Abstract

Lightweight components are essential for the future of the energy and aerospace fields. This paper presents an innovative radial turbine design that utilizes a cavity structure on the rotor for solar hybrid microturbines. The performance of the cavity-structured radial turbine is studied using mean-line models, computational fluid dynamics (CFD), and finite element analysis (FEA) simulations. The radial turbine is compared using air and supercritical carbon dioxide (sCO2) as the working fluid. The mean-line models based on enthalpy losses from recent literature are validated using commercial code Rital and CFD results. The impact of the isentropic velocity ratio (νs) and absolute flow angle at the rotor inlet (α1) on the optimum design for the rotor radial turbine is also demonstrated. A comparative loss enthalpy breakdown on the rotor is examined, such as incidence loss, passage loss, trailing edge loss, clearance loss, exit loss, and windage loss. The results show that the recent mean-line models based on enthalpy losses can accurately estimate the stage efficiency for both air and sCO2 turbines. By comparing the simulation results obtained from 3D-CFD and mean-line models, the efficiency prediction deviation is within an acceptable range of tolerance for both turbines when comparing the results obtained from 3D-CFD and mean-line models. The FE analysis reveals that the maximum stress decreased significantly for the air and sCO2 turbine after the rotor blade was added using the cavity structure inside. The maximum stress value on the rotor with the cavity structure design is still below the yield strength of the material limits. Furthermore, after the variations of the cavity structure design were added to the rotor blade of both turbines, the results were promising when the dangerous resonance at below 4EO (Engine Order) was minimized. The results of this study provide a promising direction for the development of high-efficiency and lightweight turbines in the energy and aerospace fields.

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