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contributor authorKochrad, Nidal
contributor authorCourtois, Nicolas
contributor authorCharette, Miguel
contributor authorPicard, Benoit
contributor authorLandry-Blais, Alexandre
contributor authorRancourt, David
contributor authorPlante, Jean-Sébastien
contributor authorPicard, Mathieu
date accessioned2017-11-25T07:15:54Z
date available2017-11-25T07:15:54Z
date copyright2017/1/2
date issued2017
identifier issn0742-4795
identifier othergtp_139_06_062702.pdf
identifier urihttp://138.201.223.254:8080/yetl1/handle/yetl/4233727
description abstractCeramic turbines can reduce fuel consumption by increasing turbine inlet temperatures (TIT). The need for heat-resistant materials like ceramics is particularly acute for small turbomachines for which efficiencies are limited by the use of uncooled metal turbine as complex cooling schemes are impractical and costly. Efforts to introduce ceramics in the turbine rotor were made between the 1960s and the 1990s by gas turbines and automotive manufacturers in the U.S., Europe, and Japan. While significant progress was made, a suitable level of reliability still cannot be achieved as the brittleness of ceramics leads to crack propagation in the blades loaded in tension and catastrophic failure. The inside-out ceramic turbine (ICT) is a design alternative specific to ceramics that loads the blades in compression by using an outer, air-cooled composite rim that sustains the centrifugal loads. This paper provides an analytical model based on the Brayton cycle to compute the system-level performance of microturbines using an ICT. Loss submodels specific to ICT architectures are developed to account for: (1) composite rim drag, (2) composite rim cooling, (3) leakage through rotating seals, and (4) expansion heat losses. The thermodynamic core model is validated against three state-of-the-art, non-inside-out, microturbines. Based on a Monte Carlo simulation that takes into account the modeling uncertainties, the model predicts a cycle efficiency of 45±1% for a 240 kW ICT-based microturbine, leading to a predicted reduction in fuel consumption of 20% over current all-metal microturbines.
publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleSystem-Level Performance of Microturbines With an Inside-Out Ceramic Turbine
typeJournal Paper
journal volume139
journal issue6
journal titleJournal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power
identifier doi10.1115/1.4035648
journal fristpage62702
journal lastpage062702-10
treeJournal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power:;2017:;volume( 139 ):;issue: 006
contenttypeFulltext


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