Sommerfeld effect in a gyroscopic overhung rotor-disk system

2017 ◽  
Vol 88 (3) ◽  
pp. 1565-1585 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alfa Bisoi ◽  
A. K. Samantaray ◽  
R. Bhattacharyya
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 3084
Author(s):  
Honggang Pan ◽  
Yunshi Wu ◽  
Tianyu Zhao

As the main components of the rotor system of aero-engines and other rotating machinery equipment, the bladed disk system has high requirements on its structure design, safety and stability. Taking the rotor disk system of aero-engines as the research object, modal calculation of the rotor disk system was based on the group theory algorithm, and using the fine sand movement on the experimental disk to express the disk vibration shape. The experimental vibration mode is used to compare with the finite element calculation results to verify the reliability of the finite element analysis. Study on the effect of dissonance parameter changes on the bladed disk system vibration characteristics concluded that the vibration mode trends of the blisk system and the disc are, basically, consistent. As the mass of the blade increases, the modal frequencies of the entire blisk system gradually decrease, and the amplitude slightly increases. When the mass increases at different parts of the blade, the effect on the modal frequencies of the bladed disk system are not obvious. When the bladed disk system vibrates at low frequency, the disc will not vibrate and each blade will vibrate irregularly. The bladed disk should be avoided to work in this working area for a long time, so as not to cause fatigue damage or even fracture of some blades.


1999 ◽  
Vol 121 (4) ◽  
pp. 663-669 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. J. Maeng ◽  
J. S. Lee ◽  
R. Jakoby ◽  
S. Kim ◽  
S. Wittig

The discharge coefficient of a long orifice in a rotating system is measured to examine the rotational effect on discharge behavior. The rotating system is comprised of a rotating disk and two stators on both sides of the rotating disk. Test rig is constructed to simulate the real turbine operating conditions. Pressure ratios between upstream and downstream cavities of the orifice range from 1.05 to 1.8, and rotational speed of the rotor disk is varied up to 10,000 rpm. The orifice hole bored through the rotor disk has length-to-diameter ratio of 10. For a better interpretation of discharge behavior, three-dimensional velocity field in the downstream and upstream cavities of the rotor is measured using a Laser Doppler Velocimetry. A new definition of the rotational discharge coefficient is introduced to consider the momentum transfer from the rotor to the orifice flow. Additional loss in the discharge coefficient due to pressure loss in the orifice hole at the inlet and exit regions is quantitatively presented in terms of the Rotation number and the compressibility factor. The effect of corner radiusing at the orifice inlet is also investigated at various rotational conditions.


Author(s):  
Surajudeen Adewusi

Competition and high quality requirements in the industries have necessitated the need for reliable rotating machines. This can be partly achieved by continuous monitoring of operation conditions to detect any fault before it causes serious problem or breakdown of rotating machines. The detection of faults in rotating blades via direct blade vibration measurements and analysis is somewhat difficult because blades often operate in a very harsh environment (gas turbine blades are rotating in high temperature and pressure environment). This paper presents indirect detection of blade faults from lateral vibrations of a rotor-disk-blade system, which can easily be measured, using laboratory test-rig. A rotor, disk, 6 normal blades and 3 blades with different defects were designed. The modal parameters of the normal and defective blades were determined experimentally and by modal analysis using ANSYS. The lateral vibrations, in the x- and y-axis, of the rotor-disk system with normal 6 blades and with 5 normal blades and 1 defective blade at a time were measured and analyzed. The results revealed that defective blades showed some distinct characteristics in the frequency domain, which can be used to identify blade faults in a bladed rotor-disk system.


AIAA Journal ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 27 (11) ◽  
pp. 1653-1655 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sunil K. Sinha
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
D. J. Maeng ◽  
J. S. Lee ◽  
R. Jakoby ◽  
S. Kim ◽  
S. Wittig

The discharge coefficient of a long orifice in a rotating system is measured to examine the rotational effect on discharge behavior. The rotating system is comprised of a rotating disk and two stators on both sides of the rotating disk. Test rig is constructed to simulate the real turbine operating conditions. Pressure ratios between upstream and downstream cavities of the orifice range from 1.05 to 1.8, and rotational speed of the rotor disk is varied up to 10,000 rpm. The orifice hole bored through the rotor disk has length-to-diameter ratio of 10. For a better interpretation of discharge behavior, three-dimensional velocity field in the downstream and upstream cavities of the rotor is measured using a Laser Doppler Velocimetry. A new definition of the rotational discharge coefficient is introduced to consider the momentum transfer from the rotor to the orifice flow. Additional loss in the discharge coefficient due to pressure loss in the orifice hole at the inlet and exit regions is quantitatively presented in terms of the Rotation number and the compressibility factor. The effect of comer radiusing at the orifice inlet is also investigated at various rotational conditions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Huerta ◽  
T. Bryk ◽  
V. M. Pergamenshchik ◽  
A. Trokhymchuk

Author(s):  
Marios Patinios ◽  
James A. Scobie ◽  
Carl M. Sangan ◽  
J. Michael Owen ◽  
Gary D. Lock

In gas turbines, hot mainstream flow can be ingested into the wheel-space formed between stator and rotor disks as a result of the circumferential pressure asymmetry in the annulus; this ingress can significantly affect the operating life, performance, and integrity of highly stressed, vulnerable engine components. Rim seals, fitted at the periphery of the disks, are used to minimize ingress and therefore reduce the amount of purge flow required to seal the wheel-space and cool the disks. This paper presents experimental results from a new 1.5-stage test facility designed to investigate ingress into the wheel-spaces upstream and downstream of a rotor disk. The fluid-dynamically scaled rig operates at incompressible flow conditions, far removed from the harsh environment of the engine which is not conducive to experimental measurements. The test facility features interchangeable rim-seal components, offering significant flexibility and expediency in terms of data collection over a wide range of sealing flow rates. The rig was specifically designed to enable an efficient method of ranking and quantifying the performance of generic and engine-specific seal geometries. The radial variation of CO2 gas concentration, pressure, and swirl is measured to explore, for the first time, the flow structure in both the upstream and downstream wheel-spaces. The measurements show that the concentration in the core is equal to that on the stator walls and that both distributions are virtually invariant with radius. These measurements confirm that mixing between ingress and egress is essentially complete immediately after the ingested fluid enters the wheel-space and that the fluid from the boundary layer on the stator is the source of that in the core. The swirl in the core is shown to determine the radial distribution of pressure in the wheel-space. The performance of a double radial-clearance seal is evaluated in terms of the variation of effectiveness with sealing flow rate for both the upstream and the downstream wheel-spaces and is found to be independent of rotational Reynolds number. A simple theoretical orifice model was fitted to the experimental data showing good agreement between theory and experiment for all cases. This observation is of great significance as it demonstrates that the theoretical model can accurately predict ingress even when it is driven by the complex unsteady pressure field in the annulus upstream and downstream of the rotor. The combination of the theoretical model and the new test rig with its flexibility and capability for detailed measurements provides a powerful tool for the engine rim-seal designer.


2012 ◽  
Vol 28 (3) ◽  
pp. 513-522 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. M. Khanlo ◽  
M. Ghayour ◽  
S. Ziaei-Rad

AbstractThis study investigates the effects of disk position nonlinearities on the nonlinear dynamic behavior of a rotating flexible shaft-disk system. Displacement of the disk on the shaft causes certain nonlinear terms which appears in the equations of motion, which can in turn affect the dynamic behavior of the system. The system is modeled as a continuous shaft with a rigid disk in different locations. Also, the disk gyroscopic moment is considered. The partial differential equations of motion are extracted under the Rayleigh beam theory. The assumed modes method is used to discretize partial differential equations and the resulting equations are solved via numerical methods. The analytical methods used in this work are inclusive of time series, phase plane portrait, power spectrum, Poincaré map, bifurcation diagrams, and Lyapunov exponents. The effect of disk nonlinearities is studied for some disk positions. The results confirm that when the disk is located at mid-span of the shaft, only the regular motion (period one) is observed. However, periodic, sub-harmonic, quasi-periodic, and chaotic states can be observed for situations in which the disk is located at places other than the middle of the shaft. The results show nonlinear effects are negligible in some cases.


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