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Near Wall Investigation of Three Dimensional Turbulent Boundary LayersKuhl, David Derieg 22 August 2001 (has links)
This report documents the experimental study for four different three-dimensional turbulent flows. The investigation focuses on near wall measurements in these flows. Several experimental techniques are used in the studies; however, the bulk of the investigation focuses on a three-orthogonal-velocity-component fiber-optic laser Doppler anemometer (3D-LDA) system. The control volume of the 3D-LDA is on the order of 50 micro-meter in size, or a y<sup>+</sup> distance of around 2.3 units (using average values of U<sub>τ</sub> and ν from the experiment). An auxiliary small boundary layer wind tunnel (auxiliary tunnel) and a low speed linear compressor cascade wind tunnel (cascade tunnel) are utilized in this study. One of four flow experiments is done in the auxiliary tunnel the other three are in the cascade tunnel. The first three-dimensional turbulent flow is a vortical flow created by two half-delta wing vortex generators. Near wall secondary flow features are found. The second flow is an investigation of the first quarter chord tip gap flow in the cascade tunnel. Strong three-dimensional phenomena are found. The third flow investigated is the inflow to the compressor cascade with the moving wall. The experiment records shear layer interaction between the upstream flow and moving wall. Finally the fourth flow investigated is the inflow to the compressor cascade with the moving wall with half-delta wing vortex generators attached. Phase-averaged data reveal asymmetrical vortex structures just downstream of the vortex generators. This is the first time any near wall data has been taken on any of these flows. / Master of Science
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Advanced numerical simulation of corner separation in a linear compressor cascade / Simulation numérique avancée du décollement de coin dans une grille d’aubes linéaire de compresseurGao, Feng 10 April 2014 (has links)
La demande croissante pour alléger les moteurs d’avions et diminuer les émissions polluantes de la propulsion aéronautique réclame à rendre plus compact le système de compression des moteurs, qui représente environ 40%-50% de la masse totale. Or, à taux de compression global égal, la réduction du nombre d’étage exige d’un point de vue aérodynamique une augmentation de la charge des aubes de compresseur par étage. La charge d’aube est aujourd’hui limitée car elle induit différents mécanismes de pertes tridimensionnelles très pénalisant. L’un des plus importants est le décollement de coin qui se forme à la jonction entre l’extrados de l’aube et le moyeu ou le carter. Bien que des travaux existent sur les mécanismes et paramètres intervenant dans le décollement de coin, il est encore difficile de proposer une méthode de contrôle efficace. Cela est principalement dû à deux raisons : (i) le manque de compréhension fine des mécanismes physiques, (ii) l’utilisation pour la conception de modèles de turbulence classiques de type RANS (Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes) qui ne sont pas capables de prédire précisément le décollement de coin, car ils ne peuvent pas décrire correctement les mécanismes de transport turbulent. Des simulations de type RANS et LES (large-eddy simulation = simulation des grandes échelles) sont présentées dans cette thèse sur une configuration de grille d’aubes de compresseur, et comparées avec les données expérimentales obtenues au LMFA (issues de travaux séparés). L’approche RANS surestime globalement le décollement de coin. Une amélioration significative est obtenue par la méthode LES, en particulier pour le coefficient de pression statique sur l’aube et les pertes de pression totale. Ces résultats montrent que la zone de décollement de coin, qui est la source principale des pertes, génère des tourbillons de grande échelle associés à de forts niveaux d’énergie. Les histogrammes bimodaux de la vitesse tangentielle qui ont été observés expérimentalement semblent confirmés par les résultats LES. En ce qui concerne les amplitudes des fluctuations de vitesse tangentielle, les résultats expérimentaux et ceux de la LES mettent en évidence deux pics sur certains profils perpendiculaires aux parois. Enfin, grâce à l’approche LES, les bilans de l’énergie cinétique turbulente sont calculés et analysés. Ils décrivent l’équilibre entre les termes de production, de dissipation et de transport. Une des perspectives de cette analyse est d’aider à améliorer la modélisation de la turbulence en approche RANS. / The increasing demand to reduce the mass of aircraft jet engines and emissions of aircraft propulsion requires to make the compression system of engines more compact, since this component accounts for about 40%-50% of the total mass. However, at a given overall pressure ratio, decreasing the number of stages will raise the compressor blade loading per stage. The blade loading is extremely restricted by different three-dimensional flow loss mechanisms. One of them is the corner separation that forms between the blade suction side and the hub or shroud. Although some works previously investigated the mechanisms and the parameters of corner separation, it is still difficult to propose an effective control method of the corner separation. That is mainly due to two reasons: (i) the lack of knowledge of the physical mechanisms, (ii) the nowadays classical RANS (Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes) turbulence models are not capable to accurately predict the corner separation, since they cannot correctly describe the turbulent transport mechanisms. RANS (Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes) and LES (large-eddy simulation) simulations are here presented on a compressor cascade configuration, in comparison with experimental data obtained at LMFA (from separate works). The RANS approach globally over-estimates the corner separation, whereas a significant improvement is achieved with the LES, especially for the blade surface static pressure coefficient and the total pressure losses. The corner separation region, which is the main source of the total pressure losses, is shown to generate large-scale energy-containing eddies. The bimodal histograms of the streamwise velocity that were observed experimentally seem to be confirmed by the LES results. Concerning the streamwise velocity fluctuations (RMS), both the experiment and the LES show some profiles with two peaks. Finally, thanks to the LES approach, the turbulent kinetic energy budget, which represents the balance between the production, dissipation and transport terms, are computed and analyzed. This may help the improvement of RANS turbulence modeling.
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Effects of Rotation on the Flow Structure in a Compressor CascadeVentosa-Molina, Jordi, Koppe, Björn, Lange, Martin, Mailach, Ronald, Fröhlich, Jochen 08 May 2023 (has links)
In turbomachines, rotors and stators differ by the rotation of the former. Hence, half of each stage is directly influenced by rotation effects. The influence of rotation on the flow structure and its impact on the performance is studied through wall-resolving large Eddy simulations of a rotor with large relative tip gap size. The simulations are performed in a rotating frame with rotation accounted for through a Coriolis force term. In a first step, experimental results are used to provide validation. The main part of the study is the comparison of the results from two simulations, one representing the rotating configuration and one with the Coriolis force removed, without any other change. This setup allows a very clean assessment of the influence of rotation. The turbulence-resolving approach ensures that the turbulent flow features are well represented. The results show a significant impact of rotation on the secondary flow. In the tip region, the tip leakage vortex is enlarged and destabilized. Inside the tip gap, the flow is altered as well, with uniformization in the rotating case. At the blade midspan, no significant effects are observed on the suction side, while an earlier transition to turbulence is found on the pressure side. Near the hub, rotation effects are shown to reduce the corner separation significantly.
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