Simulation of Volcanic Ash Ingestion Into a Large Aero Engine: Particle–Fan Interactions

Author:

Vogel Andreas1,Durant Adam J.2,Cassiani Massimo3,Clarkson Rory J.4,Slaby Michal5,Diplas Spyros6,Krüger Kirstin7,Stohl Andreas3

Affiliation:

1. Atmospheric and Climate Department, Norwegian Institute for Air Research, Kjeller 2027, Norway; Department of Geoscience, University of Oslo, Oslo 0316, Norway e-mail:

2. Satavia Ltd., Cambridge CB4 3AZ, UK; Geological and Mining Engineering and Sciences, Michigan Technological University, Houghton, MI 49931 e-mail:

3. Atmospheric and Climate Department, Norwegian Institute for Air Research, Kjeller 2027, Norway e-mail:

4. Rolls-Royce plc., Engine Environmental Protection, Derby DE24 9HX, UK e-mail:

5. Rolls-Royce plc., Installation Aerodynamics, Derby DE24 9HX, UK e-mail:

6. SINTEF-Industry, Oslo 0314, Norway e-mail:

7. Department of Geoscience, University of Oslo, Oslo 0315, Norway e-mail:

Abstract

Volcanic ash (VA) clouds in flight corridors present a significant threat to aircraft operations as VA particles can cause damage to gas turbine engine components that lead to a reduction of engine performance and compromise flight safety. In the last decade, research has mainly focused on processes such as erosion of compressor blades and static components caused by impinging ash particles as well as clogging and/or corrosion effects of soft or molten ash particles on hot section turbine airfoils and components. However, there is a lack of information on how the fan separates ingested VA particles from the core stream flow into the bypass flow and therefore influences the mass concentration inside the engine core section, which is most vulnerable and critical for safety. In this numerical simulation study, we investigated the VA particle–fan interactions and resulting reductions in particle mass concentrations entering the engine core section as a function of particle size, fan rotation rate, and for two different flight altitudes. For this, we used a high-bypass gas-turbine engine design, with representative intake, fan, spinner, and splitter geometries for numerical computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations including a Lagrangian particle-tracking algorithm. Our results reveal that particle–fan interactions redirect particles from the core stream flow into the bypass stream tube, which leads to a significant particle mass concentration reduction inside the engine core section. The results also show that the particle–fan interactions increase with increasing fan rotation rates and VA particle size. Depending on ingested VA size distributions, the particle mass inside the engine core flow can be up to 30% reduced compared to the incoming particle mass flow. The presented results enable future calculations of effective core flow exposure or dosages based on simulated or observed atmospheric VA particle size distribution, which is required to quantify engine failure mechanisms after exposure to VA. As an example, we applied our methodology to a recent aircraft encounter during the Mt. Kelud 2014 eruption. Based on ambient VA concentrations simulated with an atmospheric particle dispersion model (FLEXPART), we calculated the effective particle mass concentration inside the core stream flow along the actual flight track and compared it with the whole engine exposure.

Funder

H2020 European Research Council

FP7 People: Marie-Curie Actions

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering

Reference46 articles.

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