A Transport Model for the Deterministic Stresses Associated With Turbomachinery Blade Row Interactions

Author:

van de Wall Allan G.1,Kadambi Jaikrishnan R.1,Adamczyk John J.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106

2. NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, OH 44135

Abstract

The unsteady process resulting from the interaction of upstream vortical structures with a downstream blade row in turbomachines can have a significant impact on the machine efficiency. The upstream vortical structures or disturbances are transported by the mean flow of the downstream blade row, redistributing the time-average unsteady kinetic energy (K) associated with the incoming disturbance. A transport model was developed to take this process into account in the computation of time-averaged multistage turbomachinery flows. The model was applied to compressor and turbine geometry. For compressors, the K associated with upstream two-dimensional wakes and three-dimensional tip clearance flows is reduced as a result of their interaction with a downstream blade row. This reduction results from inviscid effects as well as viscous effects and reduces the loss associated with the upstream disturbance. Any disturbance passing through a compressor blade row results in a smaller loss than if the disturbance was mixed-out prior to entering the blade row. For turbines, the K associated with upstream two-dimensional wakes and three-dimensional tip clearance flows are significantly amplified by inviscid effects as a result of the interaction with a downstream turbine blade row. Viscous effects act to reduce the amplification of the K by inviscid effects but result in a substantial loss. Two-dimensional wakes and three-dimensional tip clearance flows passing through a turbine blade row result in a larger loss than if these disturbances were mixed-out prior to entering the blade row. [S0889-504X(00)01804-3]

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering

Reference21 articles.

1. Smith, L. H., Jr., 1970, “Casing Boundary Layers in Multistage Axial-Flow Compressors,” Flow Research in Blading, L. S. Dzung, ed., Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam.

2. Mikolajczak, A. A., 1977, “The Practical Importance of Unsteady Flow” in: Unsteady Phenomena in Turbomach. AGARD CP-144, North Atlantic Treaty Organization.

3. Wu, C. H., 1952, “A General Theory of Three-Dimensional Flow in Subsonic and Supersonic Turbomachines of Axial-, Radial-, and Mixed-Flow Types,” NACA TN 2604.

4. Sharma, O. P., Stetson, G. M., Daniels, W. A., Greitzer, E. M., Blair, M. F., and Dring, R. P., 1996, “Impact of Periodic Unsteadiness and Heat Load in Axial Flow Turbomachines,” Final report from United Technologies Corporation, Pratt & Whitney for NASA Lewis Research Center.

5. Smith, L. H., Jr. 1966, “Wake Dispersion in Turbomachines,” ASME J. Basic Eng., 88, pp. 688–690.

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