum for this new hybrid generation. State of the art CFD analysis has been intensively used to optimize the compressor blading as well as the flow behavior of inlet and exit for the specified requirements and different compressor control mechanisms. The novel hybrid compressor is designed for a volume flow of 930 000 m3/h and allows a scaling from 100 000 up to 1 500 000 m3/h of air. To verify the design, a rig — downscaled by the factor of 3 — was tested. The rig was intensively instrumented with thermocouples and pressure probes, a torquemeter, strain gauges, tip-timing probes, and transient pressure transducers. Besides the measurement of blading performance, inlet and exit flange-to-flange instrumentation has been used to collect performance data under a variety of industrial operating conditions. The compressor behavior will be presented with a focus on aerodynamic aspects. The analytical and experimental data will be discussed in detail.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.