Abstract

Numerical and experimental investigations were conducted in a transonic centrifugal compressor stage composed of a backswept splittered unshrouded impeller and a vaned diffuser. Unsteady three-dimensional simulations were performed with the code elsA that solves the turbulent-averaged Navier–Stokes equations, at three operating points: choked flow, peak efficiency, and near surge. Numerical results were validated with experimental data coming from laser Doppler anemometry and unsteady pressure measurements. This article focuses on the change in flow structures when the operating point moves from choke to surge. The main changes in the impeller consist in an enlargement of the wake (of the jet-wake flow structure) and an increase in the exit time-averaged flow angle. Consequently, in the diffuser passage, the main flow trajectory moves towards the vane pressure side, and the boundary layer separation transfers from pressure side to suction side. The interaction between the vane bow shock wave and the impeller blade leads to pressure waves α+, which propagate in the diffuser passage. These pressure waves generate alternately opposite and favourable pressure gradients, which drive the boundary layers to periodic separation. From choke to surge, the intensity of the pressure waves α+ increases. The interaction also leads to subsonic pockets Г, which are torn out from the vane-leading edge bow shock and swept along the vane suction side. The induced change in the shock shape and location combined with the severe hub/suction side corner separation are thought to be at the origin of the surge inception.

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