Centrifugal Compressor Stall Control by the Application of Engineered Surface Roughness on Diffuser Shroud Using Numerical Simulations
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Scope of the Paper
2. Baseline Compressor Specifications
The Wall Surface Roughness
- Hydraulically smooth region (0 < K+ < 5), in this region the size of the grain is too small and it has no significant impact on the performance of the compressor;
- Transition region (5 < K+ < 70), in this region the sand grain/roughness elements are great enough to project out of closest layer to wall and further resistance is observed because of high surface roughness;
- Completely rough region (K+ > 70), in this region all the sand grain/roughness heights project out of the viscous sublayer and drag form of resistance is offered.
3. Numerical Setup
3.1. Modelling in BladeGen Using Geometric Parametrization
3.2. Meshing in TurboGrid
3.3. Turbulence Model
3.4. Boundary Conditions and Numerical Setup
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Validation of Experimental Data
- K-ε and SST Turbulence models are used for validation;
- Simulations conditions: mass flowrate 2.55 kg/s and design rotational speed;
4.2. Influence of Surface Roughness on the Diffuser Flow Structure
4.3. Entropy Generation
5. Conclusions
- The compressor has shown peak performance when operated at low mass flow on hydraulically smooth surfaces, which plays important role in the stall margin and operating range of the compressor. At low mass flow rate compressor showed flow instabilities at diffuser inlet.
- To control the flow instabilities, surface roughness has been applied on diffuser shroud to suppress flow separation and hence, stall phenomena.
- The validation results showed overprediction of 2.3% and 8% for SST and k-ε turbulence models, respectively.
- The application of surface roughness increased the operating range from 16% to 18% and stall margin increased from 5.6% to 7.9% by controlling flow separation and flow recirculation effects.
- Based on current analysis, the most efficient design is compressor with surface roughness magnitude of 200 μm, as it completely eliminated the stall phenomena.
- The percentage drop in pressure ratio at stall point for 50 μm is 3.3%, 4.2% for 100 μm and 5.08% for 200 μm using k-ω SST turbulence model.
- The prime contributor to the entropy generation is the relatively high velocity flow in diffuser section with surface roughness applied on the diffuser shroud.
- Entropy generation increased by 3.5%, 3.7% and 3.9% for 50 μm, 100 μm and 200 μm, respectively, due to increased frictional losses and boundary layer thickness.
- Even though, it is clear from the aerodynamics of the compressor that at low mass flow rate, application of surface roughness reduces secondary flow but due to the increased surface roughness, viscous shear stresses deteriorate the performance.
- It is also observed increasing surface roughness increases the percent drop in tangential velocity, and hence increases the frictional losses that leads to the deterioration of the centrifugal compressor performance.
6. Future Recommendations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Parameter | Value | Unit |
---|---|---|
Inlet pressure, Pt1 | 101.3 | [kPa] |
Inlet temperature, Tt1 | 15 | [°C] |
Rotational speed, n | 50,000 | [rpm] |
Mass flowrate at design point, m | 2550 | [g/s] |
Blade flow-angle at inlet (β1) | 26.5 | degree |
Impeller blade tip-speed | 586 | [m/s] |
Impeller pressure-ratio | 5.8 | - |
Isentropic efficiency | 84% | - |
Full and Splitter blades count | 13:13 | - |
Blade flow-angle at outlet (β2) | 52 | degree |
Scheme 1. | Roughness Height (μm) |
---|---|
1 | 50 |
2 | 100 |
3 | 200 |
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Khan, A.; Irfan, M.; Niazi, U.M.; Shah, I.; Legutko, S.; Rahman, S.; Alwadie, A.S.; Jalalah, M.; Glowacz, A.; Khan, M.K.A. Centrifugal Compressor Stall Control by the Application of Engineered Surface Roughness on Diffuser Shroud Using Numerical Simulations. Materials 2021, 14, 2033. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14082033
Khan A, Irfan M, Niazi UM, Shah I, Legutko S, Rahman S, Alwadie AS, Jalalah M, Glowacz A, Khan MKA. Centrifugal Compressor Stall Control by the Application of Engineered Surface Roughness on Diffuser Shroud Using Numerical Simulations. Materials. 2021; 14(8):2033. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14082033
Chicago/Turabian StyleKhan, Amjid, Muhammad Irfan, Usama Muhammad Niazi, Imran Shah, Stanislaw Legutko, Saifur Rahman, Abdullah Saeed Alwadie, Mohammed Jalalah, Adam Glowacz, and Mohammad Kamal Asif Khan. 2021. "Centrifugal Compressor Stall Control by the Application of Engineered Surface Roughness on Diffuser Shroud Using Numerical Simulations" Materials 14, no. 8: 2033. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14082033
APA StyleKhan, A., Irfan, M., Niazi, U. M., Shah, I., Legutko, S., Rahman, S., Alwadie, A. S., Jalalah, M., Glowacz, A., & Khan, M. K. A. (2021). Centrifugal Compressor Stall Control by the Application of Engineered Surface Roughness on Diffuser Shroud Using Numerical Simulations. Materials, 14(8), 2033. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14082033