scholarly journals The Aerodynamics of an Oscillating Cascade in a Compressible Flow Field

Author(s):  
Daniel H. Buffum ◽  
Sanford Fleeter

Fundamental experiments are performed in the NASA Lewis Research Center Transonic Oscillating Cascade Facility to investigate and quantify the aerodynamics of a cascade of biconvex airfoils executing torsion mode oscillations at realistic reduced frequency values. Both steady and unsteady airfoil surface pressures are measured at two inlet Mach numbers, 0.65 and 0.80, and two incidence angles, 0 and 7 degrees, with the harmonic torsional airfoil cascade oscillations at realistic high reduced frequency and unsteady data obtained at several interblade phase angle values. The time-variant pressures are analyzed by means of discrete Fourier transform techniques, with these unique data compared with predictions from a linearized unsteady cascade model. The experimental results indicate that the interblade phase angle has a major effect on the chordwise distributions of the airfoil surface unsteady pressure, with the effects of reduced frequency, incidence angle, and Mach number somewhat less significant.

1990 ◽  
Vol 112 (4) ◽  
pp. 759-767 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. H. Buffum ◽  
S. Fleeter

Fundamental experiments are performed in the NASA Lewis Research Center Transonic Oscillating Cascade Facility to investigate and quantify the aerodynamics of a cascade of bioconvex airfoils executing torsion mode oscillations at realistic reduced frequency values. Both steady and unsteady airfoil surface pressures are measured at two inlet Mach numbers, 0.65 and 0.80. and two incidence angles, 0 and 7 deg, with the harmonic torsional airfoil cascade oscillations at realistic high reduced frequency and unsteady data obtained at several interbladephase angle values. The time-variant pressures are analyzed by means of discrete Fourier transform techniques, with these unique data compared with predictions from a linearized unsteady cascade model. The experimental results indicate that the interblade phase angle has a major effect on the chordwise distributions of the airfoil surface unsteady pressure, with the effects of reduced frequency, incidence angle, and Mach number somewhat less significant.


1983 ◽  
Vol 105 (4) ◽  
pp. 375-381 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Hoyniak ◽  
S. Fleeter

To predict the aerodynamically forced response of an airfoil, an energy balance between the unsteady aerodynamic work and the energy dissipated through the airfoil structural and aerodynamic damping is performed. Theoretical zero incidence unsteady aerodynamic coefficients are then utilized in conjunction with this energy balance technique to predict the effects of reduced frequency, inlet Mach number, cascade geometry and interblade phase angle on the torsion mode aerodynamically forced response of the cascade. In addition, experimental unsteady aerodynamic gust data for flat plate and cambered cascaded airfoils are used together with these theoretical cascade unsteady self-induced aerodynamic coefficients to indicate the effects of incidence angle and airfoil camber on the forced response of the airfoil cascade.


1977 ◽  
Vol 99 (1) ◽  
pp. 88-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Fleeter ◽  
A. S. Novick ◽  
R. E. Riffel ◽  
J. E. Caruthers

A unique supersonic inlet flow field unsteady cascade experiment is described wherein the time-dependent pressure distribution within an harmonically oscillating airfoil cascade is quantitatively determined. The torsional frequency of oscillation and the inter-blade phase angle are precisely controlled by means of on-line digital computers. The dynamic data obtained include the chordwise distribution of the unsteady pressure magnitude and its phase lag as referenced to the airfoil motion. Parameters varied include the cascade inlet Mach number, the interblade phase angle, and the reduced frequency. The time-dependent data are correlated with state-of-the-art analytical predictions.


1988 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroshi Kobayashi

Effects attributable to shock wave movement on cascade flutter were examined for both turbine and compressor blade rows, using a controlled-oscillating annular cascade test facility and a method for accurately measuring time-variant pressures on blade surfaces. Nature of the effects and blade surface extent influenced by the shock movement were clarified in a wide range of Mach number, reduced frequency and interblade phase angle. Remarkable unsteady aerodynamic force was generated by the shock movement and it significantly affected the occurrence of compressor cascade flutter as well as turbine one. For turbine cascade the interblade phase angle remarkably controlled the effect of the force, while for compressor one the reduced frequency dominated it. The chordwise extent on blade surface influenced by the shock movement was suggested to be about 6% chord length.


Author(s):  
K. Naresh Babu ◽  
A. Kushari ◽  
C. Venkatesan

Due to the trend of increasing power and reducing weight, the fan and compressor blades of turbo machinery might be more sensitive to flutter, which must strictly be avoided in the design process. In order to increase our understanding of the flutter phenomena for fan and compressor cascades, aero-elastic investigations are essential. In the present work experiments were performed in the specifically designed Oscillating Cascade Facility to investigate and quantify the unsteady aerodynamics forces and moments acting on a blade in a linear cascade of blades when the instrumented blade is stationary and the two adjacent blades on both sides of the instrumented blade are executing torsion-mode oscillations about their mid-chord. A 5-component strain gage balance was used to measure the unsteady aerodynamic forces on the model blade. The forces were measured for six inter-blade phase angles (i.e., the phase angle between the moving blade motions at a given frequency where the central blade is stationary) at low subsonic conditions, different reduced frequencies and different stagger. The time-variant forces were analyzed and variation of lift and drag coefficients for different inter-blade phase angles and reduced frequencies were plotted. The experimental results indicate that the inter-blade phase angle had a major effect on the variation of the unsteady forces and that reduced frequency had a somewhat less significant effect. Also in order to investigate the influence of the reduced frequency and inter-blade phase angles on the global stability of the cascade and its local contributions, experiments were performed for different reduced frequencies and phase angles. At the higher inter-blade phase angles (180°) the blade remains aerodynamically stable at 0° stagger, but the stability reduces at higher stagger angles. The blade is usually unstable when the interblade phase angle is 0°. At different flow conditions, some of the inter-blade phase angles appear to be aerodynamically unstable.


1989 ◽  
Vol 111 (3) ◽  
pp. 222-230 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Kobayashi

The effects of shock waves on the aerodynamic instability of annular cascade oscillation were examined for rows of both turbine and compressor blades, using a controlled-oscillating annular cascade test facility and a method for accurately measuring time-variant pressures on blade surfaces. The nature of the effects and blade surface extent affected by shock waves were clarified over a wide range of Mach number, reduced frequency, and interblade phase angle. Significant unsteady aerodynamic forces were found generated by shock wave movement, which markedly affected the occurrence of compressor cascade flutter as well as turbine cascade flutter. For the turbine cascade, the interblade phase angle significantly controlled the effect of force, while for the compressor cascade the reduced frequency controlled it. The chordwise extent of blade surface affected by shock movement was estimated to be approximately 6 percent chord length.


1978 ◽  
Vol 100 (4) ◽  
pp. 664-675 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Fleeter ◽  
R. L. Jay ◽  
W. A. Bennett

An experimental investigation was conducted to determine the fluctuating pressure distribution on a stationary vane row, with the primary source of excitation being the wakes from the upstream rotor blades. This was accomplished in a large scale, low speed, single stage research compressor. The forcing function, the velocity defect created by the rotor wakes, was measured with a crossed hot-wire probe. The aerodynamic response on the vanes was measured by means of flush mounted high response dynamic pressure transducers. The dynamic data were analyzed to determine the chordwise distribution of the dynamic pressure coefficient and aerodynamic phase lag as referenced to a transverse gust at the vane leading edge. Vane suction and pressure surface data as well as the pressure difference across the vane were obtained for reduced frequency values ranging from 3.65 to 16.80 and for an incidence angle range of 35.5 deg. The pressure difference data were correlated with a state-of-the-art aerodynamic cascade transverse gust analysis. The correlation was quite good for all reduced frequency values for small values of incidence. For the more negative incidence angle data points, it was shown that a convected wake phenomena not modeled in the analysis existed. Both the first and second harmonic unsteady pressure differential magnitude data decrease in the chordwise direction. The second harmonic magnitude data attains a value very nearly zero at the vane trailing edge transducer location, while the first harmonic data is still finite, albeit small, at this location. That the magnitude of the unsteady pressure differential data approaches zero near to the trailing edge, particularly the second harmonic data which has reduced frequency values to 16.8, is significant in that it reflects upon the validity of the Kutta condition for unsteady flows.


1978 ◽  
Vol 100 (1) ◽  
pp. 111-120 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. O. Carta ◽  
A. O. St. Hilaire

Tests were performed on a linear cascade of airfoils oscillating in pitch about their midchords at frequencies up to 17 cps, at free-stream velocities up to 200 ft/s, and at interblade phase angles of 0 deg and 45 deg, under conditions of high aerodynamic loading. The measured data included unsteady time histories from chordwise pressure transducers and from chordwise hot films. Unsteady normal force coefficient, moment coefficient, and aerodynamic work per cycle of oscillation were obtained from integrals of the pressure data, and indications of the nature and extent of the separation phenomenon were obtained from an analysis of the hot-film response data. The most significant finding of this investigation is that a change in interblade phase angle from 0 deg to 45 deg radically alters the character of the unsteady blade loading (which governs its motion in a free system) from stable to unstable. Furthermore, the stability or instability is governed primarily by the phase angle of the pressure distribution (relative to the blade motion) over the forward 10–15 percent of the blade chord. Reduced frequency and mean incidence angle changes were found to have a relatively minor effect on stability for the range of parameters tested.


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