The present disclosure relates generally to noise suppression in turbo-machines, and particularly to noise suppression in an inlet shroud for a centrifugal impeller turbo-machine.
Operation of turbo-machines, such as centrifugal impeller turbo-machines, generates significant amounts of acoustic noise. A dominant portion of acoustic noise generated by a centrifugal turbo-machine is due to an impeller blade rotating at a high rpm, which causes a high pressure side and a low pressure side to develop on the leading edge of the blade. This pressure differential generates pressure perturbations which propagate back upstream through the gas passage at the blade passing frequency, radiating out the fluid passage inlet of the turbo-machine as acoustic noise.
Multiple attempts have been made in the art to reduce this noise via the inclusion of inlet silencers. Inlet silencers are primarily effective in a lower frequency range than the frequency range of noise generated by the impeller blades. Other attempts at reducing the noise have resulted in unacceptable reduction in the performance of the turbo-machine.
Disclosed is a gas inlet for a turbo-machine having a gas passage including an impeller, the gas passage is bounded on one side by an inlet shroud, the gas passage has an at least partially radial fluid flow inlet relative to the impeller, and the gas passage has at least a first axial fluid flow portion relative to the impeller, the at least partially radial fluid flow inlet connected to the first axial flow portion via a non-gradual bend in the fluid passage, and wherein an arc angle of the non-gradual bend and strong curvature is sufficient to generate a shockwave extending a portion of a distance from a first side of the gas passage at an exit of the bend toward a second side of the gas passage at the exit of the bend.
Also disclosed is a turbo-machine having an inlet shroud defining a first wall of a gas passage, an impeller assembly having a gas passage, with an at least partially radial fluid flow inlet relative to the impeller assembly, and at least a first axial fluid flow portion, the at least partially radial fluid flow inlet connected to the first axial flow portion via a non-gradual bend in the gas passage, and wherein an arc angle of the non-gradual bend is sufficient to generate a shockwave extending a portion of the distance from a first side of the gas passage at an exit of said bend toward a second side of the gas passage at an exit of the bend.
Also disclosed is a method for reducing noise in a turbo-machine having the step of generating a shockwave in a fluid passage of a turbo-machine, thereby blocking upstream propagation of pressure perturbations in a fluid passing through the gas passage.
These and other features of the present invention can be best understood from the following specification and drawings, the following of which is a brief description.
Fluid, such as air, enters the gas path 40 at a fluid inlet 110, travels through the gas path 40, and is expelled at a fluid outlet 120 of the impeller 150. Fluid travels through both the fluid inlet 110 and the fluid outlet 120 radially relative to the centerline 154 of an impeller wheel 152. The gas path 40 includes a radial to axial bend 130, where fluid flow transitions from traveling radially relative to an impeller wheel 152 axis centerline 154 to traveling axially relative to the impeller wheel 152 axis centerline 154. An axial to radial bend 140 transitions the fluid flowing through the gas path 40 back to a radial flow direction relative to the impeller 150 prior to the fluid flow passing through the outlet 120. While the illustrated example illustrates a purely radial inflow at the inlet 110, alternate gas path 40 configurations with a partial radial inflow can also be utilized with the present description.
The impeller 150 is located in the axial flow portion of the gas path 40. The impeller 150 includes multiple rotating impeller blades 52 (illustrated in
The magnitude of the acoustic intensity vector generated at a given point of the fluid flow can be calculated using the following equation:
[Morfey, C. L., 1971 “Acoustic energy in nonuniform flows”, J. Sound ib., 14, pp. 159-170.]
In the above equation “I” is an instantaneous acoustic intensity vector at a particular point, and is made up of Ix, Iy, and Iz components. “
Once the instantaneous acoustic intensity vector (I) is determined, the total sound power through a plane can be determined using the following formula:
P=∫SĪ·dS
In the above equation, “P” is a total sound power, “I” is a time-averaged acoustic intensity vector, and “dS” is a normal vector times a discretized cell face area.
A full 3D computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation run with a structured grid representing the geometry depicted gas path 40 in
The radial to axial bend 130 of the gas path includes an aggressive, non-gradual, curvature (i.e. a “knee” type bend) on the shroud side of the radial to axial transition region, while maintaining a gradual curvature in the hub side of the radial to axial transition region. The knee bend causes a shockwave to be generated in the fluid flow when the fluid encounters the knee bend. The shockwave extends down from the shroud side 44 of the gas path 40 toward the hub side 42. By way of example, the shockwave can extend through the 100%-50% region of the gas path 40.
The distance between the knee bend 132 and the impeller 150 is a sufficient length to allow fluid flowing through the gas path 40 to reattach to the inner surface of the gas path 40 on the shroud side 44 prior to entering the impeller 150. Once reattached, the fluid flows into the impeller 150 with normal streamlines in the meridional plane relative to the impeller 150. By allowing the fluid flow to reattach to the shroud side 44 prior to entering the impeller 150 at the leading edge of the impeller wheel 152, performance degradation resulting from the shockwave is reduced to a minimal amount, and can be as low as a 0.1% to 0.2% efficiency reduction of the turbo-machine.
Although an embodiment of this invention has been disclosed, a worker of ordinary skill in this art would recognize that certain modifications would come within the scope of this invention. For that reason, the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this invention.
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Number | Date | Country |
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2007077860 | Mar 2007 | JP |
Entry |
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English Machine Translation of JP 2007-77860 A, Sep. 25, 2014, JPO/INPIT. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130183135 A1 | Jul 2013 | US |