Optimized Preliminary Design of a Multistage Low-Speed Axial FLow Compressor

Author(s):  
AbdelRahman Ahmed Kamal ◽  
Alyaa Abdelnaby Thabet ◽  
Mohamed M. A. Elnabawy
Author(s):  
Ernesto Benini ◽  
Andrea Toffolo

This paper introduces a cascade-stacking technique for the development of a gas turbine multi-stage axial-flow compressor model. A large database of stationary and rotating cascade performance is first obtained by quasi three-dimensional CFD simulations and used to train neural networks for the prediction of cascade performance under generalized conditions. Then the model directly calculates the operating point of a compressor having known geometry characteristics, including variable inlet guide/stator vane effects, as a function of mass flow rate and rotational speed. The model can also be used as a valuable preliminary design tool, obtaining geometry characteristics by imposing flow patterns.


Author(s):  
P. V. Ramakrishna ◽  
M. Govardhan

There are a number of performance indices for a turbomachine on the basis of which its strength is evaluated. In the case of axial compressors, pressure ratio, efficiency and stall margin are few such indices which are of major concern in the design phase as well as in the evaluation of performance of the machine. In the process of improving the blade design, 3D blade stacking, where the aerofoil sections constituting the blade are moved in relation to the flow. Tilting the blade sections to the flow direction (blade sweep) would increase the operating range of an axial compressor due to modifications in the pressure and velocity fields on the suction surface. On the other hand, blade tip gap, though finite, has great influence on the performance of a turbomachine. The present work investigates the combined effect of these two factors on various flow characteristics in a low speed axial flow compressor. The objective of the present paper is thereby confined to study the collective effects of sweep and tip clearance without attempting to suggest an outright new design. In the present numerical work, the performance of Tip Chordline Sweeping (TCS) and Axial Sweeping (AXS) of low speed axial compressor rotor blades are studied. For this, 15 computational domains were modeled for five rotor sweep configurations and three different clearance levels for each rotor. Through the results, 20°AXS rotor is found to be distinctive among all the rotors with highest pressure rise, higher operating range and less tip clearance loss characteristics. TCS rotors produced improved total pressure rise at the low flow coefficients when the tip gap is increased. Hence there is a chance that an “optimum” tip gap exists for the TCS rotors in terms of total pressure coefficient and operating range, while AXS rotors are at their best with the minimum possible clearance.


AIAA Journal ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 21 (12) ◽  
pp. 1679-1680
Author(s):  
M. Pouagare ◽  
K. N. S. Murthy ◽  
B. Lakshminarayana

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document