Subsynchronous Vibration Patterns Under Reduced Oil Supply Flow Rates

Author:

Nichols Bradley R.1,Fittro Roger L.2,Goyne Christopher P.2

Affiliation:

1. Rotating Machinery and Controls Laboratory, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22904 e-mails: ;

2. Rotating Machinery and Controls Laboratory, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22904 e-mail:

Abstract

Reduced oil supply flow rates in fluid film bearings can cause cavitation, or lack of a fully developed hydrodynamic film layer, at the leading edge of the bearing pads. Reduced oil flow has the well-documented effects of higher bearing operating temperatures and decreased power losses; however, little experimental data of its effects on system stability and performance can be found in the literature. This study looks at overall system performance through observed subsynchronous vibration (SSV) patterns of a test rig operating under reduced oil supply flow rates. The test rig was designed to be dynamically similar to a high-speed industrial compressor. It consists of a flexible rotor supported by two tilting pad bearings in vintage, flooded bearing housings. Tests were conducted over a number of supercritical operating speeds and bearing loads, while systematically reducing the oil supply flow rates provided to the bearings. A low amplitude, broadband SSV pattern was observed in the frequency domain. During supercritical operation, a distinctive subsynchronous peak emerged from the broadband pattern at approximately half of the running speed and at the first bending mode of the shaft. Under lightly loaded conditions, the amplitude of the subsynchronous peak increased dramatically with decreasing oil supply flow rate and increasing operating speed. Under an increased load condition, the subsynchronous peak was largely attenuated. A discussion on the possible sources of this SSV including self-excited instability and pad flutter forced vibration is provided with supporting evidence from thermoelastohydrodynamic (TEHD) bearing modeling results.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Aerospace Engineering,Fuel Technology,Nuclear Energy and Engineering

Reference12 articles.

1. Shaft Whipping Due to Oil Action in Journal Bearings;Gen. Electr. Rev.,1925

2. Self-Excited Vibration of Statically Unloaded Pads in Tilting-Pad Bearings;ASME J. Lubr. Technol.,1983

3. DeCamillo, S. M., He, M., and Cloud, C. H., 2008, “Journal Bearing Vibration and SSV Hash,” 37th Turbomachinery Symposium, Houston, TX, Sept. 8–11, pp. 11–22.https://www.kingsbury.com/pdf/journal-bearing-vibration-and-ssv-hash.pdf

4. Nicholas, J. C., 2003, “Tilting Pad Journal Bearings With Spray-Bar Blockers and By-Pass Cooling for High Speed, High Load Applications,” 32nd Turbomachinery Symposium, Houston, TX, Sept. 8–11, pp. 27–38.https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/51aa/88a8b7be99cb74ca47397226322990f43b5e.pdf

5. Brockwell, K., Dmochowski, W., and DeCamillo, S., 1994, “Analysis and Testing of LEG Tilting Pad Journal Bearing-A New Design for Increasing Load Capacity, Reducing Operating Temperatures and Conserving Energy,” 23rd Turbomachinery Symposium, Dallas, TX, Sept. 13–15, pp. 43–56.http://oaktrust.library.tamu.edu/handle/1969.1/163501

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