Effectiveness of Swirl-Vanes Upstream of Casing-Treatment at the Compressor Inlet in Automotive Turbochargers

2016-01-1022

4/5/2016

Authors
Abstract
Content
The use of Swirl-Vanes or Inlet Guide Vanes (IGV) in gas engines is well-known and has demonstrated their ability to improve compressor surge margin at low flow rates. But, the use of swirl-vanes is not too common in large diesel engine turbo-chargers where compressor housing inlet has some form of Casing-Treatment (CT). Recently, Ford engineers tested swirl-vanes in a diesel engine turbocharger where the compressor inlet had a ported shroud casing-treatment and the experimental data showed no improvement in surge margin. Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) analyses were performed to investigate reasons why the surge margin did not improve after introducing swirl-vanes at the compressor inlet. The CFD results showed strong interactions between swirling flow at the compressor inlet and flow stream coming out of the compressor inlet casing-treatment. This special case shows that CFD is instrumental to engineer the compressor inlet flow geometry to achieve an ideal local compressor inlet flow incidence angle for the desired surge performance.
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DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2016-01-1022
Citation
Karim, A., Morelli, A., Miazgowicz, K., Lizotte, B., et al., "Effectiveness of Swirl-Vanes Upstream of Casing-Treatment at the Compressor Inlet in Automotive Turbochargers," SAE 2016 World Congress and Exhibition, Detroit, Michigan, United States, April 12, 2016, https://doi.org/10.4271/2016-01-1022.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
4/5/2016
Product Code
2016-01-1022
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English