1. Introduction
European standards on pollution emissions regulate the acceptable limits for exhaust emissions of newly purchased vehicles with internal combustion engines in the European Union. In 2014, the last regulation on the exhaust gas emissions of diesel and gasoline engines came into force as the Euro 6 norm [
1]. This situation adds to the continuous trend towards energy savings, demanding increasingly efficient automotive internal combustion engines compatible with new laws on environmental protection in Europe [
2]. In the last 10 years, the automotive industry has opted for the development of systems such as supercharging, which has become a key for fulfilling government restrictions [
3,
4,
5]. Supercharging has helped to decrease the engine displacement, while maintaining the power performance (downsizing) [
6]. The most commonly used technique to increase the engine intake pressure is turbocharging, where mostly a centrifugal compressor is powered by a radial turbine [
7]. Both elements are joined by means of a shaft, lubricated and equipped with bearings. The operation of the compressor and thus the compression of the intake air depends on the work contributed by the turbine. As the turbine takes advantage of the exhaust energy of the combustion engine, a highly coupled dependency on the operation behavior results. To enable a satisfying matching of turbocharger and engine, mechanical or aerodynamic limits [
8,
9] are continuously attempted to be extended while component efficiencies are attempted to be improved. The efficiency of the turbo depends on mechanical losses, heat transmission, and most importantly, on the aerodynamic design of its internal geometry [
10,
11,
12].
The turbine has three main components: the volute; the stator, made up of vanes or spans, and the rotor. The flow passes through the volute, is distributed between the stator vanes, and finally, circulates towards the rotor. Viscous flow phenomena in the volute and stator can decrease the overall efficiency of the turbine and, thus, of the entire system. Some authors mention the importance of volute design and the relationship of fluid behavior depending on the location of the tongue and the final cross-sectional area of the volute itself [
13]. Due to the variation in the speed and the dynamic pressure along the volute, the distribution of the flow over the stator channels may change, causing efficiency losses in the turbine. The tip leakage vortex of the stator vane causes losses and has a significant impact on inflow angle distortions, leading to inhomogeneous rotor inflow [
14,
15] and the related efficiency losses of the entire turbine [
16,
17].
The information of the flow behavior is important to feed mathematical models that do not require a great computational capacity as 1D models [
18]. These models are used to simulate the supercharging system in the engine. The 1D tool is used in research to predict the motor behavior and its systems [
19].
Computational fluid dynamic (CFD) tools are useful for analyzing detailed aerodynamic phenomena in a wide range of turbine operating conditions [
20]. However, the results must be validated with experimental data. Obtaining experimental data is difficult due to the limited space for the required internal instrumentation. In a bigger radial turbine, Hayami et al. [
16] were able to measure the angle distribution downstream of the stator vanes by means of cobra probes. In a slightly smaller geometry, Tamaki et al. [
21] applied oil flow visualization to image the shear forces on the surface of the stator passages. Currently, there are few works dedicated to the experimental measurement of internal flow in small-sized centripetal turbines [
22,
23,
24], such as those used in automotive supercharging systems. Hence, the most common way to compare numerical results is by means of global 1D data as efficiency and reduced mass flow, obtained from measurements upstream and downstream of the turbine. The solution is to build a larger scale model of the original geometry. For this, a theoretical study has been previously developed with the subsequent construction and global characterization [
25]. There are few works such as those developed by Ioannou et al. [
26] and Dufour et al. [
27], in which some component of the turbocharger is also scaled. However, none of them is applicable in the present work due to the absence of a rotor.
Therefore, this work is focused on characterizing the internal flow of a larger scale turbine volute and stator. Consequently, this article describes, first, the design and the generation of the computational scale model. Next, it shows the mesh analysis. Following, a comparison of the numerical results of the up-scaled geometry with the results obtained from a separate study in the originally sized turbine with rotor is conducted. Finally, the limitations for the validity of the scaled model and recommendations for measurements to characterize the flow of the presented and future geometries are given.
2. Scaled Volute and Vaned Nozzle
Due to the small dimensions of the typically used turbocharger turbines and limited accessibility, the turbine geometry of a commercially used turbocharger turbine was scaled in its size. Here, only the stationary components as the volute and stator were designed with a scale factor of three in comparison to the actual turbine dimensions. The dimensions of the real size turbocharger turbine and the dimensions of the scaled turbine are listed in
Table 1. The scaling ratio of 3:1 turned out to represent a reasonable balance between manufacturing costs, operable running condition at the test bench, which was limited by a maximum mass flow of 1200 kg/h, and the accessibility for optical measurements. However, some modifications of the original geometry were made to allow more generally valid conclusions of future analysis. Separator pins, which existed in the geometry of the real size turbine in the stator passage, were removed to avoid aerodynamically biased conclusions of the volute and stator vane designs. This appreciable difference was due to two reasons. The first referred to being able to study the discharge of the volute on the stator blades without obstacles. The second reason was to compare the free flow field of each stator channel without disturbing elements like a column. In the future, studies will be carried out on the geometric variation of the stator vanes, and the behavior of each channel will be compared, varying the vane and the gap height of the vane. A modular structure of the scaled model was chosen to allow future modification and experiments with advanced designs, as well as investigating several VGT openings. Furthermore, the turbine rotor was not considered in the first design of the test setup. The construction of the rotor would significantly elevate the costs and would also bias the aerodynamics of future designs by the rotor-stator interactions. The validation of CFD models in the volute stator domain by means of 3D flow analysis is one of the main objectives of the future experimental activities. This validation would be independent of the existence of the rotor in the scaled turbine. However, the impact of the rotor-stator interaction on predominant flow patterns and the reproduction of those flow patterns in the scaled turbine were assessed in this paper.
For this study, a VGT opening of 80%, a position representative of the operation of the turbine at various engine operating points [
28], was chosen. At the same time, it was one of the rather opened positions, which moved the vane trailing edge relatively close to the rotor of a real turbine geometry. Hence, a comparison of numerically obtained flow patterns in a real size turbine with rotor and in the scaled model gave the opportunity to evaluate the given range of validity in the scaled model, since the rotor was not considered, and no stator-rotor interaction existed.
Initially, a stator gap height of the model of 0.5 mm was chosen, to achieve the Reynolds similitude at operating points with reasonably high reduced mass flow.
Figure 1 shows the design of the scaled volute and stator, where the space between the vane and the housing of the turbine is defined.
For the characterization of turbocharger turbines, performance maps were obtained in steady flow conditions at different operating points [
29]. Since the difference of fluid properties of fresh air and exhaust gases could be neglected [
30], those measurements have been typically executed with air. Hence, also for the presented study, steady flow with fresh air was analyzed.
4. Characteristic Flow Patterns
By means of the CFD model of the
, which has been applied and widely validated in previous studies [
41], the 3D fluid dynamics were analyzed as a comparison. In
Figure 6, the Mach number distribution of the
and the case with maintained Mach number
are compared. In the simulated
, big flow separations could be identified on the pressure side of stator vanes. These separations were continuously growing in the counter clockwise direction starting with the closest vane downstream the volute inlet. In
, the presence of the separator pins generated great distortions in the stator vane inflow, causing the secondary flow of the neighboring vanes to be significantly different. However, the stator passage marked in the red frame was less affected and showed similar flow patterns. Hence, this passage and one of its vanes were used for further analysis.
The Mach number of the selected stator passage of all analyzed cases is shown in
Figure 7. While the passage flow of all cases with the maintained Mach number was in the incompressible regime, the case with the maintained Reynolds number
reached Mach numbers around
close to the suction side (SS) of the vane. The comparison of all cases showed that a big separation bubble was located on the pressure side (PS) of the vane for all analyzed cases. Furthermore, in all
cases, the rotor blades seemed to generate a throat between the SS, as was observed by Tiseira et al. [
10] for closed positions in the choked condition. By moving the blades, the effective section changed, resulting in variations in the acceleration on the SS depending on the rotor position. Maintaining the Mach number, this effect could be observed at around 80% chord length, while at higher Mach numbers, this variable throat seemed to have an impact up to lower chord lengths as 50%. This indicated that the blockage generated by the rotor became more important when the reduced mass flow was high. Hence, if those operating conditions were measured according to the Reynolds similarity, a blockage would be required in the flow channel to obtain similar acceleration patterns as in the
.
Figure 8 depicts the local total pressure ratio
, which was directly related to the irreversible viscous losses, at the midspan. In the observed stator passage, the main source of losses was the identified big separation bubble on the PS of the stator vane. In their extension, the separation looked similar in all cases. However, the intensity of pressure loss was elevated in
, resulting from the elevated Mach number and velocity in this case. Peak values of the total pressure ratio located in the separation bubble in
,
, and
were around 1.03, while a maximum value of 1.20 was predicted for
. Furthermore, the vane wake could be identified as a second loss source at this span. With respect to the separation and wake losses, no noticeable impact of rotor interaction could be identified inside the stator passage. Nevertheless, the rotor showed also here some influence on the losses field up to the stator TE.
We analyze in more depth the impact of the rotor-stator interaction, as well as the quality of the reproduction of the separation bubble.
(Equation (
4)) distributions at the midspan are plotted in
Figure 9. The comparison of
with
helped to identify possible distortions in the flow field due to the existence of the separator pins and the rotor. The results showed good agreement on the PS of the vane over the entire chord length. On the SS, the curves matched well until 40% chord length, where the previously observed rotor interaction influenced the flow in the stator passage on the SS. Hence, the validity of
was limited on the SS at the presented VGT opening, if no additional blockage was generated downstream. However, it could be stated that the inflow, which described the adequate reproduction of the volute flow and the flow distribution to the stator passages, could be covered well. This was of high importance, since the analysis of the volute aerodynamics was one of the main objectives of the planned works. Having the same Ma number, but a reduced Reynolds number in
led to some deviations on the SS in the inlet.
on the PS behaved similarly to the one of
. As has been seen before, the rotor interaction was high in the stator passage in the case of
. Concluding, it seemed that the
profile on the PS where the big separation bubble was located could be representative for real turbine applications. At more closed positions, this might be extended to the entire SS. For CFD solver validation purposes, the entire
profile was assessed in the experimental campaign.
Since the tip leakage flow was in the focus of the experimental campaign, the flow inside the gap was analyzed in more detail. Therefore, the local Reynolds number profile is shown for four different locations along the camberline of the blade in
Figure 10. It can clearly be seen that maintaining the Mach number did not contribute to achieving similar flow patterns in the stator gap. The achieved local Reynolds numbers were at a much lower level than those of the other cases at all chord positions. The curves of all cases with the same Reynolds number had their maximum at a similar level. However, the tip leakage flow highly depended on the blade loading, which was identified to be affected by the rotor-stator interaction. Although the interaction was noticed at a chord length of 40%,
matched well at 50% chord length. However, at 75%, the profiles showed large deviations caused by the distortion of the blade loading.
As one leading fluid dynamic effect, the separation of the boundary layer at the PS of the vanes was identified. Therefore, the boundary layer must be studied around the stator spans. Because it was important to resolve the viscous stresses near the walls of each of the vanes, special effort was put into the adequate meshing of these zones.
Obtaining a single definition of the boundary layer can be useless work, as it varies completely with the problem that is studied. The modeled system was complex in its geometry. To establish the limit of the boundary layer, the value of the free stream in the modeled system must be defined, taking into account that it was not affected by the walls and their viscous effects. The complexity of the flow through the channels, the appearance of turbulent wakes, and the influence of the tongue of the volute duct (see
Figure 6) disturbed the flow and made it difficult to find a single criterion to define the free stream zone in the system. However, there are applications to define the free stream in a system as complex as this one. Choi et al. [
42] proposed to define the limit between the boundary layer and the free stream using normal lines from the wall of the stator spans. The speed studied would be that of the cells that crossed this line. The boundary layer extended to the point where the speed variation was less than 1% between the adjacent cells crossed by the line perpendicular to the surface of the openings. The study on each line along the span was carried out independently, without considering a common free stream for the entire channel. Another postulation was defined in the work developed by Klausner et al. [
43]. Free stream velocity was defined as the average between the channel entry velocity and the average velocity. Finally, Tiainen et al. [
44] offered four different definitions of free stream velocity based on a centrifugal compressor and applied all four in the same simulation to compare their effect. In this work, two definitions used by Tiainen et al. [
44], which provided the best results, were considered of interest (despite the fact that this document used a 99.5% criterion instead of the originally stated 99%).
In general, the limit of the boundary layer to the free stream was 99% of the free stream velocity. Although the definition may be useful, the system did not allow a clear value that had 99% of the free current due to the channeling of the flow by the volute and the stator itself with its channels.
Figure 11 is an example scheme about the boundary layer limit definition by the prism layer using the theory of 99.5%. The circles represent the velocity magnitude in each cell.
between yellow and green point was less than 0.5%. The thickness of the boundary layer was defined as the distance from the stator opening wall to the point where the velocity was 99.5% of the adjacent cell.
, where
n was defined in the normal direction of the surface. Therefore, the free stream velocity would be
from the last node to the boundary layer, varying along the channel. According to the conclusions shown in [
3], this method captured the boundary layer between the wall and the wake, but if there was a separation of the layer itself, it was possible to make a serious mistake. The second method came from the first, defining the free stream velocity as the average of each
studied (Equation (
5)). In [
44],
N it had a total value of 12 samples. The final conclusion regarding this method was that it was able to obtain the separation of the boundary layer, but it could also imply an overestimation in the thickness. Therefore, this could lead to an overestimation of the losses on the aerodynamic stator span according to this study.
To apply the so-called estimation methods, the same stator vane V5 as in previous analysis was selected (
Figure 6). From the SS and PS, fourteen normal lines were projected along its surface from its leading edge (LE) to its trailing edge (TE). Each of them extended until reaching a channel zone where the speed could be considered as a stable value applying the 99.5% criterion.
The study on the boundary layer of the stator vanes resulted in a layer thickness of 1.18 cm. The mesh was also adjusted to this physics that determined the appropriate behavior on an aerodynamic surface, as demonstrated by several authors, among which the work carried out on the structure that acquired the flow inside the boundary layer could be highlighted [
45].
Figure 12 shows the thickness result as a function of 99.5% of the difference between one cell and another in the channel of vane V5. The same exercise was done with the turbo for the real size. Both curves had a similar behavior. The thickness of the separation bubble in the scaled vane was exactly tripled compared to the actual stator vane.
5. Discussion
This work showed a methodology developed to validate the application of a new tool on the fluid behavior study in the inside of very small radial turbines used in automotive gasoline, diesel, or hybrid engines. A larger scale real turbine allowed a precise approach to some internal flows. The modeled and experimental study must be precise in the calculus, measurements, and data collection process. Therefore, the study presented a series of results demonstrating that the scaled turbine served to study the behavior of the fluid in all the small areas of the turbine, and it demonstrated its validity to be used in research as a simulation and experimental tool.
Meshing was very demanding to determine a fraction value, , and to define the numbers of cells on smalls surfaces in the model. Several studies about the boundary layer limit have been cited applying one of them. The mesh definition is not simple and may lead to improvements in the definition if other theories can be used in a complex geometry. The quantification of the separation bubble with the criteria of the boundary layer to the free stream limit used resulted in a factor of three between the separation bubble thickness of and , as would be expected for an appropriate scaling of the fluid effects along with the model dimensions.
Based on this work, several limitations of the usability range and valid conclusions of future experiments could be given. The missing rotor-stator interaction limited the validity of the results of profiles on the of the stator vanes. Here, rotor-stator interaction could be noticed in different strengths up to 40% chord length. However, other viscous effects as the dimensions of the big separation bubble and the tip leakage flow up to a chord length of 50% were well predicted according to the Reynolds similarity. Hence, the tip leakage flow in this zone could be analyzed over a wide range of the map. Furthermore, it needs to be considered that a very opened position was chosen for the presented analysis for identifying the global limitations of the experimental campaign and to be able to recommend the placement of measurement equipment, which could supply reliable results. It could be assumed that the rotor-stator interaction would be less significant at reasonable reduced mass flows, when the blades were more closed.
Although results showed that a maintenance of the Mach similitude and Reynolds similitude at the same time would be appreciable to model the operating points of the turbine map, the equality of both numbers was difficult to achieve in
. To achieve
, the inlet density in the small geometry was tripled by increasing the total inlet pressure. This resulted in the required mass flow for the Reynolds similitude Equation (
3) and also in the required reduced mass flow for the Mach number similitude. In turn, if one map operating point of
were desired to be measured with both the Mach and Reynolds similitude in
as
, the total inlet pressure would need to be reduced to one third of the one in the
. However, this would result in a total inlet pressures way below atmospheric pressure, which could not be realized in the test bench. Hence, only the Reynolds similitude or Mach similitude could be assessed in the experimental
. It is worth highlighting that the operating point of the
could represent certain flow characteristics as the pressure loss and Mach number distribution of a running point with relatively low reduced mass flow (
). At the same time, this exact running point of
could also represent other flow characteristic of a running point with much higher reduced mass flow (
). For this running point, tip leakage flow could partially be predictable. For both running points, the thickness of the separation bubble was properly predicted.
6. Final Setup of the Experimental Equipment
The objective of the experimental campaign was the measurements of the characteristic flow patterns to achieve 3D data for sophisticated flow solver validation. Hence, it was desired to measure all previously analyzed flow phenomena in this work. After the presented analysis, it was possible to know the application limitations of the new tool developed, as well as determine the sensors position to capture the entire extension of expected flow patterns.
First,
was manufactured by means of 3D printing. The material used for its construction was a polyetherimide resin called ULTEM-1010 used in applications that require high heat resistance, high strength, and broad chemical resistance. Specifically, the maximum temperature and internal pressure that the
resisted were around 483K and 2 bar.
Figure 13 shows the entire 3D printed test section of
. Here, the vanes were fixed at their position of 80%. However, the stator row could be replaced with separately printed stator rows with different VGT openings.
This test section was installed on a cold flow test bench characterized by a maximum mass flow of 1200 kg/h and maximum relative pressure around 400 mbar. The test bench incorporated sensors for measuring relative pressure and temperature. It also had a heater that allowed reaching the desired temperature in the test.
To allow the measurement with optical measurement techniques, access windows were designed around the turbine volute. It was decided to focus on the measurement of tip leakage flow by means of particle image velocimetry (PIV), but it was also possible to measure at any height of the vane, as can be seen in
Figure 14. Apart from one window, which allowed access to the extensively analyzed vane V5, two other windows were designed to allow optical access, as shown in
Figure 15. This way, the impact of the location along the volute length could be assessed. This methodology has been used in other research contributions. Experimental studies using the experimental measurement technique to characterize the flow behavior in this type of machinery by means of laser have been shown to be effective. This confirmation could be understood thanks to the contributions of various works by different authors, among which was the experimental study done by [
22]. For the study of the behavior of the flow in turbomachines, they used the technique of LDV. Further, The work in [
23] used the same measurement technique. The measurements were performed at a plane 9.5 mm behind the rotor trailing edge, and they were resolved in a blade-to-blade sense to examine the nature of the flow fully. The same methodology was presented in [
24], where the LDV technique was used to determine the flow pattern in a big size turbo.
For the measurement of vane surface pressures, wall pressure transducers were installed. Firstly, those were installed on the SS of the analyzed blade, since higher gradients were expected to appear there. Following that, they would be moved onto the PS or even in the tip region of the vanes due to their tiny size.
Furthermore, there were also five hole pitot tubes. These were installed at the inlet and outlet of a stator passage, but on different passages so that the pitot tube at the inlet did not disturb the measurements of the pitot tube at the output. With these pitot tubes, it was possible to measure total and static pressure, as well as velocity and flow angles. These sensors had a limitation in terms of working temperature. The maximum temperature at which they could operate was 353K. This was another reason why a low temperature was chosen as the boundary condition for this study.
With all the instrumentation that were mentioned, static and total pressure, velocity, and flow angles could be measured at almost any point in the domain. With these data, it was possible to validate all the previously carried out analyses and to characterize the main identified 3D flow phenomena.