The Effect of the Reynolds Number on the Three-Dimensional Flow in a Straight Compressor Cascade

1992 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Vaclav Cyrus
Author(s):  
Václav Cyrus

A straight compressor cascade of aspect ratio 2 was tested in a low speed tunnel within Reynolds number Re1 = 45 000 – 150 000 and inlet flow angle α1 = 35° – 48°. The profile of the blade was NACA 65-12-10. The purpose of the paper was to obtain data on three–dimensional flow in a straight cascade at low Reynolds numbers. Some experimental results on secondary flow have been made into simple correlation relations.


2005 ◽  
Vol 128 (1) ◽  
pp. 166-177 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takayuki Matsunuma

Tip clearance losses represent a major efficiency penalty of turbine blades. This paper describes the effect of tip clearance on the aerodynamic characteristics of an unshrouded axial-flow turbine cascade under very low Reynolds number conditions. The Reynolds number based on the true chord length and exit velocity of the turbine cascade was varied from 4.4×104 to 26.6×104 by changing the velocity of fluid flow. The freestream turbulence intensity was varied between 0.5% and 4.1% by modifying turbulence generation sheet settings. Three-dimensional flow fields at the exit of the turbine cascade were measured both with and without tip clearance using a five-hole pressure probe. Tip leakage flow generated a large high total pressure loss region. Variations in the Reynolds number and freestream turbulence intensity changed the distributions of three-dimensional flow, but had no effect on the mass-averaged tip clearance loss of the turbine cascade.


2009 ◽  
Vol 643 ◽  
pp. 349-362 ◽  
Author(s):  
DAVID LO JACONO ◽  
JUSTIN S. LEONTINI ◽  
MARK C. THOMPSON ◽  
JOHN SHERIDAN

A study of the flow past an oscillatory rotating cylinder has been conducted, where the frequency of oscillation has been matched to the natural frequency of the vortex street generated in the wake of a stationary cylinder, at Reynolds number 300. The focus is on the wake transition to three-dimensional flow and, in particular, the changes induced in this transition by the addition of the oscillatory rotation. Using Floquet stability analysis, it is found that the fine-scale three-dimensional mode that typically dominates the wake at a Reynolds number beyond that at the second transition to three-dimensional flow (referred to as mode B) is suppressed for amplitudes of rotation beyond a critical amplitude, in agreement with past studies. However, the rotation does not suppress the development of three-dimensionality completely, as other modes are discovered that would lead to three-dimensional flow. In particular, the longer-wavelength mode that leads the three-dimensional transition in the wake of a stationary cylinder (referred to as mode A) is left essentially unaffected at low amplitudes of rotation. At higher amplitudes of oscillation, mode A is also suppressed as the two-dimensional near wake changes in character from a single- to a double-row wake; however, another mode is predicted to render the flow three-dimensional, dubbed mode D (for double row). This mode has the same spatio-temporal symmetries as mode A.


Author(s):  
H. D. Schulz ◽  
H. E. Gallus ◽  
B. Lakshminarayana

An experimental study of three-dimensional flow field in an annular compressor cascade with an upstream rotor has been carried out at four different incidences to the stator blade. Blade boundary layers and the three-dimensional flow field at the exit are surveyed using a hot wire sensor and a five hole probe, respectively. The data on the blade boundary layer, passage flow and separated corner flow is presented. The upstream rotor wake has a major influence on the transition, laminar separation bubble, extent of wall/corner flow separation, aerodynamic losses, secondary flow and three-dimensional flow inside the passage. Detailed interpretation of the effects of upstream wakes on the entire passage flow is presented and compared with the data in the absence of a rotor.


2014 ◽  
Vol 748 ◽  
pp. 433-456 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giuliano De Stefano ◽  
Oleg V. Vasilyev

AbstractThe wavelet-based eddy capturing approach is extended to three-dimensional bluff body flows, where the flow geometry is enforced through Brinkman volume penalization. The wavelet-collocation/volume-penalization combined method is applied to the simulation of vortex shedding flow behind an isolated stationary prism with square cross-section. Wavelet-based direct numerical simulation is conducted at low supercritical Reynolds number, where the wake develops fundamental three-dimensional flow structures, while wavelet-based adaptive large-eddy simulation supplied with the one-equation localized dynamic kinetic-energy-based model is performed at moderately high Reynolds number. The present results are in general agreement with experimental findings and numerical solutions provided by classical non-adaptive methods. This study demonstrates that the proposed hybrid methodology for modelling bluff body flows is feasible, accurate and efficient.


1991 ◽  
Vol 113 (3) ◽  
pp. 597-603 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. T. Roeller ◽  
J. Stevens ◽  
B. W. Webb

The flow structure and average heat transfer characteristics of single, isolated three-dimensional protrusions in a flow channel have been investigated experimentally. This configuration has relevance in the electronics industry. The study was designed to identify the influence of the three-dimensional flow around a heated protrusion on its average heat transfer. Heated protrusions varying in width between 0.12 and 1.0 channel widths for a fixed protrusion height and streamwise length were studied in the channel Reynolds number range 500≤Re≤10,000. The channel wall spacing was also varied parametrically between 1.25 and 2.5 streamwise protrusion lengths. The study included both average heat transfer measurements, and detailed local velocity and turbulent flow structure measurements made using laser-Doppler velocimetry. The experimental results show that the Nusselt number increases with both decreasing channel wall spacing and decreasing protrusion width. The increase in heat transfer with decreasing wall spacing is explained by the accelerated flow due to the protrusion-obstructed channel. Increasing Nusselt number with decreasing protrusion width is a result of increased three-dimensional flow and associated turbulent mixing. Both of these flow-related phenomena are illustrated with local mean velocity and turbulence intensity measurements. The presence of recirculation zones both upstream and downstream of the module is revealed. The flow acceleration around the heated protrusions, and three dimensionality of the flow and heat transfer are competing mechanisms; the higher heat transfer due to flow acceleration around the protrusions for larger protrusions goes counter to the trend for higher heat transfer due to increased three-dimensional flow and transport for smaller protrusions. A Nusselt number correlation is developed as a function of channel Reynolds number and protrusion and channel geometric parameters, which describes the tradeoffs discussed.


Author(s):  
Takayuki Matsunuma

Tip clearance losses represent a major efficiency penalty of turbine blades. This paper describes the effect of tip clearance on the aerodynamic characteristics of an unshrouded axial-flow turbine cascade under very low Reynolds number conditions. The Reynolds number based on the true chord length and exit velocity of the turbine cascade was varied from 4.4 × 104 to 26.6 × 104 by changing the velocity of fluid flow. The free-stream turbulence intensity was varied between 0.5% and 4.1% by modifying turbulence generation sheet settings. Three-dimensional flow fields at the exit of the turbine cascade were measured both with and without tip clearance using a five-hole pressure probe. Tip leakage flow generated a large high total pressure loss region. Variations in the Reynolds number and free-stream turbulence intensity changed the distributions of three-dimensional flow, but had no effect on the mass-averaged tip clearance loss of the turbine cascade.


1993 ◽  
Vol 115 (3) ◽  
pp. 435-443 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Kang ◽  
C. Hirsch

Experimental results from a study of the three-dimensional flow in a linear compressor cascade with stationary endwall at design conditions are presented for tip clearance levels of 1.0, 2.0, and 3.3 percent of chord, compared with the no-clearance case. In addition to five-hole probe measurements, extensive surface flow visualizations are conducted. It is observed that for the smaller clearance cases a weak horseshoe vortex forms in the front of the blade leading edge. At all the tip gap cases, a multiple tip vortex structure with three discrete vortices around the midchord is found. The tip leakage vortex core is well defined after the midchord but does not cover a significant area in traverse planes. The presence of the tip leakage vortex results in the passage vortex moving close to the endwall and the suction side.


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