An analysis of the viscous flow through a compact radial turbine by the average passage approach

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Abstract

A steady, three-dimensional viscous "average passage" computer code is used to analyze the flow through a compact radial turbine rotor. The code models the flow as spatially periodic from blade passage to blade passage. Results from the code using varying computational models are compared with each other and with experimental data. These results include blade surface velocities and pressures, exit vorticity and entropy contour plots, shroud pressures, and spanwise exit total temperature, total pressure, and swirl distributions. The three computational models used are inviscid, viscous with no blade clearance, and viscous with blade clearance. It is found that modeling viscous effects improves correlation with experimental data, while modeling hub and tip clearances further improves some comparisons. Experimental results such as a local maximum of exit swirl, reduced exit total pressures at the walls, and exit total temperature magnitudes are explained by interpretation of the flow physics and computed secondary flows. Trends in the computed blade loading diagrams are similarly explained.

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Heidmann, J. D., & Beach, T. A. (1990). An analysis of the viscous flow through a compact radial turbine by the average passage approach. In Proceedings of the ASME Turbo Expo (Vol. 1). American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME). https://doi.org/10.1115/90-GT-064

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