Return to search

Investigation Into Flutter of Complex Vane Packs

There has been lots of interest in designing more fuel efficient aircraft using concepts such as boundary layer ingestion (BLI) that cause large amounts of pressure and swirl distortion that enter the jet engines. To enable ground testing the performance of these engines in different distortion patterns, the StreamVane and ScreenVane systems have been developed. A StreamVane consists of a complex vane pack that is custom designed for each distortion profile and the ScreenVane combines the StreamVane with a pressure distortion screen for testing engines under both pressure and swirl distortions. The complexity and uniqueness of these devices make predicting their structural integrity and propensity to flutter a challenge, necessitating the need for studying flutter in these complex vane packs. In order to study flutter of these complex vane packs, a methodology was created to obtain trailing edge displacements and frequencies from high speed video of a StreamVane and was used on a quad swirl StreamVane and a Simplified model. Unsteady CFD with periodic mesh deformation based off of its modal analysis was used to validate if it can predict the flutter velocity as well as understanding what the unsteady aerodynamic response to flutter is. A parameter study was then conducted along with oilflow visualization to better understand the potential causes of flutter and the impact of different design parameters. A harmonic response analysis was conducted on each of these designs and a correlation between the amplitude from the harmonic response and the flutter Mach number was obtained that can be used to predict when a StreamVane will flutter. A new series of StreamVanes were designed and based off of computational analysis, two were selected for manufacture. They both successfully avoided fluttering in flutter tests and were found to accurately replicate the goal swirl profile when measured with a 5 hole probe. These results provide a basis for understanding and predicting flutter in StreamVanes. / Master of Science / There has been lots of interest in designing more fuel efficient aircraft using concepts such as boundary layer ingestion (BLI) that cause large amounts of pressure and swirl distortion that enter the jet engines. To enable ground testing the performance of these engines in different distortion patterns, the StreamVane and ScreenVane systems have been developed. A StreamVane consists of a complex vane pack that is custom designed for each distortion profile and the ScreenVane combines the StreamVane with a pressure distortion screen for testing engines under both pressure and swirl distortions. The complexity and uniqueness of these devices make predicting their structural integrity and propensity to flutter a challenge, necessitating the need for studying flutter in these complex vane packs. Flutter is when a structure experiences excess vibration when exposed to unsteady aerodynamic loads. In order to study flutter of these complex vane packs, a methodology was created to obtain trailing edge displacements and frequencies from high speed video of a StreamVane and was used on a quad swirl StreamVane and a Simplified model. Unsteady computation fluid dynamics (CFD) with periodic mesh deformation was used to validate if it can predict the flutter velocity as well as understanding what the unsteady aerodynamic response to flutter is. A parameter study was then conducted along with oilflow visualization to better understand the potential causes of flutter and the impact of different design parameters. A harmonic response analysis, which consists of a dynamic structural analysis with sinusoidal loading applied, was conducted on each of these designs. A correlation between the amplitude from the harmonic response and the flutter Mach number was obtained that can be used to predict when a StreamVane will flutter. A new series of StreamVanes were then designed and based off of computational analyses, two were selected for manufacture. They both successfully avoided fluttering in flutter tests and were found to accurately replicate the goal swirl profile when measured with a 5 hole probe downstream of the StreamVane. These results provide a basis for understanding and predicting flutter in StreamVanes and other complex vane packs.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/113183
Date16 January 2023
CreatorsHefner, Cole
ContributorsEngineering Science and Mechanics, Untaroiu, Alexandrina, Lowe, K. Todd, Stremler, Mark A.
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
FormatETD, application/pdf
RightsIn Copyright, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/

Page generated in 0.0019 seconds