Three-dimensional numerical investigation of the separation process in a vortex tube at different operating conditions

2016 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 157-165 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seyed Ehsan Rafiee ◽  
M. M. Sadeghiazad
1996 ◽  
Vol 118 (4) ◽  
pp. 835-843 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. V. Marathe ◽  
B. Lakshminarayana ◽  
Y. Dong

The objective of this investigation is to understand the nature of the complex flow field inside each element of the torque converter through a systematic experimental and numerical investigation of the flow field. A miniature five-hole probe was used to acquire the data at the exit of the stator at several operating conditions. The flow field is found to be highly three dimensional with substantial flow deviations, and secondary flow at the exit of the stator. The secondary flow structure, caused by the upstream radial variation of the through flow, induces flow overturning near the core. Flow separation near the shell causes flow underturning in this region. The rate of decay of stator wake is found to be slower than that observed in the wakes of axial flow turbine nozzles. The flow predictions by a Navier–Stokes code are in good agreement with the pressure and the flow field measured at the exit of the stator at the design and the off-design conditions.


Author(s):  
Andrea Arnone ◽  
Michele Marconcini ◽  
Roberto Pacciani ◽  
Claudia Schipani ◽  
Ennio Spano

A quasi–three–dimensional, blade–to–blade, time–accurate, viscous solver w as used for a three–stage LP turbine study Due to the low Reynolds number, transitional computations were performed. Unsteady analyses were then carried out by varying the circumferential relative position of consecutive vanes and blade rows to study the effects of clocking on the turbine’s performance. A clocking strategy developed in order to limit the number of configurations to be analyzed is discussed. The optimum analytically–determined clocking position is illustrated for two different operating conditions, referred to as cruise and takeoff. The effects of clocking on wake interaction mechanisms and unsteady blade loadings is presented and discussed. For low Reynolds number turbine flows, the importance of taking transition into account in clocking analysis is demonstrated by a comparison with a fully turbulent approach.


2001 ◽  
Vol 124 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Arnone ◽  
Michele Marconcini ◽  
Roberto Pacciani ◽  
Claudia Schipani ◽  
Ennio Spano

A quasi-three-dimensional, blade-to-blade, time-accurate, viscous solver was used for a three-stage LP turbine study. Due to the low Reynolds number, transitional computations were performed. Unsteady analyses were then carried out by varying the circumferential relative position of consecutive vanes and blade rows to study the effects of clocking on the turbine’s performance. A clocking strategy developed in order to limit the number of configurations to be analyzed is discussed. The optimum analytically-determined clocking position is illustrated for two different operating conditions, referred to as cruise and takeoff. The effects of clocking on wake interaction mechanisms and unsteady blade loadings is presented and discussed. For low Reynolds number turbine flows, the importance of taking transition into account in clocking analysis is demonstrated by a comparison with a fully turbulent approach.


Author(s):  
B. V. Marathe ◽  
B. Lakshminarayana ◽  
Y. Dong

The objective of this investigation is to understand the nature of the complex flow field inside each element of the torque converter through a systematic experimental and numerical investigation of the flow field. A miniature five-hole probe was used to acquire the data at the exit of the stat or at several operating conditions. The flow field is found to be highly three-dimensional with substantial flow deviations, and secondary flow at the exit of the stator. The secondary flow structure, caused by the upstream radial variation of the through flow, induces flow overturning near the core. Flow separation near the shell causes flow underturning in this region. The rate of decay of stator wake is found to be slower than that observed in the wakes of axial flow turbine nozzles. The flow predictions by a Navier-Stokes code are in good agreement with the pressure and the flow field measured at the exit of the stator at the design and the off-design conditions.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jannik Eckel ◽  
Volker Gümmer

Abstract This paper describes the numerical investigation of hybrid aerofoils in a 1.5-stage low-speed compressor, which in its baseline configuration features a conventional rotor and a tandem stator. Both of these are eventually replaced by hybrid aerofoils, using the initial tandem blade profile geometry around mid-span. In this course of design investigations a pure tandem rotor was also generated and analysed as the initial geometry of the hybrid rotor. The aerodynamic design and performance of the tandem rotor and the hybrid aerofoils will be discussed in this paper. The numerical analysis is aimed at understanding the secondary flow phenomena and limiting factors of the working range of the reference stage. Based on this knowledge, the advantages of the hybrid aerofoil design will be discussed. On one hand, the origin and development of three-dimensional flow structures near the endwall regions of the rear vane of the tandem stator are investigated in detail, as they appear to play a major role at de-throttled operating conditions. On the other hand, the tip vortex leakage of the single rotor and the pure tandem rotor are considered, showing the tip vortex taking a major role in loss generation and stall inception at throttled operating conditions, and interacting with the tandem stator secondary flow phenomena at the casing. Both these performance-limiting factors can be addressed by implementing hybrid aerofoils. The paper presents and discusses the improvement of secondary flow loses and aerodynamic performance based on steady-state RANS simulations.


2018 ◽  
Vol 168 ◽  
pp. 02012
Author(s):  
Radomír Chýlek ◽  
Ladislav Šnajdárek ◽  
Jiří Pospíšil

The Ranque–Hilsch vortex tube represents a device for both cooling and heating applications. It uses compressed gas as drive medium. The temperature separation is affected by fluid flow behaviour inside the tube. It has not been sufficiently examined in detail yet and has the potential for further investigation. The aim of this paper is to compare results of numerical simulations of the vortex tube with obtained experimental data. The numerical study was using computational fluid dynamics (CFD), namely computational code STAR-CCM+. For the numerical study, a three-dimensional geometry model, and various turbulence physics models were used. For the validation of carried out calculations, an experimental device of the vortex tube of identical geometrical and operating conditions was created and tested. The numerical simulation results have been obtained for five different turbulence models, namely Standard k-ε, Realizable k-ε, Standard k-ω, SST k-ω and Reynolds stress model (RSM), were compared with experimental results. The most important evaluation factor was the temperature field in the vortex tube. All named models of turbulence were able to predict the general flow behaviour in the vortex tube with satisfactory precision. Standard k-ε turbulence model predicted temperature distribution in the best accordance with the obtained experimental data.


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