Study and Control of a Radial Vaned Diffuser Stall
Author(s) -
Aurélien Marsan,
Isabelle Trébinjac,
Sylvain Coste,
Gilles Leroy
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
international journal of rotating machinery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.265
H-Index - 33
eISSN - 1026-7115
pISSN - 1023-621X
DOI - 10.1155/2012/549048
Subject(s) - stall (fluid mechanics) , gas compressor , centrifugal compressor , mechanics , boundary layer , boundary layer suction , suction , control theory (sociology) , flow separation , axial compressor , materials science , computer science , physics , impeller , boundary layer control , meteorology , thermodynamics , control (management) , artificial intelligence
The aim of the present study is to evaluate the efficiency of a boundary layer suction technique in case of a centrifugal compressor stage in order to extend its stable operating range. First, an analysis of the flow pattern within the radial vaned diffuser is presented. It highlights the stall of the diffuser vanes when reaching a low massflow. A boundary layer separation in the hub-suction side corner grows when decreasing the massflow from the nominal operating point to the surge and finally leads to a massive stall. An aspiration strategy is investigated in order to control the stall. The suction slot is put in the vicinity of the saddle that originates the main separating skin-friction line, identified thanks to the analysis of the skin-friction pattern. Several aspiration massflow rates are tested, and two different modelings of the aspiration are evaluated. Finally, an efficient control is reached with a removal of only 0,1% of the global massflow and leads—from a steady-state calculations point of view—to an increase by 40% of the compressor operating range extent
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