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conference paper

Foil bearing design guidelines for improved stability

Schiffmann, Jürg Alexander
•
Spakovszky, Z. S.
2012
Proceedings of the ASME 2012 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences & Computers and Information in Engineering Conferences IDETC/CIE 2012
International Design Engineering Technical Conferences & Computers and Information in Engineering Conferences IDETC/CIE 2012

Experimental evidence in the literature suggests that foil bearing supported rotors can suffer from sub-synchronous vibration. While dry-friction between top foil and bump foil is thought to provide structural damping, sub-synchronous vibration is still an unresolved issue and has been recently attributed to the non-linearity of the bump-foil support stiffness. A non-linear rotordynamic model corroborates this hypothesis, however a forcing is required to excite the system. The current paper aims to shed new light onto this matter and discusses the impact of various design variables on stable foil bearing supported rotor operation. It is shown that, while a time domain integration of the equations of motion of the rotor coupled with the Reynolds equation for the fluid film is necessary to quantify the evolution of the rotor orbit, the underlying mechanism and the onset speed of instability can be predicted by coupling a reduced order foil bearing model with a rigid-body, linear rotordynamic model. Using this model it is shown that the excitation source inducing subsynchronous vibration is a classical aerodynamic instability resulting from bearing fluid film forces. A sensitivity analysis suggests that structural damping has limited effect on stability. It is shown that the location of the axial feed line of the top foil significantly influences the bearing load capacity and stability. The analysis further indicates that the static fluid film pressure distribution governs rotordynamic stability. Therefore selective shimming is introduced to tailor the unperturbed pressure distribution for improved stability. The required pattern is found via multi-objective optimization using the foil bearing supported rotor model. A critical mass parameter is introduced as a measure for stability, and a criterion for whirl instability onset is proposed. It is shown that with an optimally shimmed foil bearing, the critical mass parameter can be improved by more than two orders of magnitude. The optimum shim patterns are summarized for a variety of foil bearing geometries with different L/D ratios and different degrees of foil compliance in a first attempt to establish more general guidelines for stable foil bearing design. At low compressibility (Λ < 2) the optimum shim patterns vary little with bearing geometry, thus a generalized shim pattern is proposed for low compressibility numbers.

  • Details
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Type
conference paper
DOI
10.1115/DETC2012-70899
Author(s)
Schiffmann, Jürg Alexander
Spakovszky, Z. S.
Date Issued

2012

Published in
Proceedings of the ASME 2012 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences & Computers and Information in Engineering Conferences IDETC/CIE 2012
Start page

701

End page

713

Subjects

Foil bearings

•

Aerodynamic lubrication

•

Selective shimming

•

Rotordynamics

•

Optimization

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
IGM  
Event nameEvent placeEvent date
International Design Engineering Technical Conferences & Computers and Information in Engineering Conferences IDETC/CIE 2012

Chicago, IL, USA

August 12-15, 2012

Available on Infoscience
February 21, 2013
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/89025
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