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A revised Tesla Turbine Concept for ORC applications
Author(s) -
Giampaolo Manfrida,
Leonardo Pacini,
Lorenzo Talluri
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
energy procedia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.474
H-Index - 81
ISSN - 1876-6102
DOI - 10.1016/j.egypro.2017.09.115
Subject(s) - stator , turbine , modular design , torque , mechanical engineering , range (aeronautics) , rotor (electric) , flow (mathematics) , power (physics) , engineering , computer science , automotive engineering , mechanics , aerospace engineering , physics , quantum mechanics , thermodynamics , operating system
The TESLA turbine is an original expander working on the principle of torque transmission by wall shear stress. The principle – demonstrated for air expanders at lab scale - has some attractive features when applied to ORC expanders: it is suitable for handling limited flow rates (as is the case for machines in the range from 500W to 5 kW), it can be developed to a reasonable size (rotor of 0.1 to 0.3 m diameters), with possible rotational speeds (which range from 1000 to 12000 rpm). The original concept was revisited, improving the stator layout (which is the main responsible for poor performance) and developing a modular design allowing to cover a wide power range, as well as a perfectly sealed operation and other fluid dynamics improvements. The flow model was developed using complete real fluid assumptions, and includes several new concepts such as bladed channels for the stator and detailed treatment of losses. Preliminary design sketches are presented and results discussed and evaluated.

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