Feasibility Study of an Oil-Free Turbocharger Supported on Gas Foil Bearings Via On-Road Tests of a Two-Liter Class Diesel Vehicle

Authors
Lee, Yong-BokKwon, Suk BumKim, Tae HoSim, Kyuho
Issue Date
2013-05
Publisher
ASME
Citation
JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING FOR GAS TURBINES AND POWER-TRANSACTIONS OF THE ASME, v.135, no.5
Abstract
This paper presents the feasibility study of an oil-free turbocharger (TC) supported on gas foil bearings (GFBs) via on-road tests of a 2-liter class diesel vehicle. The oil-free TC is constructed using a hollow rotor with a radial turbine at one end and a compressor impeller at the other end, a center housing with journal and thrust GFBs, and turbine and compressor casings. The oil-free TC reuses parts of a commercial variable geometry turbocharger, except for the rotor-bearing system. In a test rig driven by a diesel vehicle engine (EG), the rotordynamic performance of the oil-free TC is evaluated up to the rotor speed of 130 krpm, which is measured at the compressor end. The journal GFBs are modified to enhance the rotordynamic performance by inserting three metal shims between the bump-strip layers and bearing housing. The rotordynamic performance is also measured during on-road tests by replacing the original TC of the test diesel vehicle with the constructed oil-free TC. The journal GFBs have a relatively large bearing clearance and no metal shims to generate subsynchronous motions at low TC and EG speeds. During normal vehicle driving, the TC rotor motions show steady rotordynamic operations. The oil-free TC rotates at 25 krpm similar to 50 krpm while the vehicle runs at 20 km/h similar to 30 km/h on the road. Subsynchronous rotor motions initiate with a frequency of similar to 100 Hz at the TC speed of similar to 37 krpm. As expected, the TC rotor motion also shows multiple EG-induced harmonics. Upon external shocks, produced by driving the vehicle on road-bumps, the subsynchronous motions are only excited when the rotor rotates above the initiation speed of subsynchronous motion. The excitation is nondestructive because the vehicle suspension absorbs most of the external shock. Incidentally, the external shocks appear to have no influence on the synchronous motion and engine-induced harmonics of the TC rotor.
Keywords
JOURNAL BEARING; JOURNAL BEARING; gas foil bearing; mechanical preload; oil-free turbocharger; rotordynamic performance
ISSN
0742-4795
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/128125
DOI
10.1115/1.4007883
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2013
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