scholarly journals The Effect of Adding Roughness and Thickness to a Transonic Axial Compressor Rotor

Author(s):  
Kenneth L. Suder ◽  
Rodrick V. Chima ◽  
Anthony J. Strazisar ◽  
William B. Roberts

The performance deterioration of a high speed axial compressor rotor due to surface roughness and airfoil thickness variations is reported. A 0.025 mm (0.001 in.) thick rough coating with a surface finish of 2.54–3.18 RMS μm (100–125 RMS microinches) is applied to the pressure and suction surface of the rotor blades. Coating both surfaces increases the leading edge thickness by 10% at the hub and 20% at the tip. Application of this coating results in a loss in efficiency of 6 points and a 9% reduction in the pressure ratio across the rotor at an operating condition near the design point. To separate the effects of thickness and roughness, a smooth coating of equal thickness is also applied to the blade. The smooth coating surface finish is 0.254–0.508 RMS μm (10–20 RMS microinches), compared to the bare metal blade surface finish of 0.508 RMS μm (20 RMS microinches). The smooth coating results in approximately half of the performance deterioration found from the rough coating. Both coatings are then applied to different portions of the blade surface to determine which portions of the airfoil are most sensitive to thickness/roughness variations. Aerodynamic performance measurements are presented for a number of coating configurations at 60%, 80%, and 100% of design speed. The results indicate that thickness/roughness over the first 10% of blade chord accounts for virtually all of the observed performance degradation for the smooth coating, compared to about 70% of the observed performance degradation for the rough coating. The performance deterioration is investigated in more detail at design speed using laser anemometer measurements as well as predictions generated by a quasi-3D Navier-Stokes flow solver which includes a surface roughness model. Measurements and analysis are performed on the baseline blade and the full-coverage smooth and rough coatings. The results indicate that coating the blade causes a thickening of the blade boundary layers. The interaction between the rotor passage shock and the thickened suction surface boundary layer then results in an increase in blockage which reduces the diffusion level in the rear half of the blade passage, thus reducing the aerodynamic performance of the rotor.

1995 ◽  
Vol 117 (4) ◽  
pp. 491-505 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. L. Suder ◽  
R. V. Chima ◽  
A. J. Strazisar ◽  
W. B. Roberts

The performance deterioration of a high-speed axial compressor rotor due to surface roughness and airfoil thickness variations is reported. A 0.025 mm (0.001 in.) thick rough coating with a surface finish of 2.54–3.18 rms μm (100–125 rms μin.) is applied to the pressure and suction surface of the rotor blades. Coating both surfaces increases the leading edge thickness by 10 percent at the hub and 20 percent at the tip. Application of this coating results in a loss in efficiency of 6 points and a 9 percent reduction in the pressure ratio across the rotor at an operating condition near the design point. To separate the effects of thickness and roughness, a smooth coating of equal thickness is also applied to the blade. The smooth coating surface finish is 0.254–0.508 rms μm (10–20 rms μin.), compared to the bare metal blade surface finish of 0.508 rms pm (20 rms μin.). The smooth coating results in approximately half of the performance deterioration found from the rough coating. Both coatings are then applied to different portions of the blade surface to determine which portions of the airfoil are most sensitive to thickness/roughness variations. Aerodynamic performance measurements are presented for a number of coating configurations at 60, 80, and 100 percent of design speed. The results indicate that thickness/roughness over the first 2 percent of blade chord accounts for virtually all of the observed performance degradation for the smooth coating, compared to about 70 percent of the observed performance degradation for the rough coating. The performance deterioration is investigated in more detail at design speed using laser anemometer measurements as well as predictions generated by a quasi-three-dimensional Navier–Stokes flow solver, which includes a surface roughness model. Measurements and analysis are performed on the baseline blade and the full-coverage smooth and rough coatings. The results indicate that adding roughness at the blade leading edge causes a thickening of the blade boundary layers. The interaction between the rotor passage shock and the thickened suction surface boundary layer then results in an increase in blockage, which reduces the diffusion level in the rear half of the blade passage, thus reducing the aerodynamic performance of the rotor.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ashima Malhotra ◽  
Shraman Goswami ◽  
Pradeep A M

Abstract The aerodynamic performance of a compressor rotor is known to deteriorate due to surface roughness. It is important to understand this deterioration as it impacts the overall performance of the engine. This paper, therefore, aims to numerically investigate the impact of roughness on the performance of an axial compressor rotor at different rotational speeds. In this numerical study, the simulations are carried out for NASA Rotor37 at 100%, 80%, and 60% of its design speed. with and without roughness on the blade surface. These speeds are chosen because they represent different flow regimes. The front stages of a multistage compressor usually have a supersonic or transonic regime whereas the middle and aft stages have a subsonic regime. Thus, these performance characteristics can give an estimate of the impact on the performance of a multistage compressor. At 100% speed (design speed), the relative flow is supersonic, at 80% of design speed, the relative flow is transonic and at 60% of design speed, the relative flow is subsonic. Detailed flow field investigations are carried out to understand the underlying flow physics. The results indicate that, for the same amount of roughness, the degradation in the performance is maximum at 100% speed where the rotor is supersonic, while the impact is minimum at 60% speed where the rotor is subsonic. Thus, the rotor shock system plays an important role in determining the performance loss due to roughness. It is also observed that the loss increases with increased span for 100% and 80% speeds, but for 60% speed, the loss is almost constant from the hub to the shroud. This is because, with the increased span, the shock strength increases for 100% and 80% speeds, whereas at 60% speed flow is subsonic.


Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. 1230
Author(s):  
Zhaohui Dong ◽  
Jinxin Cheng ◽  
Tian Liu ◽  
Gaolu Si ◽  
Buchuan Ma

A novel parametric control method for the compressor blade, the full-blade surface parametric method, is proposed in this paper. Compared with the traditional parametric method, the method has good surface smoothness and construction convenience while maintaining low-dimensional characteristics, and compared with the semi-blade surface parametric method, the proposed method has a larger degree of geometric deformation freedom and can account for changes in both the suction surface and pressure surface. Compared with the semi-blade surface parametric method, the method only has four more control parameters for each blade, so it does not significantly increase the optimization time. The effectiveness of this novel parametric control method has been verified in the aerodynamic optimization field of compressors by an optimization case of Stage35 (a single-stage transonic axial compressor) under multi-operating conditions. The optimization case has brought the following results: the adiabatic efficiency of the optimized blade at design speed is 1.4% higher than that of the original one and the surge margin 2.9% higher, while at off-design speed, the adiabatic efficiency is improved by 0.6% and the surge margin by 1.3%.


2012 ◽  
Vol 135 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
William B. Roberts ◽  
Scott A. Thorp ◽  
Patricia S. Prahst ◽  
Anthony J. Strazisar

Back-to-back testing was done using NASA fan rotor 67 in the Glenn Research Center W8 Axial Compressor Test Facility. The rotor was baseline tested with a normal industrial root-mean-square (RMS) surface finish of 0.5 μm to 0.6 μm (20 microinches to 24 microinches) at 60, 80, and 100% of design speed. At design speed the tip relative Mach number was 1.38. The blades were then removed from the facility and ultrapolished to a surface finish of 0.125 μm (5 microinch) or less and retested. At 100% speed near the design point, the ultrapolished blades showed approximately 0.3% to 0.5% increase in adiabatic efficiency. The difference was greater near maximum flow. Due to increased relative measurement error at 60 and 80% speed, the performance difference between the normal and ultrapolished blades was indeterminate at these speeds.


2012 ◽  
Vol 225 ◽  
pp. 233-238
Author(s):  
A.M. Pradeep ◽  
R.N. Chiranthan ◽  
Debarshi Dutta ◽  
Bhaskar Roy

In this paper, detailed analysis of the tip flow of an axial compressor rotor blade has been carried out using the commercial CFD package ANSYS CFX. The rotor blade was designed such that it is reminiscent of the rear stages of a multi-stage axial compressor. The effects of varying tip gaps are studied using CFD simulations for overall pressure rise and flow physics of the tip flow at the design point and near the peak pressure point. Rig tests of a low speed research compressor rotor with 3% tip clearance provided characteristics plots for validation of the CFD results. With increase in clearance from 1% to 4%, the rotor pressure rise at the design point was observed to decrease linearly. Increase in the clearance increases the cross flow across the tip; however, the magnitude of the average jet velocity crossing the tip decreases. The tip leakage vortex was observed to stay close to the suction surface with increase in clearance.


1985 ◽  
Vol 107 (2) ◽  
pp. 323-328 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pan-Ming Lu¨ ◽  
Chung-Hua Wu

A set of conservative full potential function equations governing the fluid flow along a given S2 streamsurface in a transonic axial compressor rotor was obtained. By the use of artificial density and a potential function/density iteration, this set of equations can be solved, and the passage shock on the S2 streamsurface can be captured. A computer program for this analysis problem has been developed and used to compute the flow field along a mean S2 streamsurface in the DFVLR transonic axial compressor rotor. A comparison of computed results with DFVLR L2F measurement at 100 percent design speed shows fairly good agreement.


Author(s):  
William B. Roberts ◽  
Patricia S. Prahst ◽  
Scott Thorp ◽  
Anthony J. Strazisar

Back-to-back testing has been done using NASA fan rotor 67 in the Glenn Research Center W8 Axial Compressor Test Facility. The rotor was baseline tested with a normal industrial RMS surface finish of 0.5–0.6 μm (20–24 microinches) at 60, 80 and 100% of design speed. At design speed the tip relative Mach number was 1.38. The blades were then removed from the facility and ultrapolished to a surface finish of 0.125 μm (5 microinch) or less and retested. At 100% speed near the design point, the ultrapolished blades showed approximately 0.3–0.5% increase in adiabatic efficiency. The difference was greater near maximum flow. Due to increased relative measurement error at 60 and 80% speed, the performance difference between the normal and ultrapolished blades was indeterminate at these speeds.


Author(s):  
Masato Furukawa ◽  
Kazuhisa Saiki ◽  
Kazutoyo Yamada ◽  
Masahiro Inoue

The unsteady flow nature caused by the breakdown of the tip leakage vortex in an axial compressor rotor at near-stall conditions has been investigated by unsteady three-dimensional Navier-Stokes flow simulations. The simulations show that the spiral-type breakdown of the tip leakage vortex occurs inside the rotor passage at the near-stall conditions. Downstream of the breakdown onset, the tip leakage vortex twists and turns violently with time, thus interacting with the pressure surface of the adjacent blade. The motion of the vortex and its interaction with the pressure surface are cyclic. The vortex breakdown causes significant changes in the nature of the tip leakage vortex, which result in the anomalous phenomena in the time-averaged flow fields near the tip at the near-stall conditions: no rolling-up of the leakage vortex downstream of the rotor, disappearance of the casing wall pressure trough corresponding to the leakage vortex, large spread of the low-energy fluid accumulating on the pressure side, and large pressure fluctuation on the pressure side. As the flow rate is decreased, the movement of the tip leakage vortex due to its breakdown becomes so large that the leakage vortex interacts with the suction surface as well as the pressure one. The interaction with the suction surface gives rise to the three-dimensional separation of the suction surface boundary layer.


Author(s):  
Bhaskar Roy ◽  
A. M. Pradeep ◽  
A. Suzith ◽  
Dinesh Bhatia ◽  
Aditya Mulmule

The present study involves simulation of a single compressor rotor with a high hub-to-tip ratio blade. The study includes the effect of variation of tip gap, of tip shapes and of inlet axial velocity profiles, with inflows simulated similar to that of a typical rear stage environment of a multi-stage axial compressor. Numerical studies were carried out on a baseline rotor blade (without sweep or dihedral) and then on blades with sweep and dihedral applied at the tip region of the rotor. Simulation of these part-span sweep and dihedral shapes are done to study their effects on blade tip leakage flow. Results show that sweep and dihedral, in some cases, produce favorable tip flows, improving blade aerodynamics. Positive dihedral caused weakening of tip leakage vortex at design point as well as at peak pressure point. Negative dihedral may help postpone stall at the high pressure, low flow operation. Backward sweep weakened tip vortex at the design point. Contrary to some of the studies reported earlier forward sweep, when applied at the tip region, showed performance deterioration over the most of the operating range of the high hub-to-tip rotor.


Author(s):  
Shraman Goswami ◽  
M. Govardhan

Abstract High performance and increased operating range of an axial compressor is obtained by employing three-dimensional design features, such as sweep, as well as shroud casing treatments, such as circumferential casing grooves. A number of different rotor blades with different amounts of sweeps and different sweep starting spans are studied at design speed. Different swept rotors, including zero sweep, are derived from Rotor37 rotor geometry. In the current study the best performing rotor with sweep is analyzed at part speed. The analyses were done for baseline rotor, devoid of any sweep, and with and without circumferential casing grooves. A detailed flow field investigation and performance comparison is presented to understand the changes in flow field at part speed. It is found that that at 100% design speed, stall margin improvement is achived by both sweep and casing grooves, but at 90% speed improvement in stall margin due to sacing groove is very minimal over and above the gain due to sweep. It is also noticed that due to reduced shock loss efficiency is higher at 90% speed than at 100% speed.


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