Movement of Deposited Water on Turbomachinery Rotor Blade Surfaces

Author:

Williams John1,Young John B.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford, Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PJ, UK and Whittle Laboratory, Cambridge University Engineering Department, Cambridge University, Cambridge CB2 1PZ, UK

2. Hopkinson Laboratory, Cambridge University Engineering Department, Cambridge University, Trumpington Street, Cambridge CB2 1PZ, UK

Abstract

A theoretical approach for calculating the movement of liquid water following deposition onto a turbomachine rotor blade is described. Such a situation can occur during operation of an aero-engine in rain. The equation of motion of the deposited water is developed on an arbitrarily oriented plane triangular surface facet. By dividing the blade surface into a large number of facets and calculating the water trajectory over each one crossed in turn, the overall trajectory can be constructed. Apart from the centrifugal and Coriolis inertia effects, the forces acting on the water arise from the blade surface friction, and the aerodynamic shear and pressure gradient. Nondimensionalization of the equations of motion provides considerable insight and a detailed study of water flow on a flat rotating plate set at different stagger angles demonstrates the paramount importance of blade surface friction. The extreme cases of low and high blade friction are examined and it is concluded that the latter (which allows considerable mathematical generalization) is the most likely in practice. It is also shown that the aerodynamic shear force, but not the pressure force, may influence the water motion. Calculations of water movement on a low-speed compressor blade and the fan blade of a high bypass ratio aero-engine suggest that in low rotational speed situations most of the deposited water is centrifuged rapidly to the blade tip region.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering

Reference8 articles.

1. Fog Droplet Deposition and Coarse Water Formation in Low Pressure Steam Turbines: A Combined Experimental and Theoretical Analysis;Young;ASME J. Turbomach.

2. Gas Turbine Power Augmentation by Fogging of Inlet Air;Meher-Homji

3. Condensation in Jet Engine Intake Ducts During Stationary Operation;Young;ASME J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power

4. AGARD, 1995, “Recommended Practices for the Assessment of the Effects of Atmospheric Water Ingestion on the Performance and Operability of Gas Turbine Engines,” AGARD Advisory Report No. 332.

5. Gyarmathy, G. , 1962, “Bases of a Theory for Wet Steam Turbines,” Technical Report Bulletin 6, Inst. for Thermal Turbomachines, Federal Technical University, Zurich (English translation by U.K. Central Electricity Generating Board, No. T-781).

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