Experimental Investigation of the Stalled Flow of a Single-Stage Axial Flow Compressor

1960 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 159-170 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. D. Wood ◽  
J. H. Horlock ◽  
E. K. Armstrong

SummaryExperimentally it is shown that variation of axial spacing between neighbouring blade rows can alter the stall characteristics of a compressor stage. The stall cell patterns of this compressor stage are described in detail and changes of slope in stage temperature and pressure rise characteristics are explained in terms of stall propagation. Strain gauge tests on stator blades are used to indicate the possibility of large dynamic stresses occurring when the stall cell frequency is equal to the blade natural bending frequency.

Author(s):  
Dilipkumar B. Alone ◽  
Subramani Satish Kumar ◽  
Shobhavathy Thimmaiah ◽  
Janaki Rami Reddy Mudipalli ◽  
A. M. Pradeep ◽  
...  

A bend skewed casing treatment was designed, to study the influence of one of its geometrical parameter porosity on the stable performance of single stage transonic axial flow compressor. The compressor was designed for the stage total-to-total pressure ratio of 1.35, corrected mass flow rate of 22 kg/s at corrected design speed of 12930 RPM. Bend skewed casing treatment has an axial inlet segment till 50% of the total length and rear segment that is skewed by 45° in the direction of the rotor tip section stagger. Both the sections were oriented at a skew angle of 45° to the radial plane such that the flow exiting the slot is in counter-clockwise direction to that of the rotor direction. The casing treatment slot width was equal to the maximum thickness of the rotor blades. Three casing treatment configurations were identified for the current experimental investigation. All the treatment geometries considered for the experimental research have lower porosities than reported in the open literatures. The effect of the porosity parameter on the performance of transonic compressor stage was evaluated at two axial coverages of 20% and 40% relative to the rotor tip axial chord. Performance maps were obtained for the solid casing and casing treatment with three different porosities. Comparative studies were carried out and experimental results showed a maximum of 65% improvement in the stable operating range of the compressor for one of the treatment configurations. It was also observed that the stable operating range of the compressor increases with an increase in the casing treatment porosity. All the casing treatment configurations showed that the compressor stall occurs at lower mass flows as compared to the solid casing. Compressor stage peak efficiency shows significant degradations with increase in the porosity as compared to solid casing. Detailed blade element performances were also obtained using calibrated multi-hole aerodynamic probe. Comparative variations of flow parameters like absolute flow angle, Mach number were studied at full flow and near stall conditions for the solid casing and casing treatment configurations. Hot wire measurements show very high fluctuation in the inlet axial velocity in the presence of solid casing as compared to casing treatments. Experimental investigation revealed that the porosity of the casing treatments has strong influence on the transonic compressor stage performance.


Author(s):  
Quentin Dejour ◽  
Huu Duc Vo

This paper presents the first assessment of a new non-axial counter-rotating compressor concept. This concept consists of replacing the stator of a mixed-flow compressor stage or the diffuser of a centrifugal compressor stage with a counter-rotating rotor that will turn the flow back to the axial direction with much lower diffusion factor, while providing the equivalent in work of the upstream mixed-flow rotor or impeller. This concept has two advantages. First, the very high stage pressure rise means that only a single counter-rotating rotor may be required, making mechanical implementation simpler than for multi-stage axial counter-rotating compressors. Second, the replacement of the high flow turning (high loss) stator/diffuser in a non-axial stage with a low flow turning counter-rotating rotor gives the new concept potential for achieving higher efficiency than conventional non-axial compressors. As a first proof of concept, a subsonic counter-rotating mixed-flow compressor and its conventional (i.e. rotor-stator) equivalent have been designed with the intent of being implemented in a test rig. CFD simulations have been carried out for a comparative evaluation of both configurations. Results show that the counter-rotating mixed-flow compressor produces more than double the pressure rise of its conventional version with a slightly higher peak-efficiency while having a smaller axial length. Moreover, the counter-rotating configuration has a better stall margin than its conventional counterpart, for which the boundary layer separation from excessive flow turning in the stator causes early stall.


Author(s):  
N. Suryavamshi ◽  
B. Lakshminarayana ◽  
J. Prato

The results from the area traverse measurements of the unsteady total temperature using a high response aspirating probe downstream of the second stator of a three stage axial flow compressor are presented. The measurements were conducted at the peak efficiency operating point. The unsteady total temperature data is resolved into deterministic and unresolved components. Hub and casing regions have high levels of unsteadiness and consequently high levels of mixing. These regions have significant levels of shaft resolved and unresolved unsteadiness. Comparisons are made between the total temperature and the total pressure data to examine the rotor 2 wake characteristics and the temporal variation of the stator exit flow. Isentropic efficiency calculations at the midpitch location show that there is about a 4% change in the algebraically averaged efficiency across the blades of the second rotor and if all the rotor 2 blades were behaving as a “best” blade, the improvement in efficiency would be about 1.3%. An attempt is made to create a composite flow field picture by correlating the unsteady velocity data with temperature and pressure data.


1954 ◽  
Vol 58 (517) ◽  
pp. 61-64
Author(s):  
R. G. Taylor

Two design conditions for an axial flow compressor stage are proposed and examined. These are, the constant reaction condition (incorporating I “ radial equilibrium ”), and the condition that the Mach number at inlet to the rotor shall be invariant with radius. In addition, the combination of these two properties in one stage is considered. It is found, with further assumptions regarding the nature of the flow, that a forced vortex type of flow will satisfy both design specifications. The forced vortex solutions for the various cases are presented, and for constant Mach number at inlet to the rotor, more general solutions are given.


Author(s):  
Jialing Lu ◽  
Wuli Chu ◽  
Yanhui Wu

In recent years endwall profiling has been well validated as a major new engineering design tool for the reduction of secondary loss in turbines. However, its application on compressors have been rarely performed and reported. This paper documents the findings of the analysis for diminishing compressor stator corner separation using endwall profiling; In the study, novel profiled endwalls were designed and numerically studied on a subsonic axial-flow compressor stage. The compressor stator endwalls were profiled on both axial and azimuthal directions. The results showed, the stator corner separation was significantly suppressed under all the operating conditions by implementing this profiled endwall. Significant improvements on stage pressure ratios and stage efficiency were observed. Detailed flow field changes, as well as endwall profiling methods are provided in the paper, so that the results of this research can be referenced to other compressor designs.


2018 ◽  
Vol 140 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jichao Li ◽  
Juan Du ◽  
Mingzhen Li ◽  
Feng Lin ◽  
Hongwu Zhang ◽  
...  

The effects of water ingestion on the performance of an axial flow compressor are experimentally studied with and without endwall treatment. The background to the work is derived from the assessment of airworthiness for an aero-engine. The stability-enhancing effects with endwall treatments under rain ingestion are not previously known. Moreover, all the endwall treatments are designed under dry air conditions in the compressor. Water ingestion at 3% and 5% relative to the design mass flow proposed in the airworthiness standard are applied to initially investigate the effects on the performance under smooth casing (SC). Results show that the water ingestions are mainly located near the casing wall after they move through the rotor blade row. The pressure rise coefficient increases, efficiency declines, and torque increases under the proposed water ingestion. The increase of the inlet water increases the thickness of the water film downstream the rotor blade row and aggravates the adverse effects on the performances. Subsequently, three endwall treatments, namely circumferential grooves, axial slots, and hybrid slots–grooves, are tested with and without water ingestion. Compared with no water ingestion, the circumferential grooves basically have no resistance to the water ingestion. The axial slots best prevent the drop of the pressure rise coefficient induced by water ingestion, and hybrid slots–grooves are the second-best place owing to the contribution of the front axial slots. Therefore, the hybrid slots–grooves can not only extend the stall margin with less efficiency penalty compared with axial slots, but also prevent rain ingestion from worsening the compressor performance.


1965 ◽  
Vol 87 (2) ◽  
pp. 193-196
Author(s):  
R. A. Strub ◽  
P. Suter

The character of different surge cycles is described, and the corresponding influence on the dynamic loading of the blades of axial flow compressors is discussed. It is shown that essentially fatigue is governed by the rapidity of loading or unloading of the blading. Test results from an experimental 4-stage axial flow compressor showed that the induced dynamic stresses in the blades, which reach about three times the steady gas bending stresses, can lead to fatigue failure. Reference is also made to previous surge tests carried out on a gas turbine installation, which indicate that a good correlation can be expected between the calculated and the measured pressure distribution. Mention is made of the fatigue failure of the rotor blades of an industrial compressor submitted to a long period of intense surging.


1991 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 165-180 ◽  
Author(s):  
P.B. Sharma ◽  
D.S. Pundhir ◽  
K.K. Chaudhry

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