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    Preswirl and Mixed-Flow (Mainly Liquid) Effects on Rotordynamic Performance of a Long (L/D = 0.75) Smooth Seal

    Source: Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power:;2020:;volume( 142 ):;issue: 003
    Author:
    Tran, Dung L.
    ,
    Childs, Dara W.
    ,
    Shrestha, Hari
    ,
    Zhang, Min
    DOI: 10.1115/1.4044291
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: Measured results are presented for rotordynamic coefficients and mass leakage rates of a long smooth annular seal (length-to-diameter ratio L/D = 0.75, diameter D = 114.686 mm, and radial clearance Cr = 0.200 mm) tested with a mixture of silicone oil (PSF-5cSt) and air. The test seal is centered, the seal exit pressure is maintained at 6.9 bars-g while the fluid inlet temperature is controlled within 37.8–40.6 °C. It is tested with three inlet-preswirl inserts, namely, zero, medium, and high (the preswirl ratios (PSRs), i.e., the ratio between the fluid's circumferential velocity and the shaft surface's velocity, are in ranges of 0.10–0.18, 0.30–0.65, and 0.65–1.40 for zero, medium, and high preswirls, respectively), six inlet gas-volume fractions GVFi (0%, 2%, 4%, 6%, 8%, and 10%), four pressure drops PDs (20.7, 27.6, 34.5, and 41.4 bars), and three speeds ω (3, 4, and 5 krpm). The targeted test matrix could not be achieved for the medium- and high-preswirl inserts at PD ≥ 27.6 bars due to the test-rig stator's dynamic instability issues. Spargers were used to inject air into the oil, and GVFi values higher than 0.10 could not be consistently achieved because of unsteady surging flow downstream from the sparger mixing section. Leakage mass flow rate m˙ and rotordynamic coefficients are measured, and the effect of changing inlet preswirl and GVFi is studied. The test results are then compared with predictions from a two-phase, homogeneous-mixture, bulk-flow model developed in 2011. Generally, both measurements and predictions show little change in m˙ as inlet preswirl changes. Measured m˙ remains unchanged or slightly increases with increasing GVFi, but predicted m˙ decreases. Measured m˙ is comparable to predicted values but consistently lower. Dynamic-stiffness coefficients are measured using an ensemble of excitation frequencies and curve-fitted well by frequency-independent stiffness Kij, damping Cij, and virtual mass Mij coefficients. Planned tests with the medium- and high-preswirl inserts could not be accomplished at PD = 34.5 and 41.4 bars because the seal stator became unstable with any finite injection of air. The test results show that the instability arose because the seal's direct stiffness K became negative and increased in magnitude with increasing GVFi. The model predicts a drop in K as GVFi increases, but the test results dropped substantially more rapidly than predicted. Also, the model does not predict the observed strong tendency for K to drop with an increase in preswirl in moving from the zero-to-medium and medium-to-high preswirl inserts. The authors believe that the observed drop in K due to increasing GVFi is not explained by either (a) a reverse Lomakin effect from operating in the transition flow regime or (b) the predicted drop in K at higher GVFi values from the model. A separate and as yet unidentified two-phase flow phenomenon probably causes the observed results. The negative K results due to increasing GVFi and moving from the zero to medium, and medium to high preswirl observed here could explain the instability issue (sudden subsynchronous vibration) on a high-differential-pressure helico-axial multiphase pump (MPP), reported in 2013. Effective damping Ceff combines the stabilizing effect of direct damping C, the destabilizing effect of cross-coupled stiffness k, and the influence of cross-coupled mass mq. As predicted and measured, increasing inlet preswirl significantly increases k and decreases Ceff, which decreases the seal's stabilizing properties. Ceff increases with increasing GVFi—becomes more stable.
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      Preswirl and Mixed-Flow (Mainly Liquid) Effects on Rotordynamic Performance of a Long (L/D = 0.75) Smooth Seal

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4273875
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    contributor authorTran, Dung L.
    contributor authorChilds, Dara W.
    contributor authorShrestha, Hari
    contributor authorZhang, Min
    date accessioned2022-02-04T14:32:38Z
    date available2022-02-04T14:32:38Z
    date copyright2020/01/29/
    date issued2020
    identifier issn0742-4795
    identifier othergtp_142_03_031012.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4273875
    description abstractMeasured results are presented for rotordynamic coefficients and mass leakage rates of a long smooth annular seal (length-to-diameter ratio L/D = 0.75, diameter D = 114.686 mm, and radial clearance Cr = 0.200 mm) tested with a mixture of silicone oil (PSF-5cSt) and air. The test seal is centered, the seal exit pressure is maintained at 6.9 bars-g while the fluid inlet temperature is controlled within 37.8–40.6 °C. It is tested with three inlet-preswirl inserts, namely, zero, medium, and high (the preswirl ratios (PSRs), i.e., the ratio between the fluid's circumferential velocity and the shaft surface's velocity, are in ranges of 0.10–0.18, 0.30–0.65, and 0.65–1.40 for zero, medium, and high preswirls, respectively), six inlet gas-volume fractions GVFi (0%, 2%, 4%, 6%, 8%, and 10%), four pressure drops PDs (20.7, 27.6, 34.5, and 41.4 bars), and three speeds ω (3, 4, and 5 krpm). The targeted test matrix could not be achieved for the medium- and high-preswirl inserts at PD ≥ 27.6 bars due to the test-rig stator's dynamic instability issues. Spargers were used to inject air into the oil, and GVFi values higher than 0.10 could not be consistently achieved because of unsteady surging flow downstream from the sparger mixing section. Leakage mass flow rate m˙ and rotordynamic coefficients are measured, and the effect of changing inlet preswirl and GVFi is studied. The test results are then compared with predictions from a two-phase, homogeneous-mixture, bulk-flow model developed in 2011. Generally, both measurements and predictions show little change in m˙ as inlet preswirl changes. Measured m˙ remains unchanged or slightly increases with increasing GVFi, but predicted m˙ decreases. Measured m˙ is comparable to predicted values but consistently lower. Dynamic-stiffness coefficients are measured using an ensemble of excitation frequencies and curve-fitted well by frequency-independent stiffness Kij, damping Cij, and virtual mass Mij coefficients. Planned tests with the medium- and high-preswirl inserts could not be accomplished at PD = 34.5 and 41.4 bars because the seal stator became unstable with any finite injection of air. The test results show that the instability arose because the seal's direct stiffness K became negative and increased in magnitude with increasing GVFi. The model predicts a drop in K as GVFi increases, but the test results dropped substantially more rapidly than predicted. Also, the model does not predict the observed strong tendency for K to drop with an increase in preswirl in moving from the zero-to-medium and medium-to-high preswirl inserts. The authors believe that the observed drop in K due to increasing GVFi is not explained by either (a) a reverse Lomakin effect from operating in the transition flow regime or (b) the predicted drop in K at higher GVFi values from the model. A separate and as yet unidentified two-phase flow phenomenon probably causes the observed results. The negative K results due to increasing GVFi and moving from the zero to medium, and medium to high preswirl observed here could explain the instability issue (sudden subsynchronous vibration) on a high-differential-pressure helico-axial multiphase pump (MPP), reported in 2013. Effective damping Ceff combines the stabilizing effect of direct damping C, the destabilizing effect of cross-coupled stiffness k, and the influence of cross-coupled mass mq. As predicted and measured, increasing inlet preswirl significantly increases k and decreases Ceff, which decreases the seal's stabilizing properties. Ceff increases with increasing GVFi—becomes more stable.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titlePreswirl and Mixed-Flow (Mainly Liquid) Effects on Rotordynamic Performance of a Long (L/D = 0.75) Smooth Seal
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume142
    journal issue3
    journal titleJournal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power
    identifier doi10.1115/1.4044291
    page31012
    treeJournal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power:;2020:;volume( 142 ):;issue: 003
    contenttypeFulltext
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