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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The development and application of probability distributions of aircraft engine removals

Hines, William Whaley 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
2

Noise reduction technologies for open rotors

Read, Simon John January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
3

Low pressure turbine design for a future high bypass ratio aero-engine

Cranstone, Alexander William January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
4

A study of the effect of engine mount flexibility on the engine mount loads for a jet aircraft in flight

Robinson, Norman Leander, 1925- January 1962 (has links)
No description available.
5

Model Development for active control of stall phenomena in aircraft gas turbine engines

Eveker, Kevin M. 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
6

Optimal scheduled maintenance policy based on multiple criteria decision making

Wei, Wen-Kuo,M.S. January 1978 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1978 W44 / Master of Science
7

Random vibrations of bladed-disk assembly under cyclostationary excitation

Olafsson, Sveinn V. 12 June 2010 (has links)
Random vibration of a bladed-disk assembly is studied. A stochastic model for the excitation is developed. A unique feature of this model is the statistical periodicity of the blade forces called cyclostationary. A random process is called wide sense eyeclostationary and its statistics are periodic in time. Factors like the turbulent nature of the flow around the blades, the variability in their geometry, and their nonuniform deterioration contribute to the uncertainty in the excitation. In periodic structures, like the bladed-disk assembly, small variation in the blade excitation may lead to high variability in the response. The model developed includes both random and deterministic excitation. A comparison of the responses due to the random and the deterministic part shows the significance of taking into account the variability in the blade forces. Therefore the assumption that the blade forces are all equal, used by all methods for vibration analysis of bladed disk assemblies, may lead to erroneous estimates of their response, reliability and expected life. It is shown that the response is a cyclostationary process. Therefore the cyclostationary property is preserved from the input to the output. Furthermore the frequency of the second moment of the response is equal to two times the frequency of the excitation. / Master of Science
8

Development of an object-oriented graphical user interface for an aircraft engine cycle analysis program

Stuede, Andreas 24 January 2009 (has links)
Since the 1960's an overwhelming amount of in-house and custom engineering software has been written. In the effort to reduce the cost of maintaining existing codes and producing new applications, the recent introduction of the object-oriented design approach has proved successful. At the same time graphical user interfaces are gaining in popularity to improve the usability and versatility of an application. This thesis investigates the application of the object-oriented approach to the design of a graphical user interface for an engineering design application. The development of an object-oriented graphical user interface for the NASA Engine Performance Program, a turbine engine design code is presented. The design of the new object-oriented graphical user interface for extensibility and re-usability is discussed. Design considerations for integration of the interface with procedural and object-oriented versions of the conceptual aircraft design program, ACSYNT, are explained. An existing PHIGS-based object-oriented graphical user interfacing framework is extended and built upon to develop the class structure of the interface. The class organization is presented in commonly used notation and described in detail. / Master of Science
9

Breakup characteristics of a liquid jet in subsonic crossflow

Gopala, Yogish 18 May 2012 (has links)
This thesis describes an experimental investigation of the breakup processes involved in the formation of a spray created by a liquid jet injected into a gaseous crossflow. This work is motivated by the utilization of this method to inject fuel in combustors and afterburners of airplane engines. This study aims to develop better understanding of the spray breakup processes and provide better experimental inputs to improve the fidelity of numerical models. This work adresses two key research areas: determining the time required for a liquid column to break up in the crossflow (i.e., primary breakup time) and the effect of injector geometry on spray properties. A new diagnostic technique, the liquid jet light guiding technique that utilizes ability of the liquid jet to act as a waveguide for laser light was developed to determine the location where the liquid column breaks up, in order to obtain the primary breakup time. This study found that the liquid jet Reynolds number was an important factor that governed the primary breakup time and improved the existing correlation. Optical diagnostic techniques such as Phase Doppler Particle Analyzer, Liquid Jet Light Guiding Technique, Particle Image Velocimetry and Imaging techniques were employed to measure the spray properties that include spray penetration, droplet sizes and velocities, velocity field on the surface of the liquid jet and the location of the primary breakup time. These properties were measured for two injectors: one with a sharp transition and the other with a smooth transition. It was found that the spray created by the injector with a sharp transition forms large irregular structures while one with smooth transition produces a smooth liquid jet. The spray transition creates a spray that penetrates deeper into the crossflow, breakup up earlier and produces larger droplets. Additionally, this study reports the phenomenon of the liquid jet splitting into two or more jets in sprays created by the injector with a smooth transition.

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