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October 18, 2011, 11:47 |
Radian fan
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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 51
Rep Power: 14 |
Hi,
I´m trying to simulate the performance of radial fan to match supplier values. I´m using Star-CCM+. Simulation conditions are as follows: Numerical model MRF Segregated Turbulent kW SST All y wall treatment Flow conditions inlet - stagnation inlet (0 Pa total pressure) outlet - mass flow (-1.092 kg/s) blades rotation rate - 2423 rpm Initial conditions Pressure (0 Pa) TI (.03) Length scale (.004) Tubulent velocity scale (0 m/s)) Velocity (0 m/s) Mesh 785600cells 11 prism layers 4mm of prism layer thickness I´m trying to compare the pressure rise for different flow rates for fixed rotation speed but the results don't correlates. I assumed that the pressure rise is the difference between the pressure at interface of impeller outlet (green) and pressure at interface of impeller inlet (brown). I very much appreciate your help! Thanks in advance, Ivan |
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October 20, 2011, 08:31 |
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#2 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Germany
Posts: 636
Rep Power: 21 |
How big is the difference?
Is your mesh fine enough to get a mesh independent solution (I assume, it's not)? Does your mesh look well? Are your interfaces and outlet faces far enough from your fan for the flow to settle down again? And the most important: Have you ever heard, a MRF simulation is a big simplification of your fan and will never give exactly the same numbers like a (more precise) transient simulation? Just take a few seconds and think about the difference - MRF doesn't consider the history of the flow as it is a steady simulation. First of all I would check the mesh, as this low numbers of cells with 11 prism layers usually means, the mesh is very coarse. And when the mesh is fine even with this low cell count, I would run a transient simulation, but don't forget to check the position where you set up the pressure reports. |
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October 20, 2011, 10:04 |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 51
Rep Power: 14 |
Hi abdul
Thak you very much for your support! The difference is enormous (above 30% in pressure rise). When I increase the flow rate until (4750 m3/h) the difference could reach 70%. I runned this simultaion in transient regime and the difference still there. I forgot to share the pictures. Hereby follows The pressure measurements were done in brown and green areas. Do you agree with this approximation? The inlet pipe length is 0.6m a outlet pipe have 1.0m of length. The boundary values looks fine for you? Thanks in advance! |
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October 20, 2011, 21:55 |
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#4 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Germany
Posts: 636
Rep Power: 21 |
In my opinion, the faces where the pressure measurement is done is too close to the rotor.
Also the mesh is somewhat strange. I don't understand how you got this low cell count with that much prism layers but having a too coarse mesh. Also in the last picture one can see, it's too fine to the outlet and too coarse just before the extrusion. Also in the inlet pipe, the cells could be coarser to save some cells which can be invested somewhere else. The cell size growths very quick, right near the rotor. That are some things you could improve. When running in transient, did you switch to rigid body motion or did you just run that MRF case transient? Did you choose an appropriate time step? |
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October 21, 2011, 04:53 |
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 51
Rep Power: 14 |
In trasient simulation I tried with RBM numerical model with correct time step.
The pressure measurements were done in surfaces reffered in way to match the definition of turbomachinery (energyzing the fluid from inlet to outlet). I have to agree that the mesh is not good enough (low cell counts) but I´m trying to run in cluster. Once the reference pressure (pr) is 1.013e5, do you agree that the total pressure speficfied (stagnation inlet boundary type) should be zero? or need i to specify the dynamic pressure, i mean pt=ps+pd pt - total pressure ps - static pressure pd - dynamic pressure Assuming that ps=pr, hence pt=pd Have you ever run simulations like that and the results obtained match in accordance with supplier specifications? Thanks in advance, Ivan |
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October 22, 2011, 22:46 |
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#6 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Germany
Posts: 636
Rep Power: 21 |
I never had to run a turbomachinery case, especially no fan. I usually did the opposite and run wind turbines. Somehow related, but requirements are different.
But I would say, check your pressure definitions. Pressure probes are usually measuring the static pressure, so your inlet definition should also reflect this. Energizing the flow means, you increase the total pressure, not necessarily the static pressure. Did you consider this in your reports? Next point: Ever heard about a mesh independent solution? If there's a mesh independent solution, there also has to be a mesh dependent solution. That means, your solution depends on the mesh resolution and changes when changing the mesh. So give it a try and refine your mesh and look what happens. Cheers PS: By the way, what is "the right" time step? How did you obtain the certainty it's "the right" time step? |
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