Abstract

Numerical and experimental investigations were conducted in a transonic centrifugal compressor stage composed of a backswept splittered unshrouded impeller and a vaned diffuser. The present article focuses on the results obtained within the impeller, at an operating condition close to the surge of the compressor. The experimental results were obtained from a laser Doppler anemometry investigation. Unsteady numerical simulations of the compressor stage were performed using a three-dimensional Reynolds-averaged Navier—Stokes code with a phase-lagged technique, at both peak efficiency and close to surge operating conditions. A good agreement between the experiments and simulations were obtained, which justifies the use of the computational fluid dynamics results for the comparison of the flow field at both operating conditions (peak efficiency and near surge). Even if the change in flow field within the impeller from peak efficiency to near surge looked to be gradual, an overall rotation of the whole flow in the blade passages led to a non-homogeneous flow at the impeller exit in terms of angle and velocity level. Therefore, the vaned diffuser has to tolerate upstream flows, which are all the more distorted as the operating point moves towards surge.

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