Detailed Information

Cited 0 time in webofscience Cited 0 time in scopus
Metadata Downloads

ON THE NONLINEAR DYNAMICS OF ROTOR-FOIL BEARING SYSTEMS: EFFECTS OF SHAFT ACCELERATION, MASS IMBALANCE AND BEARING MECHANICAL ENERGY DISSIPATION

Authors
San Andres, LuisRyu, Keun
Issue Date
May-2012
Publisher
AMER SOC MECHANICAL ENGINEERS
Citation
Proceedings of the ASME 2011 Turbo Expo: Turbine Technical Conference and Exposition, v.6, pp 343 - 353
Pages
11
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Proceedings of the ASME 2011 Turbo Expo: Turbine Technical Conference and Exposition
Volume
6
Start Page
343
End Page
353
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/36311
DOI
10.1115/GT2011-45763
Abstract
Gas foil bearing (GFB) technology has reached great maturity as per engineered design and construction and its system integration into rotating machinery. Empirical research has gone beyond showing a few instances of acceptable mechanical performance, to demonstrate GFB multiple-cycle repeatable performance in spite of persistent large amplitude sub synchronous whirl motions. A GFB is a forgiving mechanical element whose engineered resilient underspring structure contains and ameliorates large rotor excursions. Analyses, however, fail to distinguish the hardening stiffiress from the FB underspring structure, which under conditions of large force excitations due to imbalance, produces a complex rotordynamic behavior, rich in sub harmonic motions when operating at super critical speeds. This paper extends an earlier analysis of a rigid rotor-GFB system that dispenses with the gas film component to predict the effect of shaft rotation acceleration/deceleration on rotor amplitudes of motion and whirl frequency content. For operation above the system critical speed and as the rotor accelerates, large amplitude whirl motions appear with a main subsynchronous frequency tracking rotor speed, first at 50% speed and later bifurcating into at 33% whirl frequency. Rotor imbalance awakens and exacerbates the system nonlinear response. Slow rotor accelerations result in responses with more abundant subsynchronous whirl patterns, increased amplitudes of whirl, and accompanied by a pronounced mechanical hysteresis when the rotor decelerates. Large rotor imbalances produce both jump phenomenon and a stronger hysteresis during slow acceleration and deceleration cases. Material damping (dry friction) in the FB aids to reduce and delay the nonlinear response, eventually eliminating the multiple frequency behavior. The results bring to attention rotordynamic issues during start up and shut down events that can result from an inadequate FB technology or an unacceptable rotor imbalance grade condition.
Files in This Item
Go to Link
Appears in
Collections
COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING SCIENCES > DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING > 1. Journal Articles

qrcode

Items in ScholarWorks are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Related Researcher

Researcher Ryu, Keun photo

Ryu, Keun
ERICA 공학대학 (DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING)
Read more

Altmetrics

Total Views & Downloads

BROWSE