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COMPRESSOR TRAINING BEARINGS* *What bearing do they have on compressors?

Compressor Bearings

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Bearings for Compressors

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Page 1: Compressor Bearings

COMPRESSOR TRAINING

BEARINGS*

*What bearing do they have on compressors?

Page 2: Compressor Bearings

Most Compressor “Problems” are traced to the rotating elements or the rotor support system and are first detected at the bearings by bearing RTD’s or vibration at the bearings.

The bearings are generally more compliant that other machine elements and when there is a malfunction they tend to give first.

Whatever the cause, modification of the bearing is generally the most direct and economical means of altering the behavior.

Page 3: Compressor Bearings

Bearing Family Tree

S p h erica lE lip tica l

C ylin d rica lTap ered R o lle r

R o llin g E lem en t(n o t A F )

H Y D R O S TA TIC

N on -p re load~ P la in Jou rn a l~ A xia l G roove

~ P ressu re D am

P re-load ed~ E lip tica l~ L ob ed~ O ffse t

T ilt in g P ad~ fixed p ivo t

~ se lf-eq u a lized

F ixed L an d~ Tap er

~ R a le ig h

H Y D R O D Y N A M IC(se lf-g en era tin g )

F L U ID F IL M

A ttrac tive R ep u ls ive

M A G N E TIC

C O M P R E S S O R B E A R IN G S

Page 4: Compressor Bearings

Principal of Operation

Oil is drawn into the converging wedge by the moving bearing surface. A pressure is generated in the fluid which tends to separate the two bearing surfaces.

Behavior of the oil in the Journal bearing converging wedge is defined by the Reynolds equations:

Pressure ~ viscosity, rpm, distribution function; and (1/radial clearance)2

Page 5: Compressor Bearings

= eccentricity ratio = e / radial clearance

Difference between the bearing set bore radius and the journal radius is the bearing set clearance or running clearance. This is often specified as clearance ratio: typical values are 1.5 to 2 mils per inch of shaft.

Page 6: Compressor Bearings

True partial arc and floating bush bearings are NEVER used with Centrifugal compressors for Process services

Plain journals are SELDOM used.

Page 7: Compressor Bearings

Two-Axial Groove Journal Bearing

Grooves allow more oil flow and better heat removal.

Pressure Dam abrupt endstep causes a pressure differential before and after the step which creates a net down force which further loads the bottom bearing and increases stability.

Page 8: Compressor Bearings

RpRj

Rb

Rj = Journal Radius

Rp = Radius of max shaft to fit in pad bore

Rb = Machined pad bore radius

Cp = Rp - Rj

Cb = Rb - Rj

M = 1 - Cb/Cp = PRELOAD

PRELOAD forces the oil to converge resulting in a stronger oil wedge effect.

BEARING PRELOAD

Page 9: Compressor Bearings

PRELOAD

In a two-lobe (lemon bore) bearing.

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Each of these bearings has specific advantages and disadvantages

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There is a broad selection of available stiffness and damping properties available. Therefore some bearings will be better than others for a particular application.

Page 13: Compressor Bearings

Bearings “Crush”

CRUSH - dimensional interference between the bearing shell and the support housing.

TOO MUCH - hot bearing!

TOO LITTLE - loose bearing and synchronous or subsynchronous vibration.

Need 0.002 in Crush on diameter!

Page 14: Compressor Bearings

Stiffness and Damping Relationships

In the flexible bearing region, the shaft is stiff relative to the bearing so bearing stiffness significantly affects the critical speeds.

If the bearing is too stiff, the effectiveness of the bearing damping will be limited.

The cross-coupled stiffness can create an out-of-phase force. Under certain conditions the bearing goes unstable and OIL WHIRL will occur.

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S = NLD/W (R/c)2

Page 18: Compressor Bearings

Tilting Pad Radial Bearings

The independent pivoting feature significantly reduces or even effectively eliminates the CROSS COUPLING stiffness.

Each pad can pivot independently to develop its own pressure profile

Page 19: Compressor Bearings

Tilting Pad Bearings - guidelines•Typically 4, 5, 7 or 9 pads are used.•Load On Pad increases stiffness. Load Between Pads increases damping.•L/D (Slenderness Ratio) typically varies between 0.2 and 1.0.•Bearing UNIT LOADING (Load / Brg. Length x dia.) typically between 150 and 250 psi.

A ROCKER is a line-contact pivot with little axial alignment compensation.

A SPHERICAL is a semispherical surface-contact pivot.

Page 20: Compressor Bearings

Types of Tilt-pad Shoe Contours

Page 21: Compressor Bearings

Tilting Pad Bearings - guidelines

• LOAD ON PAD– increases stiffness– favors light rotors at

high speed– assymetry promotes

resistance to cross-coupling (stability)

• LOAD BTWN PAD– increases damping

– favors heavy rotors at low speeds (low Sommerfeld No.)

Page 22: Compressor Bearings

Comparison of Journal Bearing Types

Page 23: Compressor Bearings

What can cause bearing failures?• Design Deficiencies

– film thickness too small

– inadequate heat dissipation

– insufficient lubricant

– unstable rotor/brg system

– structural deflections

– incompatible babbitt-journal material (rub)

• Mfg/assembly errors– not per design clearances

– liners misaligned

– non-cylindrical journals

• Mfg/ass’y - cont’d– rough/scratched journal– excess runout thr-collar– dirt or debris from assy– poor bond of babbitt

• Operator mistreatment– dirt/scale in oil– operation dry (no oil)– excess vibration– hot inlet oil– misalignment of driver

Page 24: Compressor Bearings

Under Running Conditions a fluid film bearing can only be damaged or fail from two causes:

*. Film too thin which breaks down the film and damages bearing surfaces

*. Film too hot which damages babbit surfaces directly.

Page 25: Compressor Bearings

Modes of Bearing FailureMODE OTHER NAMES

Abrasion Gouging, scoring, scratchesBond failure SpallingCavitation erosion CavitationCorrosion Chemical attackElectrical Pitting FrostingErosion Worm tracksFatigueFretting Fretting corrosionHigh chromium damage Wire-wool; black scabNon-homogeneity Blistering; porosityOverheating Mottling; anisotropy;

ratcheting; sweatingSeisureStructural damageSurface wear Black scaleTin oxide damage WearWiping Smearing; polishing

REF:

McCloskey, T., Trouble shooting Bearing and Lube Oil System Problems. Proceedings of the 24th Turbomachinery Symposium.

Zeidan/Herbage, Fluid Film Bearing Fundamentals and Failure Analysis. Proceedings of the 20the Turbomachinery Symposium

Page 26: Compressor Bearings

OIL TEMPERATURE AND PRESSURE

• API 617 limitations:– 180 F (82 C) Oil Temp Out– 50 F (28 C) Temp Rise– 200 F (93 C) Brg. Temp.

• Increasing oil flow / pressure seldom cures the problem

• Change to oil grade or bearing geometry is more beneficial

• 98 - 99% Copper alloyed with chromium can be backed pads (as a retrofit) and are effective in dissipating heat and lowering bearing temperature.

Page 27: Compressor Bearings

Bearing Babbitt

Traditional babbitt material is lead-based or tin-based.

Presently favored material is white metal - which has broad definition.

Broad use of 60 Sn - 40 Al.

Tri-metal: lead-tin-copper which is a thin (<.004”) overlay of a stronger aluminum or copper alloy backing

• Lead-based:– excellent embedibility

– excellent conformability

– sensitive to corrosion from organic acids

• Tin-based:– Excellent antiseizure

– corrosion resistant except HCl & H2S (seal oil)

– good embedability

– good conformability

– Poor Fatigue properties

Page 28: Compressor Bearings

Bearing Babbitt

Embedability implies thickness (20 to 50 mils)

but thickness reduces fatigue strength (resistance to fracture from vibration loads)

Improvements in oil filtration have reduced the concern for particulates.

Page 29: Compressor Bearings

Typical of Compressor Bearings

Page 30: Compressor Bearings

FMCL Air Compressor Train Bearing

This is a picture of the FAILED FMCL NH3 Plant bearing.

Final determination was a electrical discharge problem

Page 31: Compressor Bearings

Misalignment

Page 32: Compressor Bearings

Fixed Land type Thrust Bearings

(Plain grooved thrust bearings are never used on process compressors)

Typical design load < 200 psi

Page 33: Compressor Bearings

Tilt-pad Thrust Bearing

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Unit DESIGN loads for a tilting-pad thrust bearing are typically 250 to 500 psi.

Check experience for designs using higher loads.

Page 36: Compressor Bearings

•Center pivot - most common and good for reverse rotation and avoids miss-installation.

•Offset pivot can lower bearing temperature.

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Typical No. of pads vs speed & load

Page 39: Compressor Bearings

Self-aligning Thrust Bearings*

EQUALIZING LEVER

SPRING EQUALIZER SPHERICAL SEAT

*This compensates for mis-alignment of shaft or housing or dirt behind the carrier ring.

This is NOT a cure for a cocked thrust collar!

Page 40: Compressor Bearings
Page 41: Compressor Bearings

Directed Flow Bearings

• Injection Nozzle

• Groove / Slotted Edge

• Pocket

• Spray Bar

Most of the oil is needed to remove heat rather than develop a hydraulic film.

Too much oil assures turbulent flow which promotes higher fluid friction losses.

One way of beating the horsepower loses of tilting-pad bearings is by minimizing the oil used to assure laminar hydraulics. The risk is inadequate heat removal.

Directing it to the proper point (bearing hot spots) allows an economy of oil flow.

Ref: Stewart, C., Influence of Oil Injection Method on Thrust Bearig Performance. Proceedings of 28th Turbomachinery Symposium

Page 42: Compressor Bearings
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Directed flow bearing

Page 45: Compressor Bearings

BN ServoFluid Control Bearing

Page 46: Compressor Bearings

BN ServoFluid Bearings

Supply pressure is typically 600 to 1000 psi.

Self compensating

Page 47: Compressor Bearings

F

Rotor

Electromagnetic forces

Clearance= 0.5 mm

Electromagnets

laminations

Radial bearing

© S2M PPT 20.1.0 RADIAL

Page 48: Compressor Bearings

Electromagnet

0.5 mm

Auxiliary Bearings

Position Sensors

0.2 mm

RotorRotor

Laminations

RotorRotor

F

Radial bearing

© S2M PPT 20.2.0 RADIAL 2

Page 49: Compressor Bearings

+/-

ElectromagnetsElectromagnets

SensorsSensors

Position informationPosition information

Controller PID,...

AmplifiersAmplifiers

SetpointSetpointCenterCenter

RotorRotor

Signal treatmentSignal treatment

Control loopControl loop

Page 50: Compressor Bearings

Typical compressor w/ magnetic bearings

Page 51: Compressor Bearings

SABIC Unit

Page 52: Compressor Bearings

Radial mag-bearing & thrust bearing assembly

Page 53: Compressor Bearings

Requires extensive interface and coordination with CSE and Electrical team members.

Page 54: Compressor Bearings

• NO MECHANICAL CONTACT ~ No wear• No lube oil system~ No process pollution by lubricating oil • Wide operating range (1 to 500°K, 0 to 100% speed)

• Higher rotation speed• Lower energy consumption => Best operating costs

• Maintenance free concept => Best availability

• PERMANENT ACTIVE CONTROL

• Unbalance control => low vibration level• Built-in diagnostic and monitoring• Optimal rotor dynamic performances

ADVANTAGES

Page 55: Compressor Bearings

Technical limitations• High temperatures over 250°C without cooling• Max. axial load / speed (ex.: 20 tons at 6,900 rpm)

• Rotor dynamic : requires careful engineering• E-ex environment : requires careful design• Current saturation leading to poor restoring forces• Considerable heat removal• Load carrying capacity

Human limitations• Training on a new technology (maintenance...)• Resistance to innovation• Higher costs

LIMITATIONS