Leakage modelling of revolving vane expander

Conventionally, before arriving to evaporator and after the condenser, the refrigerant gas will pass through a throttling valve which will cause a decrease in the pressure of the refrigerant gas. Now, we are trying to include the use of expander so that, instead of the refrigerant gas being expanded...

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Main Author: Hans, Hendrik.
Other Authors: Ooi Kim Tiow
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2010
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/39775
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-397752023-03-04T19:10:51Z Leakage modelling of revolving vane expander Hans, Hendrik. Ooi Kim Tiow School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering::Fluid mechanics Conventionally, before arriving to evaporator and after the condenser, the refrigerant gas will pass through a throttling valve which will cause a decrease in the pressure of the refrigerant gas. Now, we are trying to include the use of expander so that, instead of the refrigerant gas being expanded isenthalpically (without extracting any work), it will be expanded more towards isentropically. Hence, the energy that we obtained from the expansion process could be supplied to the compressor, decreasing the demand for electricity of the compressor. Through preliminary analysis, the COP could be increased by up to 60%, this translates to savings in energy of up to 37%. Therefore, we decided that detailed analysis would be very much of interest in order to evaluate the performances of the expander. And one of the main problems with rotary type expanders is leakage. Therefore, the leakage modeling becomes the main issue to be resolved. For most of the time, researchers on leakage always assumed that radial leakage is more important than endface leakage and more prominent, therefore they made assumptions that endface leakage is negligible as compared to radial leakage. So to this date, no work on endface leakage modeling is developed. The farthest researchers have gone, is represented by the work of Yanagisawa and Shimizu[10]. But the modeling done in [10] is leakage of lubricant from the shaft to the endface that mixed with the refrigerants hence we can say that no work up to this date has been done on the endface leakage from high pressure chamber to low pressure chamber. As for the radial leakage modeling, there are quite a number of models developed and one of the most well-established models is done by Yanagisawa and Shimizu in [8]. But in that model, there’s an inherent flaw both on his experimental setup and on his theoretical modeling. Hence, we perform in modeling in a different manner with results that converge well within his range of results. We require 8 models to completely describe all the leakages under different circumstances. This is due to the fact that the main leakages on the expander are radial leakage and endface leakage. The endface leakage is later divided into rotor endface leakage and leakage through vane endface. For each of these leakages, we establish choked flow model, unchoked compressible flow model and unchoked incompressible flow model, except for radial leakage. Bachelor of Engineering (Mechanical Engineering) 2010-06-04T01:53:57Z 2010-06-04T01:53:57Z 2010 2010 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/39775 en Nanyang Technological University 137 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering::Fluid mechanics
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering::Fluid mechanics
Hans, Hendrik.
Leakage modelling of revolving vane expander
description Conventionally, before arriving to evaporator and after the condenser, the refrigerant gas will pass through a throttling valve which will cause a decrease in the pressure of the refrigerant gas. Now, we are trying to include the use of expander so that, instead of the refrigerant gas being expanded isenthalpically (without extracting any work), it will be expanded more towards isentropically. Hence, the energy that we obtained from the expansion process could be supplied to the compressor, decreasing the demand for electricity of the compressor. Through preliminary analysis, the COP could be increased by up to 60%, this translates to savings in energy of up to 37%. Therefore, we decided that detailed analysis would be very much of interest in order to evaluate the performances of the expander. And one of the main problems with rotary type expanders is leakage. Therefore, the leakage modeling becomes the main issue to be resolved. For most of the time, researchers on leakage always assumed that radial leakage is more important than endface leakage and more prominent, therefore they made assumptions that endface leakage is negligible as compared to radial leakage. So to this date, no work on endface leakage modeling is developed. The farthest researchers have gone, is represented by the work of Yanagisawa and Shimizu[10]. But the modeling done in [10] is leakage of lubricant from the shaft to the endface that mixed with the refrigerants hence we can say that no work up to this date has been done on the endface leakage from high pressure chamber to low pressure chamber. As for the radial leakage modeling, there are quite a number of models developed and one of the most well-established models is done by Yanagisawa and Shimizu in [8]. But in that model, there’s an inherent flaw both on his experimental setup and on his theoretical modeling. Hence, we perform in modeling in a different manner with results that converge well within his range of results. We require 8 models to completely describe all the leakages under different circumstances. This is due to the fact that the main leakages on the expander are radial leakage and endface leakage. The endface leakage is later divided into rotor endface leakage and leakage through vane endface. For each of these leakages, we establish choked flow model, unchoked compressible flow model and unchoked incompressible flow model, except for radial leakage.
author2 Ooi Kim Tiow
author_facet Ooi Kim Tiow
Hans, Hendrik.
format Final Year Project
author Hans, Hendrik.
author_sort Hans, Hendrik.
title Leakage modelling of revolving vane expander
title_short Leakage modelling of revolving vane expander
title_full Leakage modelling of revolving vane expander
title_fullStr Leakage modelling of revolving vane expander
title_full_unstemmed Leakage modelling of revolving vane expander
title_sort leakage modelling of revolving vane expander
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/39775
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