Numerical Investigation of the Effect of Flutter Instability of the Blade on the Unsteady Flow in a Modern Low-Pressure Turbine

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pablo Garrido De La Serna ◽  
Nitish Anand ◽  
Roberto Agromayor ◽  
Matteo Pini
Author(s):  
Shine Win Naung ◽  
Mohammad Rahmati ◽  
Hamed Farokhi

Abstract Modern aeronautical Low-Pressure Turbines (LPTs) are prone to aeroelastic instability problems such as flutter. The aerodynamic performance of a modern LPT is often influenced by the interaction between the transient flow and the dynamic behaviour of the blade. Therefore, the investigation and understanding of the physics behind the interaction between the unsteady flow and the flutter phenomenon of the blade in an LPT, which is normally left out by existing studies, is an important aspect of the research to improve the aerodynamic performance of the turbine as well as to ensure the blade mechanical integrity. In this paper, a novel analysis is conducted to explore the flutter instability in a modern LPT, T106A turbine, using two inter blade phase angles (IBPAs), and their effects on the unsteady flow field are investigated. The zero degree and 180 degrees IBPAs are considered in this paper. A high-fidelity direct numerical simulation method is used for the flow simulations. Another distinctive feature of this paper is the use of the 3D model to analyse the effects associated with the 3D blade structure and the 3D vibration mode. The investigation and identification of adequate working ranges of the harmonic balance method, which has been widely used for the aeromechanical analysis of turbomachines, are also presented in this work. This paper will bridge a key gap in the knowledge of aeroelasticity modelling and analysis of modern LPTs.


Author(s):  
S. Zerobin ◽  
S. Bauinger ◽  
A. Marn ◽  
A. Peters ◽  
F. Heitmeir ◽  
...  

This paper presents an experimental study of the unsteady flow field downstream of a high pressure turbine with ejected purge flows, with a special focus on a flow field discussion using the mode detection approach according to the theory of Tyler and Sofrin. Measurements were carried out in a product-representative one and a half stage turbine test setup, which consists of a high-pressure turbine stage followed by an intermediate turbine center frame and a low-pressure turbine vane row. Four independent purge mass flows were injected through the forward and aft cavities of the unshrouded high-pressure turbine rotor. A fast-response pressure probe was used to acquire time-resolved data at the turbine center frame duct inlet and exit. The interactions between the stator, rotor, and turbine center frame duct are identified as spinning modes, propagating in azimuthal direction. Time-space diagrams illustrate the amplitude variation of the detected modes along the span. The composition of the unsteadiness and its major contributors are of interest to determine the role of unsteadiness in the turbine center frame duct loss generation mechanisms and to avoid high levels of blade vibrations in the low-pressure turbine which can in turn result in increased acoustic emissions. This work offers new insight into the unsteady flow behavior downstream of a purged high-pressure turbine and its propagation through an engine-representative turbine center frame duct configuration.


Author(s):  
Emma Veley ◽  
Christopher Marks ◽  
Richard Anthony ◽  
Rolf Sondergaard ◽  
Mitch Wolff

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