Solid particle ingestion is one of the principal degradation mechanisms in the
compressor section of heavy-duty gas turbines. Usually, foulants in the ppm range
not captured by the air filtration system cause deposits on blading and result in a
severe performance drop of the compressor. It is of great interest to the manufacturer
and industry to determine which areas of the compressor airfoils are affected by
these contaminants as a function of the location of the power unit. The aim of this
work is the estimation of the actual deposits on the blade surface in terms of location
and quantity.
Particle trajectory simulations use a stochastic Lagrangian tracking method which
solves the equations of motion separately from the continuous phase. Then, a
transonic rotor and subsonic rotor are considered as a case study for the numerical
investigation. The compressor rotor numerical model and the discrete phase
treatment have been validated against the experimental and numerical data available
in literature.
The size of the particles, their concentrations and the filtration efficiency are
specified in order to perform a realistic quantitative analysis of the fouling
phenomena in an axial compressor. This study combines the impact/adhesion
characteristic of the particles obtained through a Computational Fluid Dynamics
(CFD) numerical simulation and the real size distribution of the contaminants in the
air swallowed by the compressor.
The kinematic characteristics (velocity and angle) of the impact of micrometric and
sub-micrometric particles with the blade surface of an axial transonic and subsonic
rotor are shown. The blade zones affected by particle impact are extensively
analyzed. This work has the goal of combining the kinematic characteristics of
particle impact on the blade with fouling phenomenon through the use of a quantity
called ‘sticking probability’ adopted from literature.
The analysis shows that particular fluid-dynamic phenomena such as separation,
shock waves and tip leakage vortex strongly influence pattern deposition. The
combination of the smaller particles (0.15 ― 0.25) μm and the larger ones
(1.00 ― 1.50) μm determines the highest amounts of deposits on the leading edge of
the compressor airfoil. The blade zones affected by deposits are clearly reported by
using easy-to-use contaminant maps realized on the blade surface in terms of
contaminant mass per unit of time.
From these analyses, some guidelines for proper installation and management of
the power plant (in terms of filtration systems and washing strategies) can be drawn