Micro-turbomachinery demands gas bearings to ensure compactness, light weight, and extreme temperature operation. Gas bearings with large stiffness and damping, and preferably of low cost, will enable successful commercial applications. Presently, tests conducted on a small rotor supported on flexure pivot hydrostatic pad gas bearings (FPTPBs) demonstrate stable rotordynamic responses up to (limit of the drive motor). Test rotor responses show the feed pressure raises the system critical speed (increase in bearing direct stiffness) while the viscous damping ratio decreases. Predictions correlate favorably with experimentally identified (synchronous) direct stiffness bearing force coefficients. Identified experimental gas bearing synchronous damping coefficients are 50% or less of the predicted magnitudes, though remaining relatively constant as the rotor speed increases. Tests without feed pressure show the rotor becomes unstable at with a whirl frequency ratio of 20%. FPTPBs are mechanically complex and more expensive than cylindrical plain bearings. However, their enhanced stability characteristics and predictable rotordynamic performance makes them desirable for the envisioned oil-free applications in high speed micro-turbomachinery.
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October 2007
Technical Papers
Rotordynamic Performance of Flexure Pivot Hydrostatic Gas Bearings for Oil-Free Turbomachinery
Luis San Andrés
Luis San Andrés
Mast-Childs Professor
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Xuehua Zhu
Luis San Andrés
Mast-Childs Professor
J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power. Oct 2007, 129(4): 1020-1027 (8 pages)
Published Online: January 2, 2007
Article history
Received:
April 14, 2006
Revised:
January 2, 2007
Citation
Zhu, X., and San Andrés, L. (January 2, 2007). "Rotordynamic Performance of Flexure Pivot Hydrostatic Gas Bearings for Oil-Free Turbomachinery." ASME. J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power. October 2007; 129(4): 1020–1027. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.2720518
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