Influence of Lubricant Film Cavitation on the Vibration Behavior of a Semifloating Ring Supported Turbocharger Rotor With Thrust Bearing
Author(s) -
Christian Ziese,
Cornelius Irmscher,
Steffen Nitzschke,
Christian Daniel,
Elmar Woschke,
Thomas Klimpel
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of engineering for gas turbines and power
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.567
H-Index - 84
eISSN - 1528-8919
pISSN - 0742-4795
DOI - 10.1115/1.4053266
Subject(s) - bearing (navigation) , lubricant , lubrication , thrust bearing , mechanics , cavitation , vibration , turbocharger , materials science , rotor (electric) , reynolds equation , thrust , structural engineering , engineering , mechanical engineering , physics , composite material , turbine , reynolds number , turbulence , acoustics , astronomy
This contribution investigates the influence of outgassing processes on the vibration behavior of a hydrodynamic bearing supported turbocharger rotor. The examined rotor is supported radially by floating rings with outer squeeze-film damping and axially by thrust bearings. Due to the highly nonlinear bearing properties, the rotor can be excited via the lubricating film, which results in subsynchronous vibrations known as oil-whirl and oil-whip phenomena. A significant influence on the occurrence of oil-whip phenomena is attributed to the bearing stiffness and damping, which depend on the kinematic state of the supporting elements, the thermal condition, and the occurrence of outgassing processes. For modeling the bearing behavior, the Reynolds equation with mass-conserving cavitation regarding the two-phase model and the three-dimensional (3D) energy as well as heat conduction equation is solved. To evaluate the impact of cavitation, run-up simulations are carried out assuming a fully (half-Sommerfeld) or partially filled lubrication gap. The resulting rotor responses are compared with the shaft motion measurement. Also, the normalized eccentricity, the minimum lubricant fraction, and the thermal bearing condition are discussed.
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