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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.
21

Numerical Investigation of Aerodynamic Blade Excitation Mechanisms in Transonic Turbine Stages

Laumert, Björn January 2002 (has links)
<p>With the present drive in turbomachine engine developmenttowards thinner and lighter bladings, closer spaced blade rowsand higher aerodynamic loads per blade row and blade, advanceddesign criteria and accurate prediction methods for vibrationalproblems such as forced response become increasingly importantin order to be able to address and avoid fatigue failures ofthe machine early in the design process. The present worksupports both the search for applicable design criteria and thedevelopment of advanced prediction methods for forced responsein transonic turbine stages. It is aimed at a betterunderstanding of the unsteady aerodynamic mechanisms thatgovern forced response in transonic turbine stages and furtherdevelopment of numerical methods for rotor stator interactionpredictions.</p><p>The investigation of the unsteady aerodynamic excitationmechanisms is based on numerical predictions of thethree-dimensional unsteady flow field in representative testturbine stages. It is conducted in three successive steps. Thefirst step is a documentation of the pressure perturbations onthe blade surface and the distortion sources in the bladepassage. This is performed in a phenomenological manner so thatthe observed pressure perturbations are related to thedistortion phenomena that are present in the blade passage. Thesecond step is the definition of applicable measures toquantify the pressure perturbation strength on the bladesurface. In the third step, the pressure perturbations areintegrated along the blade arc to obtain the dynamic bladeforce. The study comprises an investigation of operationvariations and addresses radial forcing variations. With thehelp of this bottom-up approach the basic forcing mechanisms oftransonic turbine stages are established and potential routesto control the aerodynamic forcing are presented.</p><p>For the computation of rotor stator interaction aerodynamicsfor stages with arbitrary pitch ratios a new numerical methodhas been developed, validated and demonstrated on a transonicturbine test stage. The method, which solves the unsteadythree-dimensional Euler equations, is formulated in thefour-dimensional time-space domain and the derivation of themethod is general such that both phase lagged boundaryconditions and moving grids are considered. Time-inclination isutilised to account for unequal pitchwise periodicity bydistributing time co-ordinates at grid nodes such that thephase lagged boundary conditions can be employed. The method isdemonstrated in a comparative study on a transonic turbinestage with a nominal non integer blade count ratio and anadjusted blade count ratio with a scaled rotor geometry. Thepredictions show significant differences in the blade pressureperturbation signal of the second vane passing frequency, whichwould motivate the application of the new method for rotorstator predictions with non-integer blade count ratios.</p>
22

Experimental and numerical investigation of transonic turbine cascade flow /

Kiss, Tibor, January 1992 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 1992. / Vita. Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 121-127). Also available via the Internet.
23

Measurements of pressure and thermal wakes in a transonic turbine cascade /

Mezynski, Alexis, January 1994 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 1994. / Vita. Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 56-58). Also available via the Internet.
24

Aerodynamics of transonic turbine trailing edges

Melzer, Andrew Philip January 2018 (has links)
No description available.
25

Effects of Mach Number and Flow Incidence on Aerodynamic Losses of Steam Turbine Blades

Chu, Teik Lin 27 April 1999 (has links)
An experiment was conducted to investigate the aerodynamic losses of two high-pressure steam turbine nozzles (526A, 525B) subjected to a large range of incident angle and exit Mach number. The blades were tested in a 2D transonic windtunnel. The exit Mach number ranged from 0.60 to 1.15 and the incidence was varied from -34o to 35o. Measurements included downstream Pitot probe traverses, upstream total pressure, and endwall static pressures. Flow visualization techniques such as shadowgraph photography and color oil flow visualization were performed to complement the measured data. When the exit Mach number for both nozzles increased from 0.9 to 1.1, the total pressure loss coefficient increased by a factor of 7 as compared to the total pressure losses observed at subsonic condition (M2<0.9). For the range of incidence tested, the effect of flow incidence on the total pressure losses is less pronounced. Based on shadowgraphs taken during the experiment, it's believed that the large increase in losses at transonic conditions is due to strong shock/boundary layer interaction that may lead to flow separation on the blade suction surface. From the measured total pressure coefficients, a modified loss model that accounts for higher losses at transonic conditions was developed. The new model matches the data much better than the existing Kacker-Okapuu model for transonic exit conditions. / Master of Science
26

NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF SIDEWALL EFFECTS ON ACOUSTIC FIELDS IN TRANSONIC CAVITY FLOW

LI, ZHISONG 04 April 2007 (has links)
No description available.
27

Effects of High Intensity, Large-Scale Freestream Combustor Turbulence On Heat Transfer in Transonic Turbine Blades

Nix, Andrew Carl 01 May 2003 (has links)
The influence of freestream turbulence representative of the flow downstream of a modern gas turbine combustor and first stage vane on turbine blade heat transfer has been measured and analytically modeled in a linear, transonic turbine cascade. Measurements were performed on a high turning, transonic turbine blade. The facility is capable of heated flow with inlet total temperature of 120C and inlet total pressure of 10 psig. The Reynolds number based on blade chord and exit conditions (5x106) and the inlet and exit Mach numbers (0.4 and 1.2, respectively) are representative of conditions in a modern gas turbine engine. High intensity, large length-scale freestream turbulence was generated using a passive turbulence-generating grid to simulate the turbulence generated in modern combustors after it has passed through the first stage vane row. The grid produced freestream turbulence with intensity of approximately 10-12% and an integral length scale of 2 cm near the entrance of the cascade passages, which is believed to be representative of the core flow entering a first stage gas turbine rotor blade row. Mean heat transfer results showed an increase in heat transfer coefficient of approximately 8% on the suction surface of the blade, with increases on the pressure surface on the order of two times higher than on the suction surface (approximately 17%). This corresponds to increases in blade surface temperature of 5-10%, which can significantly reduce the life of a turbine blade. The heat transfer data were compared with correlations from published literature with good agreement. Time-resolved surface heat transfer and passage velocity measurements were performed to investigate and quantify the effects of the turbulence on heat transfer and to correlate velocity fluctuations with heat transfer fluctuations. The data demonstrates strong coherence in velocity and heat flux at a frequency correlating with the most energetic eddies in the turbulence flow field (the integral length-scale). An analytical model was developed to predict increases in surface heat transfer due to freestream turbulence based on local measurements of turbulent velocity fluctuations (u'RMS) and length-scale (Lx). The model was shown to predict measured increases in heat flux on both blade surfaces in the current data. The model also successfully predicted the increases in heat transfer measured in other work in the literature, encompassing different geometries (flat plate, cylinder, turbine vane and turbine blade) as well as both laminar and turbulent boundary layers, but demonstrated limitations in predicting early transition and heat transfer in turbulent boundary layers. Model analyses in the frequency domain provided valuable insight into the scales of turbulence that are most effective at increasing surface heat transfer. / Ph. D.
28

An Investigation of Effectiveness of Normal and Angled Slot Film Cooling in a Transonic Wind Tunnel

Hatchett, John Henry 04 March 2008 (has links)
An experimental and numerical investigation was conducted to determine the film cooling effectiveness of a normal slot and angled slot under realistic engine Mach number conditions. Freestream Mach numbers of 0.65 and 1.3 were tested. For the normal slot, hot gas ingestion into the slot was observed at low blowing ratios (M < 0.25). At high blowing ratios (M > 0.6) the cooling film was observed to "lift off" from the surface. For the 30o angled slot, the data was found to collapse using the blowing ratio as a scaling parameter (x/Ms). Results from the current experiment were compared with the subsonic data published to confirm this test procedure. For the angled slot, at the supersonic freestream Mach number, the current experiment shows that at the same x/Ms, the film cooling effectiveness increases by as much as 25% as compared to the subsonic case. The results of the experiment also show that at the same x/Ms, the film cooling effectiveness of the angled slot is considerably higher than that of the normal slot, at both subsonic and supersonic Mach numbers. The flow physics for the slot tests considered here are also described with computational fluid dynamic (CFD) simulations in the subsonic and supersonic regimes. / Master of Science
29

Aerodynamics of a Transonic Turbine Vane with a 3D Contoured Endwall, Upstream Purge Flow, and a Backward-Facing Step

Gillespie, John Lawrie 09 August 2017 (has links)
This experiment investigated the effects of a non-axisymmetric endwall contour and upstream purge flow on the secondary flow of an inlet guide vane. Three cases were tested in a transonic wind tunnel with an exit Mach number of 0.93-a flat endwall with no upstream purge flow, the same flat endwall with upstream purge flow, and a 3D contoured endwall with upstream purge flow. All cases had a backward-facing step upstream of the vanes. Five-hole probe measurements were taken 0.2, 0.4, and 0.6 Cx downstream of the vane row trailing edge, and were used to calculate loss coefficient, secondary velocity, and secondary kinetic energy. Additionally, surface static pressure measurements were taken to determine the vane loading at 4% spanwise position. Surface oil flow visualizations were performed to analyze the flow qualitatively. No statistically significant differences were found between the three cases in mass averaged downstream measurements. The contoured endwall redistributed losses, rather than making an improvement distinguishable beyond experimental uncertainty. Flow visualization found that the passage vortex penetrated further in the spanwise direction into the passage for the contoured endwall (compared to the flat endwall), and stayed closer to the endwall with a blowing ratio of 1.5 with a flat endwall (compared to no blowing with flat endwall). This was corroborated by the five hole probe results. / Master of Science / This experiment investigated effects of a specially designed endwall (the wall of a jet engine where the vanes end) and adding extra flow upstream through a slot on the inefficiencies of a jet engine vane (a stationary part of the engine that looks like a wing). Three cases were tested in a high-speed wind tunnel at almost the speed of sound-a flat endwall with no extra flow upstream, the same flat endwall with extra flow upstream, and the specially designed endwall with extra flow upstream. All cases had a backward-facing step (a step in the direction as if you are walking downstairs) upstream of the vanes. Measurements of flow direction and pressure were taken at three locations close to the vanes, and were used to calculate parameters relating to efficiency. Additionally, measurements were taken to verify that the vanes functioned correctly. Different colored paints (that do not stick) were used to see how the flow changed between each case. Measurements showed there were no major differences in overall efficiency between the three cases. The specially designed endwall made some areas more efficient, and others less efficient, rather than making the overall vane more efficient. The colored paints showed that a region of spinning flow went further away from the wall with the specially designed endwall. The paints also found that the same region of spinning flow stayed closer to wall when extra flow was added upstream. This was corroborated by the five hole probe results. The results from the paints agreed with the measurements of flow direction and pressure. In conclusion, neither the specially designed endwall or the extra flow made much difference in the overall efficiency (instead, they made some parts more efficient and other parts less efficient).
30

Analysis of pressure data obtained at transonic speeds on a thin low-aspect-ratio cambered delta wing-body combination

Mugler, John P. January 1958 (has links)
An investigation was conducted in the Langley 8-foot transonic tunnels to determine the aerodynamic loading characteristics of a thin conical cambered low-aspect-ratio delta wing in combination with a basic body and a body indented symmetrically for a Mach number of 1.2 in accordance with the supersonic area rule. The tests were conducted at Mach numbers from 0.60 to 1.12 and at 1.43 and at angles of attack generally from -4° to 20°. The wing vas conically cambered over the outboard 15 percent of each semispan. The wing had an aspect ratio of 2.31, 60° sweepback of the leading edge, and had NACA 65A003 airfoil sections parallel to the model plane of symmetry over the uncambered portion. The results of this investigation indicate that a leading-edge separation vortex forms at moderate angles of attack and causes the shape of the span load distribution to change markedly. Significant center of pressure movements are noted at transonic speeds. Indenting the body in accordance with the supersonic area rule had little effect on the aerodynamic loading characteristics. Comparisons with expert mental data for a similar plane wing indicates that the cambered wing is considerably more effective than the plane wing in utilizing the leading edge suction forces to produce thrust. A comparison between experimental and theoretical results indicates fair agreement around sonic speeds. / Master of Science

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