Abstract
Gas turbines require filtered air to preserve operability, availability, and efficiency. Fouling, corrosion, and erosion severely affect the performance of the axial compressor and it can be in part prevented by filtering the air intake. For this reason, several stages of filters can be used in series to catch pollutant particles gradually smaller and with a high level of capturing efficiency. Traditionally, the separation is obtained using cartridges of porous material, which provide a high level of filtration but at the same time generate a pressure drop increasing over time. Another common type of filter is the inertial one, whose operating principle is based on the inertial force acting on the solid particles to separate them from the mainstream. The capturing efficiency of the inertial filter is not comparable with the porous one and for this reason, it is used upstream as a pre-filter. In recent years, another technique has been developed to filter air flows thanks to an electrostatic field, that is induced inside the flow. The electrostatic force generated is able to attract and separate metallic particles. In the present work, numerical investigations are carried out to simulate the effect of the electrostatic force for gas turbine filtering systems. The computational fluid dynamics tool used is openfoam, whose official release can simulate inertial and porous filtering media, while for electrostatic one is not possible due to the absence of a library able to simulate the electrostatic force that acts on the discrete phase. A new library was developed in order to calculate the electric field, the electric potential, and the charge density of the continuous phase. Simulation results show how the calculation of these quantities allows us to predict the electrostatic force acting on particle flows in the presence of electrostatic fields.