The Fluid Dynamics of LPT Blade Separation Control Using Pulsed Jets
Author:
Bons Jeffrey P.1, Sondergaard Rolf2, Rivir Richard B.2
Affiliation:
1. Air Force Institute of Technology, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH 45433 2. Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH 45433
Abstract
The effects of pulsed vortex generator jets on a naturally separating low-pressure turbine boundary layer have been investigated experimentally. Blade Reynolds numbers in the linear turbine cascade match those for high-altitude aircraft engines and industrial turbine engines with elevated turbine inlet temperatures. The vortex generator jets (30 deg pitch and 90 deg skew angle) are pulsed over a wide range of frequency at constant amplitude and selected duty cycles. The resulting wake loss coefficient versus pulsing frequency data add to previously presented work by the authors documenting the loss dependency on amplitude and duty cycle. As in the previous studies, vortex generator jets are shown to be highly effective in controlling laminar boundary layer separation. This is found to be true at dimensionless forcing frequencies F+ well below unity and with low (10 percent) duty cycles. This unexpected low-frequency effectiveness is due to the relatively long relaxation time of the boundary layer as it resumes its separated state. Extensive phase-locked velocity measurements taken in the blade wake at an F+ of 0.01 with 50 percent duty cycle (a condition at which the flow is essentially quasi-steady) document the ejection of bound vorticity associated with a low-momentum fluid packet at the beginning of each jet pulse. Once this initial fluid event has swept down the suction surface of the blade, a reduced wake signature indicates the presence of an attached boundary layer until just after the jet termination. The boundary layer subsequently relaxes back to its naturally separated state. This relaxation occurs on a timescale which is five to six times longer than the original attachment due to the starting vortex. Phase-locked boundary layer measurements taken at various stations along the blade chord illustrate this slow relaxation phenomenon. This behavior suggests that some economy of jet flow may be possible by optimizing the pulse duty cycle and frequency for a particular application. At higher pulsing frequencies, for which the flow is fully dynamic, the boundary layer is dominated by periodic shedding and separation bubble migration, never recovering its fully separated (uncontrolled) state.
Publisher
ASME International
Subject
Mechanical Engineering
Reference21 articles.
1. Sharma, O., 1998, “Impact of Reynolds Number on LP Turbine Performance,” Proc. of 1997 Minnowbrook II Workshop on Boundary Layer Transition in Turbomachines, NASA/CP-1998-206958. 2. Matsunuma, T., Abe, H., Tsutsui, Y., and Murata, K., 1998, “Characteristics of an Annular Turbine Cascade at Low Reynolds Numbers,” presented at IGTI 1998 in Stockholm, Sweden, June 1998. Paper No. 98-GT-518. 3. Matsunuma, T., Abe, H., and Tsutsui, Y., 1999, “Influence of Turbulence Intensity on Annular Turbine Stator Aerodynamics at Low Reynolds Numbers,” presented at IGTI 1999 in Indianapolis, Indiana, June 1999, Paper No. 99-GT-151. 4. Helton, D., 1997, private communication. 5. Lin, J. C., Howard, F. G., Bushnell, D. M., and Selby, G. V., 1990, “Investigation of Several Passive and Active Methods of Turbulent Flow Separation Control,” AIAA Paper No. 90-1598.
Cited by
138 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|