Test results for sawtooth-pattern damper seals - Leakage and rotordynamic coefficientsTest results consisting of direct and transverse force coefficients are presented for eleven sawtooth-pattern damper-seal configurations. The designation 'damper' seal refers to a seal which uses a deliberately roughened stator and smooth rotor to increase the net seal damping force. The designation 'sawtooth-pattern' refers to a stator-roughness pattern whose cross section normal to the axis of the seal resembles saw teeth with the teeth direction opposing fluid motion in the direction of shaft rotation. The sawtooth pattern yields axial grooves in the stator which are interrupted by spacer elements which act as flow constrictions or 'dams'. Sawtooth-pattern seals had more damping than smooth seals but less than the round-hole-pattern seals tested previously. If damping is sacrificed, sawtooth-pattern seals can be designed to leak less than round-hole-pattern seals.
Document ID
19870032256
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Childs, D. (Texas A & M University College Station, United States)
Garcia, F. (NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL, United States)