In multiple stage centrifugal pumps, balance pistons, often comprising a grooved annular seal, equilibrate the full pressure rise across the pump. Grooves in the stator break the evolution of fluid swirl and increase mechanical energy dissipation; hence, a grooved seal offers a lesser leakage and lower cross-coupled stiffness than a similar size uniform clearance seal. To date, bulk-flow modelbulk-flow models (BFMs) expediently predict leakage and rotor dynamic force coefficients of grooved seals; however, they lack accuracy for any other geometry besides rectangular. Note that scalloped and triangular (serrated) groove seals are not uncommon. In these cases, computational fluid dynamics (CFD) models seals of complex shape to produce leakage and force coefficients. Alas, CFD is not yet ready for routine engineer practice. Hence, an intermediate procedure presently takes an accurate two-dimensional (2D) CFD model of a smaller flow region, namely a single groove and adjacent land, to produce stator and rotor surface wall friction factors, expressed as functions of the Reynolds numbers, for integration into an existing BFM and ready prediction of seal leakage and force coefficients. The selected groove-land section is well within the seal length and far away from the effects of the inlet condition. The analysis takes three water lubricated seals with distinct groove shapes: rectangular, scalloped, and triangular. Each seal, with length/diameter L/D = 0.4, has 44 grooves of shallow depth dg ∼ clearance Cr and operates at a rotor speed equal to 5,588 rpm (78 m/s surface speed) and with a pressure drop of 14.9 MPa. The method validity is asserted when 2D (single groove-land) and three-dimensional (3D) (whole seal) predictions for pressure and velocity fields are compared against each other. The CFD predictions, 2D and 3D, show that the triangular groove seal has the largest leakage, 41% greater than the rectangular groove seal does, albeit producing the smallest cross-coupled stiffnesses and whirl frequency ratio (WFR). On the other hand, the triangular groove seal has the largest direct stiffness and damping coefficients. The scalloped groove seal shows similar rotordynamic force coefficients as the rectangular groove seal but leaks 13% more. For the three seal groove types, the modified BFM predicts leakage that is less than 6% away from that delivered by CFD, whereas the seal stiffnesses (both direct and cross-coupled) differ by 13%, the direct damping coefficients by 18%, and the added mass coefficients are within 30%. The procedure introduced extends the applicability of a BFM to predict the dynamic performance of grooved seals with distinctive shapes.
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October 2019
Research-Article
Pump Grooved Seals: A Computational Fluid Dynamics Approach to Improve Bulk-Flow Model Predictions
Luis San Andrés
Luis San Andrés
Fellow ASME Mechanical Engineering Department,
Texas A&M University,
College Station, TX 77843
e-mail: lsanandres@tamu.edu
Texas A&M University,
College Station, TX 77843
e-mail: lsanandres@tamu.edu
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Tingcheng Wu
Luis San Andrés
Fellow ASME Mechanical Engineering Department,
Texas A&M University,
College Station, TX 77843
e-mail: lsanandres@tamu.edu
Texas A&M University,
College Station, TX 77843
e-mail: lsanandres@tamu.edu
1Corresponding author.
Manuscript received June 25, 2019; final manuscript received June 25, 2019; published online July 31, 2019. Editor: Jerzy T. Sawicki.
J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power. Oct 2019, 141(10): 101005 (10 pages)
Published Online: July 31, 2019
Article history
Revised:
June 25, 2019
Received:
June 25, 2019
Citation
Wu, T., and San Andrés, L. (July 31, 2019). "Pump Grooved Seals: A Computational Fluid Dynamics Approach to Improve Bulk-Flow Model Predictions." ASME. J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power. October 2019; 141(10): 101005. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4044283
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