Similarity Laws for Turbo-machinery P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department From Inception to Utilization….
Buckingham, E. The principle of similitude. Nature 96, (1915).
The purpose of Dimensional Analysis Want to determine which variables to study. Want to determine the parameters that significantly affect the system. Reduce the cost/effort of experimental analysis by studying the most important groups of variables. The ideas can be used for any physical system. This will help in the design of scale test models
Similitude & Dimensional Analysis Scale model to prototype design and analysis. Used to select proper turbo-machine (axial, radial or mixed flow,…) Used to define performance parameters
Similarity Laws GEOMETRIC –Linear dimension ratios are the same everywhere. –Photographic enlargement KINEMATIC ( ϕ m = ϕ p ) –Same flow coefficients –Same fluid velocity ratios (triangles) are the same DYNAMIC (ψ m = ψ p ) –Same loading coefficient –Same force ratios (and force triangles) Energetic ( m = p ) –Same power coefficient –Same energy ratios.
Euler’s GENERIC TURBOMACHINE (turbine, compressor, pump, ….) List the n physical quantities (Q n ) with dimensions and the k fundamental dimensions. There will be (n-k) π-terms. Select k of these quantities, none dimensionless and no two having the same dimensions. All fundamental dimensions must be included collectively in the quantities selected.
Fundamental Quantities for Turbo-machines
The First Non-dimensional Parameter Flow Coefficient or Capacity Coefficient ( ) “the dimensionless ‘swallowing’ capacity of the machine”
Flow Velocity Vs Blade Speed Volumetric flow rate (Q) can be related to the fluid velocity : A particular value of implies a specific relationship between fluid velocity and blade/impeller speed.
Efficiency (η) vs Flow coefficient ( ϕ )
Design Innovations for Better Performance
Strategies to Capture More Power from Wind
Pitch-Controlled Variable-Speed Wind Turbine Generation
Grid Acceptable Power
The second Non-dimensional Parameter p corresponds to the energy per unit volume of the fluid. N 2 D 2 relates to the rotor or impeller dynamic pressure (K.E. per unit volume). Loading Coefficient
Load Coefficient or Head Coefficient For compressible fluid machines : For incompressible fluid machines :
Selection of Load Coefficient for an Axial Flow Compressor
Accepted Technology for Hydro Power generation
Universal Design Chart for Power Consuming Turbo-machines
The Third non-dimensional Parameter
Role of Power Coefficient : Wind Turbines
Size Vs Capacity of A Wind TUrbine
Design Upgradation
Similarity of Model & Prototype
Design for Best Efficiency for Pumps & Fans
Dimensions for Performance