4.5 Article

Experimental Characterization of an Adaptive Supersonic Micro Turbine for Waste Heat Recovery Applications

Journal

ENERGIES
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/en15010025

Keywords

organic Rankine cycle; thermodynamic evaluation; waste heat recovery; cantilever turbine; supersonic turbine; adaptive turbine

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This paper introduces an adaptive supersonic micro turbine for waste heat recovery systems, which can adjust its swallowing capacity to accommodate the fluctuation of mass flow rate and maintain a constant upper cycle pressure. Through experimental tests and comparison analysis using a digital twin model, the off-design performance of the turbine is studied, and the impact of the improved pressure ratio on the entire ORC energy conversion chain is analyzed.
Micro turbines (<100 kW(el)) are commercially used as expansion machines in waste heat recovery (WHR) systems such as organic Rankine cycles (ORCs). These highly loaded turbines are generally designed for a specific parameter set, and their isentropic expansion efficiency significantly deteriorates when the mass flow rate of the WHR system deviates from the design point. However, in numerous industry processes that are potentially interesting for the implementation of a WHR process, the temperature, mass flow rate or both can fluctuate significantly, resulting in fluctuations in the WHR system as well. In such circumstances, the inlet pressure of the ORC turbine, and therefore the reversible cycle efficiency must be significantly reduced during these fluctuations. In this context, the authors developed an adaptive supersonic micro turbine for WHR applications. The variable geometry of the turbine nozzles enables an adjustment of the swallowing capacity in respect of the available mass flow rate in order to keep the upper cycle pressure constant. In this paper, an experimental test series of a WHR ORC test rig equipped with the developed adaptive supersonic micro turbine is analysed. The adaptive turbine is characterized concerning its off-design performance and the results are compared to a reference turbine with fixed geometry. To create a fair data basis for this comparison, a digital twin of the plant based on experimental data was built. In addition to the characterization of the turbine itself, the influence of the improved pressure ratio on the energy conversion chain of the entire ORC is analysed.

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