Experimental Validation of a New Modeling for the Design Optimization of a Sliding Vane Rotary Expander Operating in an ORC-Based Power Unit
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Mathematical Model of SVRE
- Between blade tip and stator inner surface;
- Between rotor face and casing;
- Between blade side and rotor slots.
- The intake and exhaust phases are considered as isobaric transformations;
- The dynamic phenomena taking place at intake and exhaust phases are not considered.
2.2. Experimental Validation
- -
- A volumetric gear pump, which circulates the fluid. Thanks to an inverter, the revolution speed (and consequently the mass flow rate) can be changed;
- -
- A plate and fin evaporator;
- -
- A Sliding Vane Rotary Expander, linked to the electric grid via an electric generator;
- -
- A plate heat exchanger, acting as a condenser and cooled by tap water;
- -
- A tank, upstream the pump, which allows to dump the mass flow rate fluctuation and to decouple the minimum plant pressure from the mass of working fluid inside the plant.
- The representation of the leakages;
- The intake and exhaust phases were represented as isobaric transformation.
2.3. Model-Based SVRE Design
3. Results
4. Discussion
- It presents simulation times significantly lower with respect to the numerical model; few seconds characterize a complete prediction of the machine, while a more advanced theoretical model requires few hours;
- Once experimentally validated, the simplified model allows representing the whole behavior of the SVRE. Indeed, the predicted mass flow rate, volumetric efficiency, and indicated and mechanical power show a Root Mean Square Error equal to 3.6%, 2.3%, 5%, and 3%, respectively. Moreover, for all the quantities object of validation, the maximum deviations are lower than 20%.
5. Conclusions
- (1)
- Reduction of the chamber axial length, increasing the machine eccentricity, to keep constant the intake volume. This orients the design toward a “disk-shaped” machine (instead of considering a “finger-shaped” type), which reduces the leakage area, thus improving the volumetric efficiency (up to 8% with respect to the tested configuration), which shows the heaviest effects on machine global efficiency. Moreover, an improvement of up to 4.3% of mechanical efficiency is also obtained. This indicates that vane axial length reduction produces also a stronger reduction in mechanical losses due to friction. In order to define a geometry type, a geometrical Aspect Ratio has been defined as the ratio between expander width and stator diameter;
- (2)
- The increase of the Aspect Ratio (toward a “finger-shaped” machine) leads to a reduction of the SVRE efficiency. In particular, the volumetric and mechanical efficiencies decrease, respectively, up to 5% and 3%. On the other hand, an increase of the mechanical power is observed (+10% with respect to the original design), caused by the higher mass flow rate required by a “finger-shaped” configuration to guarantee the set point on the design intake pressure. Nevertheless, this power advantage is partially eroded by the higher power required by the pump to circulate the working fluid;
- (3)
- If the revolution speed increases, the overall machine performance increases too. Too high revolution speed, moreover, should be avoided because of the wear phenomena, which grow, as well as the centrifugal force (and consequently the friction losses). For these reasons, the intermediate value of design revolution speed (1500–2000 RPM) should be adopted for expander design for a machine mechanical power range of less than 5 kW.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
Symbols | eq—Equivalent Orifice |
A—Area [m2] | exh—Exhaust |
AR—Aspect Ratio | exp—Expander |
cd—Pressure Loss Coefficient | glob—Global |
C—Friction Coefficient | i—Index of Chamber/Pressure Profile |
ch—Chamber | in—Intake |
d—Diameter [mm] | ind—Indicated |
e—Eccentricity [mm] | leak—Leakages |
FN—Normal Force [N] | loss—Mechanical Losses |
h—Specific Enthalpy [kJ/kg] | mech—Mechanical |
mb—Blade Mass [g] | out, is—Isentropic Condition at Expander Outlet |
ṁ—Mass Flow Rate [kg/s] | rot—Rotor |
pb—Pressure Under the Blades [barg] | stat—Stator |
P—Power [W] | th—Theoretical |
p—Pressure [bar] | tip—Tip Blade |
Nv—Number of Vanes/Blades | vol—Volumetric |
rv—Blade Tip/Rotor Center Distance [mm] | WF—Working Fluid |
tb—Blade Thickness [mm] | |
tcycle—Time Cycle [s] | Greek Letter |
T—Temperature [K], [°C] | βv—Built-in Volume Ratio |
Vint—Intake Volume [cm3] | δ—Clearance Gap |
Wexp—Expander/Chamber Axial Height [mm] | η—Efficiency |
θ—Rotational Angle | |
Subscripts | ρ—Density |
end-wall—Leakages at End-Wall Plate | ω—Expander Revolution Speed |
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Expander Geometry | |
---|---|
Number of vanes | 7 |
Angular chamber extent [deg] | 51.4 |
Stator diameter [mm] | 75.9 |
Rotor diameter [mm] | 65 |
Eccentricity [mm] | 5.45 |
Expander width [mm] | 60 |
Blade thickness [mm] | 3.96 |
Blade length [mm] | 17 |
Intake port opening angle [deg] | 4.4 |
Intake port closing angle [deg] | 48 |
Exhaust port opening angle [deg] | 180 |
Exhaust port closing angle [deg] | 322 |
Boundary conditions | |
Static pressure at intake [bar] | 10.5 |
Static pressure at exhaust [bar] | 4.8 |
Temperature at intake [°C] | 83.6 |
Expander revolution speed [RPM] | 1500 |
Physical Quantities | Uncertainty of Measurement |
---|---|
Working fluid temperature | ±0.3 K |
Working fluid pressure | ±0.3 bar |
Indicated cycle | ±0.1% of the full-scale sensor output |
Working fluid mass flow rate | ±0.5% [kg/s] |
Water mass flow rate | ±0.5% [kg/s] |
Mechanical power | ±0.8% [W] |
Volumetric efficiency | ±0.6% |
Mechanical efficiency | ±2% |
Global efficiency | ±2.2% |
Operating Conditions | |
---|---|
Static pressure at intake [bar] | 13 |
Static pressure at exhaust [bar] | 3 |
Temperature at intake [°C] | 90 |
Expander revolution speed [RPM] | 1500 |
Mass flow rate [kg/s] | 0.150 |
Initial value of volumetric efficiency | 0.5 |
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Fatigati, F.; Di Bartolomeo, M.; Di Battista, D.; Cipollone, R. Experimental Validation of a New Modeling for the Design Optimization of a Sliding Vane Rotary Expander Operating in an ORC-Based Power Unit. Energies 2020, 13, 4204. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13164204
Fatigati F, Di Bartolomeo M, Di Battista D, Cipollone R. Experimental Validation of a New Modeling for the Design Optimization of a Sliding Vane Rotary Expander Operating in an ORC-Based Power Unit. Energies. 2020; 13(16):4204. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13164204
Chicago/Turabian StyleFatigati, Fabio, Marco Di Bartolomeo, Davide Di Battista, and Roberto Cipollone. 2020. "Experimental Validation of a New Modeling for the Design Optimization of a Sliding Vane Rotary Expander Operating in an ORC-Based Power Unit" Energies 13, no. 16: 4204. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13164204