The bearing system of a turbocharger has to keep the rotor in the specified position and thus has to withstand the rotor forces that result from turbocharger operation. Hence, its components need to be designed in consideration of the bearing loads that have to be expected. The applied bearing system design also has significant influence on the overall efficiency of the turbocharger and impacts the performance of the combustion engine. It has to ideally fulfill the trade-off between bearing friction and load capacity. For example, the achievable engine’s low end-torque is reduced, if the bearing system produces more friction losses than inherently unavoidable for safe and durable operation because a higher portion of available turbine power needs to be employed to compensate bearing losses instead of providing boost pressure. Moreover, also transient turbocharger rotor speed up can be compromised and hence the response of the turbocharged combustion engine to a load step becomes less performant than it could be. Besides the radial bearings, the thrust bearing is a component that needs certain attention. It can already contribute to approximately 30% of the overall bearing friction, even if no load is applied and this portion further increases under thrust load. It has to withstand the net thrust load of the rotor under all operating conditions resulting from the superimposed aerodynamic forces that the compressor and the turbine wheel produce. A challenge for the determination of the thrust forces appearing on engine is the nonsteady loading under pulsating conditions. The thrust force will alternate with the pulse frequency over an engine cycle, which is caused by both the engine exhaust gas pressure pulses on the turbine stage and—to a smaller amount—the nonsteady compressor operation due to the reciprocating operation of the cylinders. The conducted experimental investigations on the axial rotor motion as well as the thrust force alternations under on-engine conditions employ a specially prepared compressor lock nut in combination with an eddy-current sensor. The second derivative of this signal can be used to estimate the occurring thrust force changes. Moreover, a modified thrust bearing—equipped with strain gauges—was used to cross check the results from position measurement and thrust force modeling. All experimental results are compared with an analytical thrust force model that relies on the simultaneously measured, crank angle resolved pressure signals before and after the compressor and turbine stage. The results give insight into the axial turbocharger rotor oscillations occurring during an engine cycle for several engine operating points. Furthermore, they allow a judgment of the accuracy of thrust force modeling approaches that are based on measured pressures.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
January 2016
Research-Article
Unsteady Thrust Force Loading of a Turbocharger Rotor During Engine Operation
Michael Bargende
Michael Bargende
Institute for Internal Combustion Engines and
Automotive Engineering,
University of Stuttgart,
Stuttgart 70569, Germany
Automotive Engineering,
University of Stuttgart,
Stuttgart 70569, Germany
Search for other works by this author on:
Bernhardt Lüddecke
Philipp Nitschke
Michael Dietrich
Dietmar Filsinger
Michael Bargende
Institute for Internal Combustion Engines and
Automotive Engineering,
University of Stuttgart,
Stuttgart 70569, Germany
Automotive Engineering,
University of Stuttgart,
Stuttgart 70569, Germany
1Corresponding author.
Contributed by the Turbomachinery Committee of ASME for publication in the JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING FOR GAS TURBINES AND POWER. Manuscript received July 14, 2015; final manuscript received July 20, 2015; published online August 18, 2015. Editor: David Wisler.
J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power. Jan 2016, 138(1): 012301 (8 pages)
Published Online: August 18, 2015
Article history
Received:
July 14, 2015
Revised:
July 20, 2015
Citation
Lüddecke, B., Nitschke, P., Dietrich, M., Filsinger, D., and Bargende, M. (August 18, 2015). "Unsteady Thrust Force Loading of a Turbocharger Rotor During Engine Operation." ASME. J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power. January 2016; 138(1): 012301. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4031142
Download citation file:
Get Email Alerts
Cited By
Investigation of Grooved Front Plate for Inlet Swirl Reduction in Brush Seals
J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power
In-Cylinder Imaging and Emissions Measurements of Cold-Start Split Injection Strategies
J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power (August 2025)
Related Articles
Development and Performance Measurement of Oil-Free Turbocharger Supported on Gas Foil Bearings
J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power (March,2012)
Analysis of Thrust Bearing Impact on Friction Losses in Automotive Turbochargers
J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power (August,2015)
Blade Excitation in Pulse-Charged Mixed-Flow Turbocharger Turbines
J. Turbomach (April,2011)
Assessment of Unsteady Pressure Measurement Uncertainty—Part I: Single Sensor Probe
J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power (April,2016)
Related Proceedings Papers
Related Chapters
Outlook
Closed-Cycle Gas Turbines: Operating Experience and Future Potential
Threshold Functions
Closed-Cycle Gas Turbines: Operating Experience and Future Potential
The Special Characteristics of Closed-Cycle Gas Turbines
Closed-Cycle Gas Turbines: Operating Experience and Future Potential