Impellers and Centrifugal Fans
For axial fans, the outflow direction is the same as the inflow direction. However, for impellers and centrifugal fans, the outflow direction is not the same as the inflow direction. These types of fans are modeled using the blower interface. The blower interface implementation in Simcenter STAR-CCM+ is the same for both impellers and centrifugal fans, except that swirl at the outflow is allowed for impellers only.

Blower Interface
The blower interface is a non-conformal interface that connects the inlet and the outlet of the impeller or the centrifugal fan. Unlike an axial fan, an impeller or a centrifugal fan has the inlet and the outlet located in different places and oriented in different directions. The blower interface is a simple model that imposes a pressure jump across the inlet and the outlet of the fan. The geometry of the impeller or the centrifugal fan between the inlet and the outlet is not modeled.
- Pressure Jump Modeling
- The pressure jump is obtained from a user-specified fan curve that plots pressure jump as a function of volumetric flow rate. The pressure jump that is read from the fan curve is interpreted as: (5039)
where is the static pressure downstream of the blower interface and is the total pressure upstream of the blower interface.
The pressure on the faces of the fan inlet are computed as:
(5040)where is a local pressure jump that is based on the local normal velocity and is the averaged pressure on the fan outlet.
- Swirl Modeling
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The figure below illustrates the computation of the swirl (tangential) component of the velocity at the blower outlet:
The velocity tangential to the impeller outlet is given by:
(5041)where:
fan rotation rate radial distance from the fan axis to the impeller outlet blade angle velocity normal to the impeller outlet mass flow rate circumferential area of the impeller The following figure illustrates the amount of tangential velocity that is added for different values of blade angle: