Design and off-design analysis of a Tesla Turbine utilizing CO2 as working fluid

The Tesla turbine is a bladeless expander; which principle of operation is based on the conversion of the viscous forces, developed by the flow while expanding through the rotor, in mechanical energy. It is especially suitable for small/micro size distributed energy systems (kW scale), mainly due to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fiaschi Daniele, Talluri Lorenzo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2019-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2019/39/e3sconf_supehr18_03008.pdf
id doaj-e949391fbdb647748e4eecfba21daa5c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e949391fbdb647748e4eecfba21daa5c2021-03-02T10:19:44ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422019-01-011130300810.1051/e3sconf/201911303008e3sconf_supehr18_03008Design and off-design analysis of a Tesla Turbine utilizing CO2 as working fluidFiaschi Daniele0Talluri Lorenzo1Department of Industrial Engineering, Università degli Studi di FirenzeDepartment of Industrial Engineering, Università degli Studi di FirenzeThe Tesla turbine is a bladeless expander; which principle of operation is based on the conversion of the viscous forces, developed by the flow while expanding through the rotor, in mechanical energy. It is especially suitable for small/micro size distributed energy systems (kW scale), mainly due to its very low cost, which results from the simple structure of the machine. The Tesla turbine works well at relatively moderate expansion ratios. Therefore, it is fit for CO2 power cycles applications that are characterised by small expansion ratio, despite the high pressure involved. In this work, the design and off-design analysis of a Tesla turbine for small/micro power application utilizing CO2 cycles is proposed. The optimized design was targeted for an inlet temperature of 150 °C and an inlet pressure of 220 bar. The final optimized geometry of the expander was defined, achieving a 23.4 W per channel power output with a 63% isentropic efficiency, when working with a 10.1 bar pressure drop at 2000 rpm. Furthermore, the turbine placement on the Baljè diagram was performed in order to understand the direct competitors of this machine. Finally, starting from the design configuration, the maps of efficiency at variable load and flow coefficients and that of reduced mass flowrate at variable pressure ratio were realized. Through the merging of these curves, the off-design maps of the Tesla turbine were obtained, highlighting a very limited sensitivity of the efficiency to variable working conditions, if rotational speed is adequately adjusted.https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2019/39/e3sconf_supehr18_03008.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fiaschi Daniele
Talluri Lorenzo
spellingShingle Fiaschi Daniele
Talluri Lorenzo
Design and off-design analysis of a Tesla Turbine utilizing CO2 as working fluid
E3S Web of Conferences
author_facet Fiaschi Daniele
Talluri Lorenzo
author_sort Fiaschi Daniele
title Design and off-design analysis of a Tesla Turbine utilizing CO2 as working fluid
title_short Design and off-design analysis of a Tesla Turbine utilizing CO2 as working fluid
title_full Design and off-design analysis of a Tesla Turbine utilizing CO2 as working fluid
title_fullStr Design and off-design analysis of a Tesla Turbine utilizing CO2 as working fluid
title_full_unstemmed Design and off-design analysis of a Tesla Turbine utilizing CO2 as working fluid
title_sort design and off-design analysis of a tesla turbine utilizing co2 as working fluid
publisher EDP Sciences
series E3S Web of Conferences
issn 2267-1242
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The Tesla turbine is a bladeless expander; which principle of operation is based on the conversion of the viscous forces, developed by the flow while expanding through the rotor, in mechanical energy. It is especially suitable for small/micro size distributed energy systems (kW scale), mainly due to its very low cost, which results from the simple structure of the machine. The Tesla turbine works well at relatively moderate expansion ratios. Therefore, it is fit for CO2 power cycles applications that are characterised by small expansion ratio, despite the high pressure involved. In this work, the design and off-design analysis of a Tesla turbine for small/micro power application utilizing CO2 cycles is proposed. The optimized design was targeted for an inlet temperature of 150 °C and an inlet pressure of 220 bar. The final optimized geometry of the expander was defined, achieving a 23.4 W per channel power output with a 63% isentropic efficiency, when working with a 10.1 bar pressure drop at 2000 rpm. Furthermore, the turbine placement on the Baljè diagram was performed in order to understand the direct competitors of this machine. Finally, starting from the design configuration, the maps of efficiency at variable load and flow coefficients and that of reduced mass flowrate at variable pressure ratio were realized. Through the merging of these curves, the off-design maps of the Tesla turbine were obtained, highlighting a very limited sensitivity of the efficiency to variable working conditions, if rotational speed is adequately adjusted.
url https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2019/39/e3sconf_supehr18_03008.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT fiaschidaniele designandoffdesignanalysisofateslaturbineutilizingco2asworkingfluid
AT tallurilorenzo designandoffdesignanalysisofateslaturbineutilizingco2asworkingfluid
_version_ 1724237107215466496