Subsea pumps and compressors must withstand multi-phase flows whose gas volume fraction (GVF) or liquid volume fraction (LVF) varies over a wide range. Gas or liquid content as a dispersed phase in the primary stream affects the leakage, drag torque, and dynamic forced performance of secondary flow components, namely seals, thus affecting the process efficiency and mechanical reliability of pumping/compressing systems, in particular during transient events with sudden changes in gas (or liquid) content. This paper, complementing a parallel experimental program, presents a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis to predict the leakage, drag power and dynamic force coefficients of a smooth surface, uniform clearance annular seal supplied with an air in oil mixture whose inlet GVF varies discretely from 0.0 to 0.9, i.e., from a pure liquid stream to a nearly all gas content mixture. The test seal has uniform radial clearance Cr = 0.203 mm, diameter D = 127 mm, and length L = 0.36 D. The tests were conducted with an inlet pressure/exit pressure ratio equal to 2.5 and a rotor surface speed of 23.3 m/s (3.5 krpm), similar to conditions in a pump neck wear ring seal. The CFD two-phase flow model, first to be anchored to test data, uses an Euler-Euler formulation and delivers information on the precise evolution of the GVF and the gas and liquid streams’ velocity fields. Recreating the test data, the CFD seal mass leakage and drag power decrease steadily as the GVF increases. A multiple-frequency shaft whirl orbit method aids in the calculation of seal reaction force components, and from which dynamic force coefficients, frequency dependent, follow. For operation with a pure liquid, the CFD results and test data produce a constant cross-coupled stiffness, damping, and added mass coefficients, while also verifying predictive formulas typical of a laminar flow. The injection of air in the oil stream, small or large in gas volume, immediately produces force coefficients that are frequency dependent; in particular the direct dynamic stiffness which hardens with excitation frequency. The effect is most remarkable for small GVFs, as low as 0.2. The seal test direct damping and cross-coupled dynamic stiffness continuously drop with an increase in GVF. CFD predictions, along with results from a bulk-flow model (BFM), reproduce the test force coefficients with great fidelity. Incidentally, early engineering practice points out to air injection as a remedy to cure persistent (self-excited) vibration problems in vertical pumps, submersible and large size hydraulic. Presently, the model predictions, supported by the test data, demonstrate that even a small content of gas in the liquid stream significantly raises the seal direct stiffness, thus displacing the system critical speed away to safety. The sound speed of a gas in liquid mixture is a small fraction of those speeds for either the pure oil or the gas, hence amplifying the fluid compressibility that produces the stiffness hardening. The CFD model and a dedicated test rig, predictions and test data complementing each other, enable engineered seals for extreme applications.
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ASME Turbo Expo 2018: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition
June 11–15, 2018
Oslo, Norway
Conference Sponsors:
- International Gas Turbine Institute
ISBN:
978-0-7918-5114-2
PROCEEDINGS PAPER
On the Leakage, Torque and Dynamic Force Coefficients of an Air in Oil (Wet) Annular Seal: A CFD Analysis Anchored to Test Data
Luis San Andrés,
Luis San Andrés
Texas A&M University, College Station, TX
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Jing Yang,
Jing Yang
Texas A&M University, College Station, TX
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Xueliang Lu
Xueliang Lu
Texas A&M University, College Station, TX
Search for other works by this author on:
Luis San Andrés
Texas A&M University, College Station, TX
Jing Yang
Texas A&M University, College Station, TX
Xueliang Lu
Texas A&M University, College Station, TX
Paper No:
GT2018-77140, V07BT34A046; 13 pages
Published Online:
August 30, 2018
Citation
San Andrés, L, Yang, J, & Lu, X. "On the Leakage, Torque and Dynamic Force Coefficients of an Air in Oil (Wet) Annular Seal: A CFD Analysis Anchored to Test Data." Proceedings of the ASME Turbo Expo 2018: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition. Volume 7B: Structures and Dynamics. Oslo, Norway. June 11–15, 2018. V07BT34A046. ASME. https://doi.org/10.1115/GT2018-77140
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