Experimental investigations on a single stage centrifugal compressor showed that measured blade vibration amplitudes vary considerably along a constant speed line from choke to surge. The unsteady flow has been analyzed to obtain detailed insight into the excitation mechanism. Therefore, a turbocharger compressor stage impeller has been modeled and simulated by means of computational fluid dynamics (CFD). Two operating points at off-design conditions were analyzed. One was close to choke and the second one close to the surge line. Transient CFD was employed, since only then a meaningful prediction of the blade excitation, caused by the unsteady flow situation, can be expected. Actually, it was observed that close to surge a steady state solution could not be obtained; only transient CFD could deliver a converged solution. The CFD results show the effect of the interaction between the inducer casing bleed system and the main flow. Additionally, the effect of the nonaxisymmetric components, such as the suction elbow and the discharge volute, was analyzed. The volute geometry itself had not been modeled. It turned out to be sufficient to impose a circumferentially asymmetric pressure distribution at the exit of the vaned diffuser to simulate the volute. Volute and suction elbow impose a circumferentially asymmetric flow field, which induces blade excitation. To understand the excitation mechanism, which causes the measured vibration behavior of the impeller, the time dependent pressure distribution on the impeller blades was transformed into the frequency domain by Fourier decomposition. The complex modal pressure data were imposed on the structure that was modeled by finite element methods (FEM). Following state-of-the-art calculations to analyze the free vibration behavior of the impeller, forced response calculations were carried out. Comparisons with the experimental results demonstrate that this employed methodology is capable of predicting the impeller’s vibration behavior under real engine conditions. Integrating the procedure into the design of centrifugal compressors will enhance the quality of the design process.
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July 2006
Technical Papers
Unsteady Flow in a Turbocharger Centrifugal Compressor: Three-Dimensional Computational Fluid Dynamics Simulation and Numerical and Experimental Analysis of Impeller Blade Vibration
Christian H. Roduner
Christian H. Roduner
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Hans-Peter Dickmann
Thomas Secall Wimmel
Jaroslaw Szwedowicz
Dietmar Filsinger
Christian H. Roduner
J. Turbomach. Jul 2006, 128(3): 455-465 (11 pages)
Published Online: February 1, 2005
Article history
Received:
October 1, 2004
Revised:
February 1, 2005
Citation
Dickmann, H., Secall Wimmel, T., Szwedowicz, J., Filsinger, D., and Roduner, C. H. (February 1, 2005). "Unsteady Flow in a Turbocharger Centrifugal Compressor: Three-Dimensional Computational Fluid Dynamics Simulation and Numerical and Experimental Analysis of Impeller Blade Vibration." ASME. J. Turbomach. July 2006; 128(3): 455–465. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.2183317
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