The present invention relates to a turbomachine comprising a centrifugal compressor stage, and in particular to the diffuser of the compressor.
Turbomachines are machines that transfer energy between a rotor and a fluid. For example, a turbomachine may transfer energy from a fluid to a rotor or may transfer energy from a rotor to a fluid. Two examples of turbomachines are a power turbine, which uses the rotational energy of a rotor driven by a fluid to do useful work, for example, generating electrical power; and a compressor which uses the rotational energy of the rotor to compress a fluid.
Turbochargers are well known turbomachines for supplying air to an inlet of an internal combustion engine at pressures above atmospheric pressure (boost pressures). A conventional turbocharger essentially comprises an exhaust gas driven turbine wheel mounted on a rotatable shaft within a turbine housing connected downstream of an engine outlet manifold. Rotation of the turbine wheel rotates a compressor wheel mounted on the other end of the shaft within a compressor housing. The compressor wheel delivers compressed air to an engine inlet manifold.
The turbocharger shaft is conventionally supported by journal and thrust bearings, including appropriate lubricating systems, located within a central bearing housing connected between the turbine and compressor wheel housings.
The turbine housing 15 has at least one exhaust gas inlet volute 19 (in
In use, the turbine wheel 14 is rotated by the passage of exhaust gas from the exhaust gas inlet volute 19 to the exhaust gas outlet 10. Exhaust gas is provided to the exhaust gas inlet volute 19 from an exhaust manifold (also referred to as an outlet manifold) of the engine (not shown) to which the turbocharger is attached. The turbine wheel 14 in turn rotates the compressor wheel 16 which thereby draws intake air through the compressor inlet 31 and delivers boost air to an inlet manifold of the engine via the diffuser 39, the volute 32 and then the outlet 33.
The invention aims to provide a new and useful diffuser for the compressor of a turbomachine.
In general terms, the invention proposes that in a diffuser formed as the gap between rotationally-symmetric surfaces which face each other, the axial extent of the gap varies in the radial direction. Specifically, moving in the radial direction, the axial extent of the gap generally decreases to a minimum value in a portion of the diffuser referred to as a “throat portion” (or just “throat”), and then generally increases again.
The distance from the rotational axis of the compressor to the throat may be at least approximately 125% of the radius of the compressor wheel, and no more than approximately 160% of the radius of the compressor wheel. In computation simulations, it has been found that a throat at this distance from the rotational axis may lead to higher efficiency at high flow rates, especially for relatively low turbo speeds. This is because the spacing between the compressor wheel and the throat permits diffusion of the gas streams (including the jet and the wake) leaving the compressor wheel. Furthermore, the increasing axial extent of the gap radially outwardly the throat portion (i.e. in the portion of the diffuser between the throat and the scroll) reduces turbulence at the transition between the diffuser and the scroll.
Increasing the radial distance between the rotational axis and the throat still further tends to lead to increased efficiently at high flow rates for a higher range of turbo speeds. On the other hand, the greatest levels of efficiency improvement for low turbo speeds are obtained when the radial distance between the rotational axis and the throat is not that high. In other words, there may be a trade-off between increasing the range of turbo speeds at which higher efficiency is obtained, and increasing the efficiency improvement at low turbo speeds.
The diffuser may be formed as the gap between a planar, axially-facing hub surface, and a curved surface of the shroud wall facing towards the hub surface. In a cross-section of the shroud in a plane including the rotational axis, the shroud surface defining one side of the diffuser may appear as a smooth curve (i.e. without positions at which the tangent to the shroud surface varies discontinuously). The shroud wall may be convex as viewed in this plane. For example, the curve may a parabola.
Radially-inwardly of the throat, the diffuser has a radially-inner portion in which the axial extent of the gap is greater than that of the throat. In this radially-inner portion, the axial extent of the gap may decrease monotonously at successive radially-outward positions towards the throat. The radially-inner portion of the diffuser may be spaced from the compressor wheel.
Radially-outwardly of the throat portion, the diffuser has a radially-outer portion extending to the scroll, in which the axial extent of the gap is greater than that of the throat. In this radially-outer portion of the diffuser, the axial extent of the gap increases monotonously at successively radially-outward positions towards the scroll. At the transition between the diffuser and the scroll, the shroud surface is preferably rounded, to minimise turbulence.
The throat portion of the diffuser may have no radial extent, i.e. it is a single throat position where the radially-inner and radially-outer portions of the diffuser meet.
In this document a surface of a first object is said to “face towards” a second object if the normal direction out of the surface of the first object has a positive component in the separation direction of the objects (i.e. the direction in which the respective points on the two objects which are closest to each other, are spaced apart), and “face away” from the second object if the normal direction out of the surface has a negative component in the separation direction. The term “face” does not imply that the normal to the surface is parallel to the separation direction. A surface is said to be “radially-extending” if the normal to the surface has a component in the axial direction.
A non-limiting embodiment of the invention will now be described, for the sake of example only, with reference to the following figures, in which:
Referring firstly to
Eight radially-spaced reference positions in the diffuser are marked 1-8 in
The reference position 1 of the diffuser of the baseline configuration has a first axial width b2. The diffuser 39 becomes narrower linearly at successive positions in the radially-outward direction, until reference position 2. Then it has substantially constant width until the outlet reference position 8. At the reference position 1, the angle between the tangent to the hub surface 20 (perpendicular to the circumferential direction) and the axial direction is marked as a2. At the outlet position 8, the angle between the tangent to the hub surface (measured in a plane including the rotational axis) and the axial direction is marked as a3, and the axial width at the outlet 8 is denoted by b3.
By contrast,
The diffuser gap has a narrowest axial extent at a single, radial position 44, referred to as the throat position. The portion of the diffuser which is radially-inward from the throat portion 44 is the radially-inner portion 42. The portion of the diffuser which is radially-outward from the throat portion 44, and extends to the scroll, is the radially-outer portion 43. The radially-inner portion 42 and radially-outer portion 43 of the gap touch at the throat position 44 because the throat position 44 has no radial extent.
However, more generally, there may be a range of radial positions at which the gap has the same, minimal axial extent. In other words, the diffuser has a throat portion which may have any radial extent. Throughout the throat portion, all positions on the shroud surface 20 are axially spaced by this same axial distance from respective positions on the hub surface 21. The throat portion spaces the radially-inner portion of the diffuser radially from the radially-outer portion.
The arrangement of
We now turn to more precise definitions of the parameters of the baseline configuration of
As in the baseline configuration, in all three embodiments the compressor wheel 16 has a diameter of 108 mm, i.e. a radius of 54 mm. Table 2 shows further parameters which are in common between the baseline configuration and the three embodiments. The impeller tip width means the axial length of the blades of the compressor wheel 6 at their radially-outer point. The radially-outer edge of the blade has equal distance from the rotational axis along the whole length of the blade. As mentioned above, the diffuser inlet width b2 is the axial width of the diffuser at the reference position 1. The diffuser length is the radial distance from the reference position 1 to the outlet reference position 8. The inlet angle α2 is the angle between the tangent to the hub surface 20 at the reference position 1, and the axial direction.
Table 3 shows other parameters of the baseline configuration and the three embodiments, while Table 4 shows the axial width of the baseline configuration and the three embodiments at each of the radial positions 1 to 8.
In summary, the embodiment 3 has efficiency improvement through the maps (though to a small extent at very high turbo speeds), whereas embodiments 1 and 2 only exhibit efficiency improvement at the low turbo speeds. On the other hand, for low turbo speeds, embodiments 1 and 2 show the greatest levels of efficiency improvement for high mass flow rates. All embodiments are more significantly more efficient than the baseline configuration at low turbo speed (about 65 k rpm) and high mass flow.
Compared to the embodiments, the baseline configuration has a smaller diffusion length for flow mixing, but the diffusion process begins earlier (that is, at a radially inward position). The embodiments, by contrast, have an extended diffusion length for flow mixing, and the diffusion process is delayed. These factors produce better performance, especially at low speed.
Although only a few embodiments of the diffuser have been described, many variations are possible within the scope of the invention as will be clear to a skilled reader.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1611439.9 | Jun 2016 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/GB2017/051893 | 6/29/2017 | WO | 00 |