Experimental investigation of rotating instability in a contra-rotating axial flow compressor

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
S. Yue ◽  
Y. Wang ◽  
Z. Zhang ◽  
L. Wei ◽  
H. Wang

Abstract The rotating instability in a contra-rotating axial flow compressor is investigated by experiments. Twenty-four pressure sensors were installed on the casing to capture the unsteady flow in the rotor tip region simultaneously. A double-phase-locking technique suitable for the contra-rotating compressor was proposed to characterise the static pressure contours of the rotor tip. The mean and root-mean-square pressure contours indicate that rotating instability occurs before the rotating stall happened, and the rotor tip clearance vortex is located upstream of the rear rotor leading edge plane before stall. Fourier spectrum shows that rotating instability and rotating stall both happened under the stall condition, and the frequency band of rotating instability does not change with the flow rate. In the front rotor, the frequency of rotating instability is half of the blade passing frequency. It is verified that the modal estimation method can be implemented by using the average azimuthal phase velocity, which significantly reduced the number of pressure sensors required. Modal estimation results show that each peak of the rotating instability frequency band corresponds to a unique dominant circumferential mode. By optimising average azimuthal phase velocity, an improved modal estimation method is obtained, which can further improve the reliability of the modal estimation results.

2009 ◽  
Vol 2009 (0) ◽  
pp. 377-378 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroaki KIKUTA ◽  
Masato FURUKAWA ◽  
Satoshi GUNJISHIMA ◽  
Kenichiro IWAKIRI ◽  
Takuro KAMEDA

2006 ◽  
Vol 2006.2 (0) ◽  
pp. 149-150
Author(s):  
Sho BONKOHARA ◽  
Ken-ichiro IWAKIRI ◽  
Ryusuke OHTAGURO ◽  
Yasuhiro SHIBAMOTO ◽  
Masato FURUKAWA

Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (19) ◽  
pp. 6143
Author(s):  
Xiaoxiong Wu ◽  
Bo Liu ◽  
Botao Zhang ◽  
Xiaochen Mao

Numerical simulations have been performed to study the effect of the circumferential single-grooved casing treatment (CT) at multiple locations on the tip-flow stability and the corresponding control mechanism at three tip-clearance-size (TCS) schemes in a transonic axial flow compressor rotor. The results show that the CT is more efficient when its groove is located from 10% to 40% tip axial chord, and G2 (located at near 20% tip axial chord) is the best CT scheme in terms of stall-margin improvement for the three TCS schemes. For effective CTs, the tip-leakage-flow (TLF) intensity, entropy generation and tip-flow blockage are reduced, which makes the interface between TLF and mainstream move downstream. A quantitative analysis of the relative inlet flow angle indicates that the reduction of flow incidence angle is not necessary to improve the flow stability for this transonic rotor. The control mechanism may be different for different TCS schemes due to the distinction of the stall inception process. For a better application of CT, the blade tip profile should be further modified by using an optimization method to adjust the shock position and strength during the design of a more efficient CT.


2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
Craig A. Buhr ◽  
Matthew A. Franchek ◽  
Sanford Fleeter

Abstract Presented in this paper is an analytical study evaluating the closed loop stability of rotating stall control in an axial flow compressor subject to a nonlinear spatial actuation constraint that limits the amplitude of a spatial mode input. Absolute stability of the rotating stall control system is investigated by applying the circle criterion to a linearized model of an axial compressor in series with the saturation element. This stability analysis is then used to design the gain and phase of the ‘classical’ complex gain feedback control law. Resulting is a systematic method for designing the parameters of the complex gain control law which increases the region of absolute stability guaranteed by the circle criterion for the closed-loop system.


2008 ◽  
Vol 131 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xingen Lu ◽  
Wuli Chu ◽  
Junqiang Zhu ◽  
Yangfeng Zhang

In order to advance the understanding of the fundamental mechanisms of axial skewed slot casing treatment and their effects on the subsonic axial-flow compressor flow field, the coupled unsteady flow through a subsonic compressor rotor and the axial skewed slot was simulated with a state-of-the-art multiblock flow solver. The computational results were first compared with available measured data, that showed the numerical procedure calculates the overall effect of the axial skewed slot correctly. Then, the numerically obtained flow fields were interrogated to identify the physical mechanism responsible for improvement in stall margin of a modern subsonic axial-flow compressor rotor due to the discrete skewed slots. It was found that the axial skewed slot casing treatment can increase the stall margin of subsonic compressor by repositioning of the tip clearance flow trajectory further toward the trailing of the blade passage and retarding the movement of the incoming∕tip clearance flow interface toward the rotor leading edge plane.


1992 ◽  
Vol 114 (3) ◽  
pp. 675-685 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Goto

The effect of difference in rotor tip clearance on the mean flow fields and unsteadiness and mixing across a stator blade row were investigated using hot-wire anemometry, pressure probes, flow visualization, and the ethylene tracer-gas technique on a single-stage axial flow compressor. The structure of the three-dimensional flow fields was discussed based on results of experiments using the 12-orientation single slanted hotwire technique and spectrum analysis of velocity fluctuation. High-pass filtered measurements of turbulence were also carried out in order to confirm small-scale velocity fluctuation, which is more realistically referred to as turbulence. The span-wise distribution of ethylene gas spreading, estimated by the measured small-scale velocity fluctuation at the rotor exit, agreed quite well with that which was experimentally measured. This fact suggests the significant role of turbulence, generated within the rotor, in the mixing process across the downstream stator. The value of the maximum mixing coefficient in the tip region was found to increase linearly as the tip clearance became enlarged, starting from the value at midspan.


Author(s):  
Qiushi Li ◽  
Tianyu Pan ◽  
Tailu Sun ◽  
Zhiping Li ◽  
Yifang Gong

Experimental investigations are conducted to study the instability evolution in a transonic axial flow compressor at four specific rotor speeds covering both subsonic and transonic operating conditions. Two routes of evolution to final instability are observed in the test compressor: at low rotor speeds, a disturbance in the rotor tip region occurs and then leads to rotating stall, while at high rotor speeds, a low-frequency disturbance in the hub region leads the compressor into instability. Different from stall and surge, this new type of compressor instability at high rotor speed is initiated through the development of a low-frequency axisymmetric disturbance at the hub, and we name it “partial surge”. The frequency of this low-frequency disturbance is approximately the Helmholtz frequency of the system and remains constant during instability inception. Finally, a possible mechanism for the occurrence of different instability evolutions and the formation of partial surge are also discussed.


Author(s):  
Daisuke Morita ◽  
Yutaka Fujita ◽  
Yutaka Ohta ◽  
Eisuke Outa

Transient characteristics as well as unsteady cascade flow fields of a three-stage axial flow compressor with compression plane wave injection from the compressor downstream were experimentally investigated by detail measurements of casing wall pressure fluctuations and unsteady velocity. The main feature of tested compressor is a shock tube facility connected in series to the compressor outlet duct in order to supply a compression plane wave which simulates the sudden rise of the compressor back pressure in a gas turbine system. Research attention is mainly focused on the unsteady behavior of surge and rotating stall coexistence phenomenon, and influence of the compression plane wave injection on the compressor operating conditions. When the compressor is connected to the capacity tank, surge and rotating stall occur simultaneously according to the capacitance increment of the whole compression system. The surge cycle changes irregularly with a throttling of the valve installed just behind the compressor and several different types of surge behaviors are observed. Furthermore, even though the compressor is operating under the stable condition, it goes into surge by injecting the compression plane wave.


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