scholarly journals Numerical Simulation of 3D Viscous Flow in a Linear Compressor Cascade With Tip Clearance

1994 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shun Kang ◽  
Charles Hirsch

A Navier-Stokes solver is applied to investigate the 3D viscous flow in a low speed linear compressor cascade with tip clearance at design and off-design conditions with two different meshes. The algebraic turbulence model of Baldwin-Lomax is used for closure. Relative motion between the blades and wall is simulated for one flow coefficient. Comparisons with experimental data, including flow structure, static and total pressures, velocity profiles, secondary flows and vorticity, are presented for the stationary wall case. It is shown that the code predicts well the flow structure observed in experiments and shows the details of the tip leakage flow and the leading edge horseshoe vortex.

1996 ◽  
Vol 118 (3) ◽  
pp. 492-502 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Kang ◽  
C. Hirsch

A Navier–Stokes solver is applied to investigate the three-dimensional viscous flow in a low-speed linear compressor cascade with tip clearance at design and off-design conditions with two different meshes. The algebraic turbulence model of Baldwin–Lomax is used for closure. Relative motion between the blades and wall is simulated for one flow coefficient. Comparisons with experimental data, including flow structure, static and total pressures, velocity profiles, secondary flows and vorticity, are presented for the stationary wall case. It is shown that the code predicts well the flow structure observed in experiments and shows the details of the tip leakage flow and the leading edge horseshoe vortex.


1993 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Kang ◽  
C. Hirsch

Tip leakage flow in a linear compressor cascade of NACA 65-1810 profiles is investigated, for tip clearance levels of 1.0, 2.0 and 3.25 percent of chord at design and off-design flow conditions. Data, velocity and pressures, are collected from three transverse sections inside tip clearance and sixteen sections within flow passage. Tip separation vortex influence is identified from the data. Leakage flow mixing is clearly present inside the clearance and has a significant influence on the internal loss.


1994 ◽  
Vol 116 (4) ◽  
pp. 657-664 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Kang ◽  
C. Hirsch

Tip leakage flow in a linear compressor cascade of NACA 65-1810 profiles is investigated, for tip clearance levels of 1.0, 2.0, and 3.25 percent of chord at design and off-design flow conditions. Velocity and pressure data are collected from three transverse sections inside tip clearance and sixteen sections within flow passage. Tip separation vortex influence is identified from the data. Leakage flow mixing is clearly present inside the clearance and has a significant influence on the internal loss.


Author(s):  
Wei Ma ◽  
Feng Gao ◽  
Xavier Ottavy ◽  
Lipeng Lu ◽  
A. J. Wang

Recently bimodal phenomenon in corner separation has been found by Ma et al. (Experiments in Fluids, 2013, doi:10.1007/s00348-013-1546-y). Through detailed and accurate experimental results of the velocity flow field in a linear compressor cascade, they discovered two aperiodic modes exist in the corner separation of the compressor cascade. This phenomenon reflects the flow in corner separation is high intermittent, and large-scale coherent structures corresponding to two modes exist in the flow field of corner separation. However the generation mechanism of the bimodal phenomenon in corner separation is still unclear and thus needs to be studied further. In order to obtain instantaneous flow field with different unsteadiness and thus to analyse the mechanisms of bimodal phenomenon in corner separation, in this paper detached-eddy simulation (DES) is used to simulate the flow field in the linear compressor cascade where bimodal phenomenon has been found in previous experiment. DES in this paper successfully captures the bimodal phenomenon in the linear compressor cascade found in experiment, including the locations of bimodal points and the development of bimodal points along a line that normal to the blade suction side. We infer that the bimodal phenomenon in the corner separation is induced by the strong interaction between the following two facts. The first is the unsteady upstream flow nearby the leading edge whose angle and magnitude fluctuate simultaneously and significantly. The second is the high unsteady separation in the corner region.


Author(s):  
Gherardo Zambonini ◽  
Xavier Ottavy

The aim of this work is to present detailed unsteady pressure measurements of three-dimensional flow field in a NACA 65 linear compressor cascade. Chord-based Reynolds number of 382000 and incidence angle of 4 degrees were chosen as target configuration of the rig, which clearly presents the corner separation phenomenon at the juncture of the blade suction side and the end-wall. Concerning the experiments, a characterization of the mean and fluctuating component of wall static pressure on the surface of a specially developed blade is achieved at first. This fluctuating component is investigated utilizing nineteen high sensitivity condenser microphones plugged into blade cavities which have been carefully calibrated. Transfer functions obtained by calibration are exploited to reconstruct the time-dependent pressure signal and finally statistics, conditional ensemble averages, coherence and spectra analyses of fluctuations are presented in order to investigate the unsteady characteristics of the corner separation. High values of root mean square are individuated near the leading edge and in the separation region on the suction surface of the blade. Skewness and kurtosis show an intermittent behavior of the separation onset, which moves upstream and downstream on the suction surface. This intermittency of the separation line is probably linked with the existence of a bimodal behavior of the size of the corner separation. The analyses of coherence and conditional ensemble average between the signals at the leading edge and at the onset of the separation suggest a critical influence of angle and velocity of the incoming end-wall boundary layer on the positive pressure signatures of the shear layer, which characterize the inception of the separation.


2013 ◽  
Vol 135 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua D. Cameron ◽  
Matthew A. Bennington ◽  
Mark H. Ross ◽  
Scott C. Morris ◽  
Juan Du ◽  
...  

Experimental and numerical studies were conducted to investigate tip-leakage flow and its relationship to stall in a transonic axial compressor. The computational fluid dynamics (CFD) results were used to identify the existence of an interface between the approach flow and the tip-leakage flow. The experiments used a surface-streaking visualization method to identify the time-averaged location of this interface as a line of zero axial shear stress at the casing. The axial position of this line, denoted xzs, moved upstream with decreasing flow coefficient in both the experiments and computations. The line was consistently located at the rotor leading edge plane at the stalling flow coefficient, regardless of inflow boundary condition. These results were successfully modeled using a control volume approach that balanced the reverse axial momentum flux of the tip-leakage flow with the momentum flux of the approach fluid. Nonuniform tip clearance measurements demonstrated that movement of the interface upstream of the rotor leading edge plane leads to the generation of short length scale rotating disturbances. Therefore, stall was interpreted as a critical point in the momentum flux balance of the approach flow and the reverse axial momentum flux of the tip-leakage flow.


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