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Turbomachinery Lecture 1 - Pumps, Turbines - Subcomponents - Units, Constants, Parameters - Thermodynamics www.engr.uconn.edu/barbertj~ - ME3280 / ME6160 1 Turbomachinery • Turbomachine: A device in which energy is transferred to or from a continuously flowing fluid through a casing by the dynamic action of a rotor. • Rotor or impellor: Changes stagnation enthalpy of fluid moving through it by either doing positive or negative work. • Works on fluid to produce either power or flow • Turbomachine categories: – Those which absorb power to increase fluid pressure or head [compressor, pump]. • Fan: pressure rise up to • Blower: pressure between • Compressor: pressure rise 1 lbf/in2 1 - 40 lbf/in2 above 40 lbf/in2 – Those which produce power by expanding fluid to lower pressure or head [turbine]. 2 Turbomachinery • Turbomachine classification – Impulse: pressure change takes place in one or more nozzles – Reaction: takes place in all nozzles • Path of through flow – Mainly or wholly parallel to axis of rotation: axial flow machine – Mainly or wholly in a plane perpendicular to axis of rotation: radial flow machine 3 Brayton Thermodynamic Cycle for Single Spool Turbojet Engine 4 Meridional Projection of Axial & Centrifugal Compressor Stages Essentially constant radius Substantial change in radius 5 Turbomachinery - Pumps • Positive Displacement: moving boundary forces fluid along by volume changes. – Reciprocating, rotary: piston, screw, ... • Dynamic: momentum change by means of moving blades or vanes (No closed volume). – Axial, centrifugal, mixed – Fluid increases momentum while moving through open passages and then converts high velocity to pressure rise in diffuser section • In radial machines doughnut-shaped diffuser is called a scroll • Through a casing...........Not wind mills, water wheels or propellers • Flow conditioning..........Stators, scrolls 6 Turbomachinery - Pumps Screw Centrifugal Axial 7 Turbomachinery - Turbines • Extracts energy from a fluid with high head [pump run backwards]. • Reaction turbine: fluid fills blade passages and pressure drop occurs within impeller. – Low-head, high-flow devices – V across rotor increases, p decreases – Stators merely alter direction of flow • Impulse turbine: converts high head to high velocity using a nozzle; then strikes blades as they pass by. – Impeller passages are not fluid filled, and jet flows past blades is essentially at constant pressure. – Discharge velocity relative inlet velocity across rotor – no net change in p across rotor – stators shaped to increase V, decrease p 8 Gas Generator • Purpose: Supply High-Temperature and High-Pressure Gas – compressor, combustor, turbine 9 Turbojet • Purpose: Provide High-Velocity Thrust – inlet, compressor, combustor, turbine, nozzle 10 Turbofan • Purpose: Produce Lower-Velocity Thrust Through the Addition of a Fan – inlet, fan, compressor, combustor, turbine, nozzle Stations 0=1= Upstream 2 =compressor inlet 2.5=low-to-high comp 3 =combustor inlet 4 =turbine inlet 4.5=high-to-low turb. 5 =nozzle inlet 8 =exit 11 Turboprop • Purpose: Produce Low-Velocity Thrust Through Addition of a Propeller 12 Turboshaft • Purpose: Produce Shaft Power for Rotating Component [Not for Thrust] - helicopter 13 Low BPR 14 BPR= mass flow through bypass/mass flow through core High BPR 15 Gas Turbine Components • Main Flow-Path Components of a Gas Turbine Engine: – – – – – inlet compressor combustor turbine nozzle • Secondary Flow-Path Components: – disk cavities – cooling flow bleed ducts – bearing compartments 16 Inlet • Inlet Reduces the Entering Air Velocity to a Level Suitable for the Compressor • Often Considered Part of Nacelle Nacelle • Critical Factors: – Mach Number – Mass Flow – Attached Flow • Subsonic Inlet – Divergent area used to reduce velocity • Supersonic Inlet – Shocks often used to achieve reduced velocity and compression Engine Inlet 17 Fan/Compressor • Axial-Flow Fan • Axial-Flow Compressor – Low-Pressure – High-Pressure • Centrifugal Compressor – Mixed Axial/Radial Flow Fan Low-Pressure Compressor 18 High-Pressure Compressor Combustor • Designed to Burn a Mixture of Fuel & Air and Deliver to Turbine – Uniform Exit Temperature – Complete Combustion – Emission issues – Exit Temperature Must Not Exceed Critical Limit Set By Turbine Metal + Cooling Design Combustor 19 Turbine • Extracts Kinetic Energy from expanding gases and converts to shaft HP to drive compressor/fan – Axial Flow Turbine • High Flow Rates • Low-Moderate Pressure Ratios High-Pressure Turbine – Centrifugal Turbine • Lower Flow Rates • Higher Pressure Ratio 20 Low-Pressure Turbine Nozzle • Increase velocity of exhaust before discharge from nozzle and straighten flow from turbine – Convergent Nozzle Used When Nozzle Pr < 2 (Subsonic Flow) – Convergent-Divergent Nozzle Used When Nozzle Pr > 2 • Often incorporate variable geometry to control throat area Nozzle 21 3 Planar Views of a Turbomachine Cross Flow Area Variation in Compressor & Turbine Rotors Diffuser Cross Flow Area Nozzle 23 Favorable [Turbine] & Unfavorable [Compressor] Pressure Gradients Bernoulli: dp dV 24 Thermophysical Process Across an Adiabatic Stator Turbine Compressor 25 Compressibility Can Be A Major Issue in Nozzle Flows Subsonic M 1, Subsonic M 1, Supersonic nozzle dA 0 A Subsonic diffuser dA 0 A 26 Gas-Turbine Design Process Well Developed Developed Fairly Mature Developed Improvements Required Determine “Steady” and Unsteady Coupling Effects Between the Components Determine Unsteady-Flow Interaction Effects on Performance (e.g.. Wake / Blade, Shock / Blade, Potential, Thermal, and Structural Interactions Under Development Multi-Component 3-D Steady and Unsteady-Flow Analysis Multi-Stage Turbomachinery 3-D Unsteady-Flow Analysis Multi-Stage Turbomachinery and Secondary Flow Path 3-D Steady-Flow Analysis 3-D Turbomachinery Airfoil and Design and Analysis Turbomachinery 2-D Airfoil Section Design and Analysis Through-Flow or Streamline (2D x,r) Analysis Turbomachinery Meanline (1D) Analysis Engine Cycle Analysis Determine Primary Blade-Row and Secondary Flow Path Pressure and Mass-Flow Distribution Interaction Effects Upon Stacking Airfoil Sections from Structural or Aero Considerations, Determine Single BladeRow Performance (i.e.. Loading and Pt Losses) and Combustor Heat and NOx Release From Velocity Triangles, Determine Airfoil Shape as a Function of Radius for Required Flow Turning and Pressure Rise/Drop From Radial Equilibrium or Axisymmetric Streamline Analysis, Determine Spanwise Variation in Velocity Triangles From Required Compressor / Turbine Work Determine Number of Stages and Velocity Triangles of”Mean Radius” Streamline From Required Thrust, Determine Work Required by Compressor and Turbine and Heat Addition from Combustor Fidelity / Complexity 27 Units and Key Constants 28 • Conventional Units Parameter English Units SI Units – – – – Feet, Inches Seconds Pounds (force), lbf psf, psi Meters, M Seconds, s 4.448 Newton, N Pascal, Pa (1N/1m2) bar (105Pa) 2.989 kPa 0.4536 kilogram Joule, J 0.7457 kWatt Distance Time Force Pressure – Mass – Energy – Power 1 ft H2O Pounds (mass), lbm Btu 1 Hp 29 Equivalent Systems of Units System English Eng. English Gravitational Metric Metric International System (SI) Force Mass lbf lbm lbf slug kgf kg dyne gm Newton kg Length ft ft m cm m time s s s s s 1 Newton = 1 kg-m/sec2 1 Joule = 1 N-m/sec 30 Important Constants for Air Variable pressure density Universal gas constant Spec. gas constant (air) Air Air Joule constant speed of sound Symbol p R=/M Cp Cv J a lbm unit lb/ft2 slug/ft3 4.97+4 ft-lb/slug-mole-R 1716 ft-lb/slug-R 7.73 5.5 778.16 ft-lbf/BTU 1100 ft/s lbf unit lb/ft2 lbm/ft3 1545.33 ft-lb/lbm-mole-R 53.35 ft-lb/lbm-R 0.24 0.172 kg u N/m N/m 831 J/kg-mo 287 J/kg 1.00 0.71 1100 ft/s 440 m R=287 J/kg-R = 287 m2/s2-K 31 Useful Equivalents Quantity Original Unit Flow Specific Energy Mass Rotational speed Kinematic viscosity Pressue 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1 Joule 1 BTU 1 slug cfs [ft3/sec] ft2/s2 slug rad/s ft2/s in. H2O Equivalent 448. gal/min 1.0 ft-lbf/slug 32.174 lbm 9.549 rev/min 92,903 centistokes 5.2 lbf/ft2 = Nm =kg-m2/sec2 = 778.2 ft-lbf = 32.2 lbm = lbf-sec2/ft Atmospheric pressure 1 in Hg = 0.49116 psi 2116 psf = 14.7 psi = 1.013 Bar = 101,325 Pascals 32 SI – English Units Runiv J kg m2 8314 2 kg mole K kg sec mole K Rspec Runiv 8314 m2 287 2 M 28.97 sec K 2 m a 2 RT sec2 BTU ft lbf ft lbf 1.987 778 1545.3 mole R lbm mole R lbm mole R R ft lbf Rspec univ 53.35 M lbm R ft lbf ft lbm ft 2 2 a gRT 53.35 32.2 TR 1716 T 2 2 lbm R lbf sec sec Runiv 1.987 33 • For Liquid Water : 62.4lbm / ft 3 • U.S. Standard Atmosphere - 1976 lbf pressure 14.696 2 in temperature 518.67 R 34 Standard Atmosphere http://www.digitaldutch.com/atmoscalc/tableatmosphere.htm Altitude Stratosphere >65,000 ft 36,089 ft 59 F Temperature Altitude 36,089 ft 3.202 psia 14.696 psia Pressure 35 36 37 Thermodynamics Review 38 Thermodynamics Review • Thermodynamic views – microscopic: collection of particles in random motion. Equilibrium refers to maximum state of disorder – macroscopic: gas as a continuum. Equilibrium is evidenced by no gradients • 0th Law of Thermo [thermodynamic definition of temperature]: – When any two bodies are in thermal equilibrium with a third, they are also in thermal equilibrium with each other. – Correspondingly, when two bodies are in thermal equilibrium with one another they are said to be at the same temperature. 39 Thermodynamics Review • 1st Law of Thermo [Conservation of energy]: Total work is same in all adiabatic processes between any two equilibrium states having same kinetic and potential energy. – Introduces idea of stored or internal energy E – dE = dQ - dW • dW = Work done by system [+]=dWout= - pdV • Some books have dE=dQ+dW [where dW is work done ON system] • dQ = Heat added to system [+]=dQin – Heat and work are mutually convertible. Ratio of conversion is called mechanical equivalent of heat J = joule 40 Review of Thermodynamics • Stored energy E components – Internal energy (U), kinetic energy (mV2/2), potential energy, chemical energy • Energy definitions – Introduces e = internal energy = e(T, p) – e = e(T) de = Cv(T) dT thermally perfect – e = Cv T calorically perfect • 2nd law of Thermo – Introduces idea of entropy S – Production of s must be positive – Every natural system, if left undisturbed, will change spontaneously and approach a state of equilibrium or rest. The property associated with capability for change is called entropy. dS Qrev T TdS dE dW 41 Review of Thermodynamics • Extensive variables – depend on total mass of the system, e.g. M, E, S, V • Intensive variables – do not depend on total mass of the system, e.g. p, T, s, (1/v) • Equilibrium (state of maximum disorder) – bodies that are at the same temperature are called in thermal equilibrium. • Reversible – process from one state to another state during which the whole process is in equilibrium • Irreversible – all natural or spontaneous processes are irreversible, e.g. effects of viscosity, conduction, etc. 42 Thermodynamic Properties Derived Primitive Extensive Intensive Extensive Intensive Mass – M Density - Energy – Eo Specific energy – eo - Pressure – p Kinetic energy – Ek Sp. kin. energy – V2/2 - Temperature – T Potential energy – Ep Sp. pot. energy – gz Volume - V Specific volume - Internal energy - E Sp. int. energy - e E0 E Ek E p or V2 e0 e gz 2 0 T Total or stagnation state 43 1st Law of Thermodynamics • For steady flow, defining: V2 /2 gz e specific kinetic energy specific potential energy specific internal energy h=e+pv e+ p specific enthalpy V2 e0 e gz 2 total specific energy • We can write: V2 e0 pv e gz pv 2 • and h e pv and h0 e0 pv 44 Equation of State • The relation between the thermodynamic properties of a pure substance is referred to as the equation of state for that substance, i.e. F(p, v, T) = 0 • Ideal (Perfect) Gas – Intermolecular forces are neglected – The ratio pV/T in limit as p 0 is known as the universal gas constant (R). p /T R = 8.3143e3 – At sufficiently low pressures, for all gases p/T = R or p RT • Real gas: intermolecular forces are important 45 Real Gas 1150 R 46 Real Gas 47 1st & 2nd Law of Thermodynamics • Gibbs Eqn. relates 2nd law properties to 1st law properties: Tds pdv de h e pv dh de pdv vdp dp Tds dh 48 Gibbs Equation • Isentropic form of Gibbs equation: dh dp • and using specific heat at constant pressure: RT c p dT dP P dT R dP T cp P 49 Thermally & Calorically Perfect Gas • Also, for a thermally perfect gas: cP cv R = cp cv -1 R cp dT 1 dP T P • Calorically perfect gas - Constant Cp dT 1 dP 1 T 1 P 2 2 50 Isentropic Flow • For Isentropic Flow: 1 / T2 P2 T1 P1 or T CP 1 / • Precise gas tables available for design work – Thermally Perfect Gas good for compressors not for turbines because of burned fuel. 51 Gibbs Equation • Rewriting Gibbs Equation: Tds dh dP c p dT 1 RT dP T T P P ds dT 1 dP cP T P ds T2 1 P2 s2 s1 ln ln cp T1 P1 52 Gibbs Equation • Rewriting Gibbs Equation: Apply at stagnation state T02 1 P02 s2 s1 ln ln cp T01 P01 For adiabatic processes, T0 constant s2 s1 1 P02 ln cp P 01 P02 s2 s1 1 exp R P01 53 Mollier Chart for Air 3,000 P=50Atm Temperature Deg R 2,500 Isobars are not parallel 20 2,000 10 1,500 5 2 1,000 500 0.00 1 0.02 0.04 0.06 0.08 0.10 0.12 0.14 0.16 Entropy - BTU/Lbm/deg R 54 Mollier for Static / Total States Poout h02 1,650 h02i We will soon see 1,450 P out V2/2 2 V h0 h 2 1,250 T 1,050 Real Ideal 850 Poin 650 h01 P in 450 -0.02 s -0.01 0.00 0.01 0.02 S 0.03 0.04 0.05 0.06 55