Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/29313
Title: Integrated aerodynamic and structural blade shape optimisation of axial turbines operating with supercritical carbon dioxide blended with dopants
Authors: Abdeldayem, AS
White, MT
Paggini, A
Ruggiero, M
Sayma, AI
Keywords: axial turbines;blade-shape optimisation;supercritical carbon dioxide;sCO2;sCO2 blends
Issue Date: 28-Oct-2022
Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers
Citation: Abdeldayem, A.S. et al. (2022) 'Integrated aerodynamic and structural blade shape optimisation of axial turbines operating with supercritical carbon dioxide blended with dopants', Proceedings of the ASME Turbo Expo 2022: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition. Volume 9: Supercritical CO2. Rotterdam, Netherlands. 13–17 June, V009T28A004, pp. 1 - 14. doi: 10.1115/GT2022-81223.
Abstract: Within this study, the blade shape of a large-scale axial turbine operating with sCO2 blended with dopants is optimised using an integrated aerodynamic-structural 3D numerical model, whereby the optimisation aims at maximising the aerodynamic efficiency whilst meeting a set of stress constraints to ensure safe operation. Specifically, three candidate mixtures are considered, namely CO2 blended with titaniumtetrachloride (TiCl4), hexafluorobenzene (C6F6) or sulfur dioxide (SO2), where the selected blends and boundary conditions are defined by the EU project, SCARABEUS. A single passage axial turbine numerical model is setup and applied to the first stage of a large-scale multi-stage axial turbine design. The aerodynamic performance is simulated using a 3D steady-state viscous computational fluid dynamic (CFD) model while the blade stress distribution is obtained from a static structural finite element analysis (FEA). A genetic algorithm is used to optimise parameters defining the blade angle and thickness distributions along the chord line while a surrogate model is used to provide fast and reliable model predictions during optimisation using genetic aggregation response surface. The uncertainty of the surrogate model represented by the difference between the surrogate model results and the CFD/FEA model results is evaluated using a set of verification points and found to be less than 0.3% for aerodynamic efficiency and 1% for both the mass flow rate and the maximum equivalent stresses. The comparison between the final optimised blade cross-sections have shown some common trends in optimising the blade design by decreasing stator and rotor trailing edge thickness, increasing stator thickness near the trailing edge, decreasing rotor thickness near the trailing edge and decreasing the rotor outlet angle. Further investigations of the loss breakdown of the optimised and reference blade designs are presented to highlight the role of the optimisation process in reducing aerodynamic losses. It has been noted that the performance improvement achieved through shape optimisation is mainly due to decreasing the endwall losses of both stator and rotor blades.
Description: Paper No: GT2022-81223, V009T28A004.
URI: https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/29313
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1115/GT2022-81223
ISBN: 978-0-7918-8608-3
Other Identifiers: ORCiD: Abdulnaser Sayma https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2315-0004
GT2022-81223
V009T28A004
Appears in Collections:Dept of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Research Papers

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