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    Making Better Swirl Brakes Using Computational Fluid Dynamics: Performance Enhancement From Geometry Variation

    Source: Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power:;2022:;volume( 144 ):;issue: 002::page 21027-1
    Author:
    Yang, Jing
    ,
    San Andrés, Luis
    DOI: 10.1115/1.4051962
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: A fluid with a large swirl (circumferential) velocity entering an annular pressure seal influences the seal cross-coupled dynamic stiffness coefficients, and hence it affects system stability. Typically comprising a large number of angled vanes around the seal circumference, a swirl brake (SB) is a mechanical element installed to reduce (even reverse) the swirl velocity entering an annular seal. SB design guidelines are not readily available, and existing configurations appear to reproduce a single source. By using a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model, the paper details a process to engineer a SB upstream of a 16-tooth labyrinth seal (LS) with tip clearance Cr = 0.203 mm. The process begins with a known nominal SB* geometry and considers variations in vane length (LV* = 3.25 mm) and width (WV* = 1.02 mm), and stagger angle (θ* = 0 deg). The vane number NV* = 72 and vane height HV* = 2.01 mm remain unchanged. The SB–LS operates with air supplied at pressure PS = 70 bar, a pressure ratio PR = exit pressure Pa/PS = 0.5, and rotor speed Ω = 10.2 krpm (surface speed ΩR = 61 m/s). Just before the SB, the preswirl velocity ratio = average circumferential velocity U/shaft surface speed (ΩR) equals α = 0.5. For the given conditions, an increase in LV allows more space for the development of vortexes between two adjacent vanes. These are significant to the dissipation of fluid kinetic energy and thus control the reduction of α. A 42% increase in vane length (LV = 4.6 mm) produces a ∼43% drop in swirl ratio at the entrance of the LS (exit of the SB), from αE = 0.23 to 0.13. Based on the SB with LV = 4.6 mm, the stagger angle θ varies from 0 deg to 50 deg. The growth in angle amplifies a vortex at ∼70% of the vane height, while it weakens a vortex at 30% of HV. For θ = 40 deg, the influence of the two vortexes on the flow produces the smallest swirl ratio at the LS entrance, αE = −0.03. For a SB with LV = 4.6 mm and θ = 40 deg, the vane width WV varies from 0.51 mm to 1.52 mm (±50% of WV*). A reduction in WV provides more space for the strengthening of the vortex between adjacent vanes. Therefore, a SB with greater spacing of vanes also reduces the inlet circumferential velocity. For WV = 0.51 mm, αE further decreases to −0.07. Besides the design condition (α = 0.5), the engineered SB having LV = 4.6 mm, θ = 40 deg, and WV = 0.51 mm effectively reduces the circumferential velocity at the LS entrance for other inlet preswirl ratios equaling α = 0 and 1.3. Rather than relying on extensive experiments, the CFD analysis proves effective to quickly engineer a best SB configuration from the quantification of performance while varying the SB geometry and inlet swirl condition.
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      Making Better Swirl Brakes Using Computational Fluid Dynamics: Performance Enhancement From Geometry Variation

    URI
    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4284954
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    • Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power

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    contributor authorYang, Jing
    contributor authorSan Andrés, Luis
    date accessioned2022-05-08T09:17:46Z
    date available2022-05-08T09:17:46Z
    date copyright1/13/2022 12:00:00 AM
    date issued2022
    identifier issn0742-4795
    identifier othergtp_144_02_021027.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4284954
    description abstractA fluid with a large swirl (circumferential) velocity entering an annular pressure seal influences the seal cross-coupled dynamic stiffness coefficients, and hence it affects system stability. Typically comprising a large number of angled vanes around the seal circumference, a swirl brake (SB) is a mechanical element installed to reduce (even reverse) the swirl velocity entering an annular seal. SB design guidelines are not readily available, and existing configurations appear to reproduce a single source. By using a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model, the paper details a process to engineer a SB upstream of a 16-tooth labyrinth seal (LS) with tip clearance Cr = 0.203 mm. The process begins with a known nominal SB* geometry and considers variations in vane length (LV* = 3.25 mm) and width (WV* = 1.02 mm), and stagger angle (θ* = 0 deg). The vane number NV* = 72 and vane height HV* = 2.01 mm remain unchanged. The SB–LS operates with air supplied at pressure PS = 70 bar, a pressure ratio PR = exit pressure Pa/PS = 0.5, and rotor speed Ω = 10.2 krpm (surface speed ΩR = 61 m/s). Just before the SB, the preswirl velocity ratio = average circumferential velocity U/shaft surface speed (ΩR) equals α = 0.5. For the given conditions, an increase in LV allows more space for the development of vortexes between two adjacent vanes. These are significant to the dissipation of fluid kinetic energy and thus control the reduction of α. A 42% increase in vane length (LV = 4.6 mm) produces a ∼43% drop in swirl ratio at the entrance of the LS (exit of the SB), from αE = 0.23 to 0.13. Based on the SB with LV = 4.6 mm, the stagger angle θ varies from 0 deg to 50 deg. The growth in angle amplifies a vortex at ∼70% of the vane height, while it weakens a vortex at 30% of HV. For θ = 40 deg, the influence of the two vortexes on the flow produces the smallest swirl ratio at the LS entrance, αE = −0.03. For a SB with LV = 4.6 mm and θ = 40 deg, the vane width WV varies from 0.51 mm to 1.52 mm (±50% of WV*). A reduction in WV provides more space for the strengthening of the vortex between adjacent vanes. Therefore, a SB with greater spacing of vanes also reduces the inlet circumferential velocity. For WV = 0.51 mm, αE further decreases to −0.07. Besides the design condition (α = 0.5), the engineered SB having LV = 4.6 mm, θ = 40 deg, and WV = 0.51 mm effectively reduces the circumferential velocity at the LS entrance for other inlet preswirl ratios equaling α = 0 and 1.3. Rather than relying on extensive experiments, the CFD analysis proves effective to quickly engineer a best SB configuration from the quantification of performance while varying the SB geometry and inlet swirl condition.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleMaking Better Swirl Brakes Using Computational Fluid Dynamics: Performance Enhancement From Geometry Variation
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume144
    journal issue2
    journal titleJournal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power
    identifier doi10.1115/1.4051962
    journal fristpage21027-1
    journal lastpage21027-12
    page12
    treeJournal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power:;2022:;volume( 144 ):;issue: 002
    contenttypeFulltext
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