59961 - Open Source Axial Compressor Mean Line Design Tool for Supercritical Carbon Dioxide
An open-source axial compressor design code has been developed for applications using Supercritical CO2 (S-CO2). Real property tables have been generated using REFPROP (Reference Fluid Thermodynamic and Transport Properties Database) linked to MATLAB. Tables have been created and are provided for S-CO2, and could be created for any fluid in the database. At this time, only single phase fluid has been demonstrated. These tables are imported into the meanline code and are interpolated with cubic splines to calculate real properties based on two given properties.
The meanline code is written in Python to allow portablity and convenient plotting capability. The inputs are simple ascii files with the overall compressor details, stage data, and an optional IGV file. The code uses the axial flow equations of continuity, energy and angular momentum in addition to velocity triangles to calculate state properties at every station. A free vortex assumption at each between-blade row station is used to calculate information at hub, pitch and tip. The input for each stage includes the Mach number and absolute flow angle at the rotor leading edge in addition to the total enthalpy rise across each rotor. Loss coefficients, solidity, aspect ratio and axial spacing are also specified for each blade row along with blockage to account for wakes and boundary layers and bleed. The hub radius is also specified. These parameters allow for a complete set of realistic inputs for the design of axial compressors using S-CO2 as the working fluid. The output can be used to assess the design and is used as the start of higher fidelity design calculations.
Open Source Axial Compressor Mean Line Design Tool for Supercritical Carbon Dioxide
Paper Type
Technical Paper Publication
Description
Session: 33-01 Compressors
Paper Number: 59961
Start Time: June 10th, 2021, 09:45 AM
Presenting Author: Mark Turner
Authors: Kaden Wells University of Cincinnati
Mark Turner University of Cincinnati