This seems like a very basic level question but I'm really trying to wrap my head around it and understand the problem.
When looking through the literature/articles on pressure recovery in a diffuser nobody seems to mention (or I'm too thick to understand the obvious conclusion) why would we want to do it?
To sum up my understanding of the problem; fluid enters the reduced cross section, because of conservation of mass, the velocity is increases. Because of Bernoulli's principle, increase of velocity causes/is accompanied by the reduction of pressure (static pressure). When the cross section increases again (in a diffuser), velocity decreases and pressure increases. The increase in pressure after contraction is called pressure recovery. I added the image bellow.
Now my question is, why would we want to do it? Theoretical answer is that we increase the enthalpy of fluid and this directly increases the isentropic efficiency. I get the theory but I cannot understand the real-life behaviour.
The only conclusion I got is that when velocity decreases, friction and turbulent losses are lower.