scholarly journals Closure to “Discussion of ‘Boundary Layer Optimization for the Design of High Turning Axial Flow Compressor Blades’” (1971, ASME J. Eng. Power, 93, pp. 154–155)

1971 ◽  
Vol 93 (1) ◽  
pp. 155-155
Author(s):  
K. D. Papailiou
1984 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francis Leboeuf

A computational method for secondary flows in a compressor has been extended to treat stalled flows. An integral equation is used which simulates the inviscid flow at the wall, under the viscous flow influence. We present comparisons with experimental results for a 2D stalled boundary layer, and for the secondary flow in a highly loaded stator of an axial flow compressor.


Author(s):  
Songtao Wang ◽  
Xiaoqing Qiang ◽  
Weichun Lin ◽  
Guotai Feng ◽  
Zhongqi Wang

In order to design high pressure ratio and highly loaded axial flow compressor, a new design concept based on Highly-Loaded Low-Reaction and boundary layer suction was proposed in this paper. Then the concept’s characteristics were pointed out by comparing with the MIT’s boundary layer suction compressor. Also the application area of this design concept and its key technic were given out in this paper. Two applications were carried out in order to demonstrate the concept. The first application was to redesign a low speed duplication-stage axial flow compressor into a single stage. The second one was a feasibility analysis to decrease an 11 stage axial compressor’s stage count to 7 while not changing its aerodynamic performance. The analysis result showed that the new design concept is feasible and it can be used on high pressure stage of the aero-engine, compressor of ground gas turbine (except the transonic stage) and high total pressure ratio blower.


1978 ◽  
Vol 100 (2) ◽  
pp. 287-292 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. L. Evans

The boundary layer on an axial-flow compressor stator blade has been measured using an ensemble-averaging technique. Although the mean velocity profiles appear to indicate fully developed turbulent flow, ensemble-averaged instantaneous profiles show the boundary layer to be highly unsteady and transitional over much of the blade chord. At a given chordwise position, variations in boundary-layer thickness with time of up to 150 percent were recorded. When compared to boundary-layer development on a similar blade in a two-dimensional cascade the stator blade boundary-layer growth was found to be much greater. The results indicate that extreme caution should be used in attempting to predict blade boundary-layer development from cascade test results or steady calculation procedures.


2020 ◽  
Vol 23 (5) ◽  
pp. 39-53
Author(s):  
V. A. Potapov ◽  
A. A. Sanko

The construction and useful practice of gas-turbine engine diagnosis systems depend largely on the availability of the engine mathematical models and its certain components in their structure. Utilization of multi-stage axial flow compressor performance with account for erosive wear of its parts during the operation fundamentally raises possibilities of such systems as erosive wear of flow channel, blade rings of impellers and vane rings of multi-stage compressor is a common cause of preschedule gas-turbine engine detaching from an aircraft. As evidenced by various contributions presented in the article, special emphasis on abrasive wear impact assessment on axial flow compressor performance is placed upon rotor-wing turbo-shaft engine due to their particular operating conditions. One of the main tasks in the process of mathematic simulation of an axial flow compressor blade ring is consideration of its wear type that again has a nonlinear distribution along the level of the blade. In addition, wear rate at entry and exit blade edges often have different principles. Detecting of these principles and their consideration when constructing the compressor mathematical model is a crucial task in diagnostic assessment and integrity monitoring of rotor-wing turbo-shaft engine in operation. The article represents a concept to an estimate nonlinear erosive wear effect of axial flow compressor blades on its performance based on the three-dimensional flow approach in the gas-air flow duct of compressor with a formulation of the blade rings. This approach renders possible to take into account the nonlinearity of the compressor blades wear during their operation. Through the example of the inlet compressor stage of a rotor-wing aircraft gas-turbine engine, the engine pump properties predictions with different kind of rotor blade wear have been presented.


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