11 Pelton Wheel Characteristics
11 Pelton Wheel Characteristics
11 Pelton Wheel Characteristics
: 19 JUN 08
Page 1
Grading Sheet
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
MIME 3470Thermal Science Laboratory
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Laboratory . 11
PELTON WHEEL
PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS
30
25
CALCULATIONS
COMBINED PLOT
DISCUSSION OF RESULTS
WHAT ARE TWO FEATURES OBSERVED FROM COMBINED PLOT?
WHY IS THE BUCKET EXIT ANGLE SMALL AND NONZERO?
WHAT IS PURPOSE OF CUTOUT AT BUCKET PERIPHERY?
WHAT IS THE MAXIMUM UTILIZATION FACTOR WHEN 2 = 0?
WHY MUST A TURBINE W/ NONZERO HAVE A ROTOR ENCLOSED?
WHY DOES THE RELATIVE VELOCITY REMAIN UNCHANGED AS
THE FLOW PASSES THROUGH A PELTON BUCKET?
CONCLUSIONS
ORIGINAL DATASHEET
TOTAL
COMMENTS
GRADER
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
100
SCORE
TOTAL
Page 2
PELTON WHEEL
PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
EXPERIMENT TIME/DATE:
NAME
NAME
NAME
TIME, DATE
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
turbine: word coined by the French engineer Claude Bourdin in the early
19th century and is derived from the Latin word for whirling or a vortex.
2
engine: a mechanical device producing some form of output from a given
input.
Page 3
M1
M
r1Vu1 2 r2Vu 2
gct
gct
Eutil
1
U1Vu1 U 2Vu 2
gc
(1)
This is one form of the Euler turbine equation or simply the Euler
equation.3
Degree of Reaction
The relative proportions of energy transfer obtained by change
of both static and dynamic pressures are important factors with
respect to classifying turbomachines, as for a given class of
machine this proportion inevitably leads to a particular type of
design with certain inherent characteristics. The parameter used to
describe this relation is the degree of reaction or more simply the
reaction, R, which is defined as the ratio of the energy transfer by
means of or resulting in a change of static pressure in the rotor to
the total energy transfer to (utilized by) the rotor.
1
U12 U 22 Vr2 Vr2
2
1
2gc
R
1
U1Vu1 U 2Vu 2
g
c
(2)
E util
This should not be confused with the Euler flow equation which is simply
the Navier-Stokes equation without viscosity effects.
Page 4
Lester Pelton was born in Vermilion Township (Erie County), Ohio. In the
spring of 1850, Lester and some other youths headed for gold country in
California. Arriving there Pelton left his friends and went to Sacramento
where he peddled fish to miners. After hearing that digging gold in the Sierra
Nevada Mountains was more profitable he moved some ninety miles north to
Camptonville along the Yuba River in 1860. All types of mining were going on
there; placer, hard rock, and hydrologic. Although Lester was not terribly
interested in mining he was an avid reader and he enjoyed watching the mining
efforts. A very introspective person, he was also a skilled tinsmith, carpenter,
and millwright. At the time steam engines powered most of the mining works.
According to a 1939 article by W. F. Durand of Stanford University in
Mechanical Engineering: Pelton's invention started from an accidental
observation, some time in the 1870s. Pelton was watching a spinning water
turbine when the key holding its wheel onto its shaft slipped, causing it to
become misaligned. Instead of the jet hitting the cups in their middle, the
slippage made it hit near the edge; rather than the water flow being
stopped, it was now deflected into a half-circle, coming out again with
reversed direction. Surprisingly, the turbine now moved faster. That was
Pelton's great discovery. In other turbines the jet hit the middle of the cup
and the splash of the impacting water wasted energy.
Peltons wheel was first used at the Mayflower Mine in Nevada City,
California in 1878. By 1879 he had tested a prototype Pelton wheel at the
University of California. In 1887 a miner attached Pelton's wheel to a dynamo
and produced the first hydroelectric power in the Sierra Nevada Mountains.
With Peltons wheel, low-cost hydroelectric power could replace expensive
steam engines in mining operations in the western states, where streams
rarely flowed at high enough volumes to turn traditional water wheels.
A patent was granted in 1889 to Pelton. To keep up with tremendous
demand, Pelton and a San Francisco machine shop owner organized the
Pelton Water Wheel Company. Today, Peltons wheel still generates
electricity in small hydroelectric power plants in the western United States.
the product of two factors, the first factor being referred to as the
utilization factor or diagram efficiency is the ratio of the ideal
work output to the energy available for conversion into work. The
value of the utilization factor may be found from the ideal velocity
diagrams and the energy equations. Under ideal conditions, it
should be possible to use all of the available kinetic energy of the
liquid at the turbine inlet and also the energy obtained in the rotor
due to pressure drop (i.e., reaction effort). Since the former
quantity is
V12
2
1
U 22 / 2 g c Vr2 Vr2 / 2 g c
2
1
V12 U12 U 22 Vr2 Vr2
2
1
2gc
E
util
E avail
V12
U12
U 22
Vr2
2
V12
U U
21 cos 2
V1 V1
U
0 21 cos 2 1 2
V1
U
V1
d
Vr2
1
Pelton Wheel
The Pelton wheel is composed of a nozzle which converts the
whole available head to kinetic energy and a rotor made up of a
series of double hemispherical buckets fastened on the periphery
of the rotor. The rotor is not enclosed, and the water leaving the
buckets goes immediately to the tailrace.
The Pelton wheel falls in a large class of these machines known
as the axial-flow type5 where the nozzle angle relative to the runner is
zero. However, the bucket cannot have a 180 camber angle, since
the water must have a finite radial velocity component away from
the wheel in order to avoid interference.
The Pelton wheel shown in Figure 3 is a pure impulse (R = 0)
turbine. It is used in very high head installations and develops efficiencies very close to the Francis and Kaplan reaction turbines.
The utilization factor described in Equation 3 can be further
simplified as follows: For these machines there is no change of
rotor radius, so U1 = U2. Further, since the energy transfer is entirely
at atmospheric pressure (see Figure 3) the absolute flow velocity
remains unchanged; i.e., an impulse machine of the axial-flow type
has Vr1 Vr2 . Thus the energy transfer is wholly derived from a
change in the velocitys direction. This resulting change in
momentum (impulse) causes a force on the turbine buckets. The
denominator of Equation 3 representing energy available then
becomes simply V12.
The Vu terms in the numerator of Equation 3 can be simplified
by referring to the vector diagram of Figure 3.
or
U
1
V1
2
U
0 21 cos 2 1 2
V1
U
V1
U
1
V1
2
or
(5)
i.e., when the linear velocity of the bucket is half that of the
absolute velocity of the impinging jet.
(3)
Vu1 V1 U Vr1
2UVr 1 cos 2
V12
2U V1 U 1 cos 2
1
V12 U12 U 22 Vr2 Vr2
2
1
2gc
2 U1Vu1 U 2Vu 2
V12
On the other hand, the work output (energy utilized) from the
system is given by the Euler turbine equation (see Equation 1).
The ideal utilization factor, , is the ratio of Eutil to Eavail, i.e.,
1
U1Vu1 U 2Vu 2
gc
(4)
the ideal energy available for conversion into work in the turbine is:
E avail
Page 5
V1
1 = 0
Vr1
U
2
WATER
JET
U
Vr2
V2
VARIABLE
AREAS
NOZZLE
SPEAR
CUTOUT
SIDE OF BUCKET
TAIL RACE
PROCEDURE
Given the apparatus of Figure 4, do the following:
1. In Figure 4, is a box labeled Pump Motor Controller. With this,
one dials in a nominal percent of maximum pump motor rpm.
For 60%, 50%, and 40% settings, perform the following steps.
2. For each of these settings determine the following:
a. Determine the flow rate using the Volumetric Measuring
Tank and a stopwatch. The lab instructor will demonstrate
how to fill the tank.
b. Measure the pump discharge pressure and note the pump
discharge inner diameter. From these, one can determine the
absolute velocity of the jet from the Pelton nozzle, V1, from
Bernoullis equation.
c. Note the diameters of the Pelton wheel (to the center of the
cups) and of the Prony brake.
d. The Prony brake6, shown in Figure 4 and at the right, is used
to both apply a torque to the Pelton wheel and to measure
Vu 2 U Vr2 cos 2
where 2 is described in Figure 3.
5
Page 6
SpringLoaded
Loaded
Scale
Prony Brake
Pump
Pump
Motor
Motor
Controller
Controller
Pelton Wheel
Buckets
Motor
Pump
(see below)
Volumetric
Measuring
Tank
Torque Arm
Sump Tank
Weight Hanger
CALCULATIONS
A Mathcad is supplied below.
Use the variable names already
supplied in the object. At the
bottom of this object is in the
required format the student is to
supply a summary of the 60%rpm condition. This along with
the required plot should be more
than sufficient to evaluate the
students work. One should be
able to put all their Mathcad
calculations on one sheet as
Figure 5Example Oneshown in Figure 5.
Page Calculation Sheet
The required plot is as shown
in Figure 6. The data used to generate this plot is questionable so
the actual shape of the curves is subject to change.
Page 7
RUN INDEX:
j 1 10
Page 8
ID 1.5 in
F2
NP
| F1 3 j F2 3 j NP3 j
1j
1j
1j
2j
2j
2j
|
|
|
Vol
Vol
|
1
3
Vol
|
2
|
|
|
t
t
t
|
1
2
3
|
|
|
|
H
H
H
|
1
2
3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1j
ft lbf
V1.Th ft
1
HPAct
1j
ft hp
1j
ft
DISCUSSION OF RESULTS
What two features can be observed from the plot of the results?
Answer:
Why are the buckets designed so that 2 (see Figure 3) is a small,
nonzero angle?
Answer:
What is the purpose of the cutout or notch at the periphery of the
Pelton wheel buckets?
Answer:
What is the maximum ideal utilization factor for a Pelton wheel
when 2 = 0?
Answer:
Why must a turbine with nonzero degree of reaction have a rotor
enclosed?
Answer:
Why does the relative velocity remain unchanged as the flow
passes through a Pelton bucket?
Answer:
CONCLUSIONS
Page 9
Page 10
APPENDIXDATA SHEET
Time/Date:
___________________
Lab Partners:
_______________________
_______________________
_______________________
_______________________
_______________________
_______________________
Trial 1
(i= 1)
Nominal
60% of
Max
Motor
RPM
Volume, Vol
Time, t
Pump
Flow Rate
Trial 2
(i= 2)
Nominal
50% of
Max
Motor
RPM
Prony Brake
Forces
Run, j
F2
)
Volume, Vol
Time, t
F1
(
Pump
Flow Rate
Run, j
F1
(
10
10
Trial 3
(i= 3)
Nominal
40% of
Max
Motor
RPM
Pump
Flow Rate
Time, t
Prony Brake
Forces
Run, j
F1
(
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
F2
)
Volume, Vol
F2
)