Abstract

Determining the natural frequencies and mode shapes of rotating turbomachinery components from both rotating and stationary reference frames is of paramount importance to avoid resonance problems that could affect the normal operation of the machine, or even cause critical damages in these components. Due to their similarity to real engineering cases, this topic has been experimentally analyzed in the past for disk-shaft assemblies and rotor disk-blades assemblies (bladed-disk or blisk). The same topic is less analyzed for disk-blades-disk assemblies, although such configurations are widely used in centrifugal closed impellers of compressors, hydraulic pumps, pump-turbines, and runners of high head Francis turbines. In this paper, experimental measurements, varying the rotating speed of a disk-blade-disk assembly and exciting the first natural frequencies of the rotating frame, have been performed. The rotating structure is excited and measured by means of PZT patches from the rotating frame and with a Laser Doppler Vibrometer (LDV). In order to interpret the experimental results obtained from the stationary frame, a method to decompose the diametrical mode shapes of the structure in simple diametrical components (which define the diametrical mode shapes of a simple disk) has been proposed. It is concluded that the resonant frequencies detected with a stationary sensor correspond to the ones predicted with the decomposition method. Finally, a means to obtain equivalent results with numerical simulation methods is shown.

Highlights

  • Rotating-disk-like structures are a common element in rotating machines and turbomachinery components. These structures are excited by different kinds of dynamic loads and a resonance can occur if the excited frequency coincides with one of the natural frequencies of the structure and the excitation shape matches the mode shape of the structure [1,2]

  • In this kind of rotating structure, it is of paramount importance to predict and determine the natural frequencies and mode shapes of both rotating and stationary frames

  • The main effect of a possible mistuning is to separate the doublets in frequency [20], in many real cases, this separation is less than 1% with respect to the natural frequency value [6]

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Summary

Introduction

Rotating-disk-like structures are a common element in rotating machines (such as circular saws, wafer cutting machines, disk brakes, grinding wheels) and turbomachinery components (blisks, centrifugal fans, gas turbines, hydraulic turbines). These structures are excited by different kinds of dynamic loads and a resonance can occur if the excited frequency coincides with one of the natural frequencies of the structure and the excitation shape matches the mode shape of the structure [1,2]. Figure a structure that can that be considered as an assembly assembly disk-blades-disk shown.

Examples
Simple Disk Case
Disk-Blades-Disk Structures
Diametrical mode of a disk-like real impeller
Experimental Test
Test Setup
12. Response
Tests with thethat
Findings
14. Excitation
Full Text
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