Turbine Engine Rotor Dynamic Evaluation. Volume II. Engine and Test Rig Balancing.

1978 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Davis ◽  
J. Tessarzik ◽  
R. A. Rio
Author(s):  
Erik E. Swanson ◽  
Hooshang Heshmat

An experimental program was conducted on a large compliant surface foil bearing to document its performance. This large single pad foil bearing is 100 mm in diameter, and was operated at speeds of up to 30,000 RPM. Operation at 22,000 RPM with a measured load of 4190 N was also demonstrated. During coastdown runs from 30,000 RPM, maximum amplitudes of shaft vibration did not exceed 7.6 μm while passing through the two rigid shaft modes of the system. Thermal performance of the bearing was also in accord with previously documented foil bearings. This testing also demonstrates the practicality of scaling smaller foil bearing designs to the large bearings required for larger turbomachinery. To enhance the practical application of the results, the test rig shaft was designed to simulate a small gas turbine engine rotor.


Author(s):  
Henry Jones

A technique for measuring turbine engine rotor blade vibrations has been developed as an alternative to conventional strain-gage measurement systems. Light probes are mounted on the periphery of the engine rotor casing to sense the precise blade passing times of each blade in the row. The timing data are processed on-line to identify (1) individual blade vibration amplitudes and frequencies, (2) interblade phases, (3) system modal definitions, and (4) blade static deflection. This technique has been effectively applied to both turbine engine rotors and plant rotating machinery.


2021 ◽  
Vol 103 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
K Joseph Shibu ◽  
K Shankar ◽  
Ch. Kanna Babu ◽  
Girish K Degaonkar

Meccanica ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 51 (7) ◽  
pp. 1571-1581 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margherita Forlani ◽  
Nicola Sancisi ◽  
Michele Conconi ◽  
Vincenzo Parenti-Castelli

Author(s):  
Alireza Kalantari ◽  
Elliot Sullivan-Lewis ◽  
Vincent McDonell

Because flashback is a key operability issue associated with low emission combustion of high hydrogen content fuels, design tools to predict flashback propensity are of interest. Such a design tool has been developed by the authors to predict boundary layer flashback using non-dimensional parameters. The tool accounts for the thermal coupling between the flame and burner rim and was derived using detailed studies carried out in a test rig at elevated temperature and pressure. The present work evaluates the applicability of the tool to a commercial 65 kW micro turbine generator (MTG). Two sets of data are evaluated. One set is obtained using the combustor, removed from the engine, which has been configured to operate like it does in the engine but at atmospheric pressure and various preheat temperatures. The second set of data is from a combustor operated as it normally would in the commercial engine. In both configurations, studies are carried out with various amounts of hydrogen added to either natural gas or carbon monoxide. The previously developed model is able to capture the measured flashback tendencies in both configurations. In addition, the model is used to interpret flashback phenomena at high pressures and temperatures in the context of the engine conditions. An increase in pressure for a given preheat temperature and velocity reduces the equivalence ratio at which flashback occurs and increases the tip temperature due to lower quenching distance. The dependency of the flashback propensity on the injector tip temperature is enhanced with an increase in pressure. The variation of critical velocity gradient with equivalence ratio for a constant preheat temperature is more pronounced at higher pressures. In summary, the model developed using the high pressure test rig is able to predict flashback tendencies for a commercial gas turbine engine and can thus serve as an effective design tool for identifying when flashback is likely to occur for a given geometry and condition.


Author(s):  
R. J. Trippett

A unique rotor dynamic data acquisition system is described to control the gathering and display of rotor displacement data measured at rotor speeds up to 70 000 r/min. The first published results measured with this system are demonstrated with plots of measured transient shaft motion after a sudden increase in shaft imbalance at speeds up to 44 500 r/min. The displacements of the rotor in the forms of Lissajous plots with and without a squeeze film damper are presented at four axial shaft locations below and above the shafts critical speeds. The blade-loss, dynamic test rig is also described.


Author(s):  
Akira Saito ◽  
Matthew P. Castanier ◽  
Christophe Pierre

An efficient methodology for predicting the nonlinear forced vibration response of a turbine engine rotor with a cracked blade is presented and used to investigate the effects of the damage on the forced response. The effects of small, random blade-to-blade differences (mistuning) and rotation on the forced response are also considered. Starting with a finite element model, a hybrid-interface method of Component Mode Synthesis (CMS) is employed to generate a reduced-order model (ROM). The crack surfaces are retained as physical degrees of freedom in the ROM so that the forces due to contact interaction in three-dimensional space can be properly calculated. The resulting nonlinear equations of steady-state motion are solved by applying an alternating frequency/time-domain method, which is much more computationally efficient than traditional time integration. Using this reduced-order modeling and analysis framework, the effects of the cracked blade on the system response are investigated for various mistuning levels and rotation speeds. First, the advantages of the selected hybrid-interface CMS method are discussed and demonstrated. Then, the resonant frequency shift associated with the stiffness loss due to the crack, as well as vibration localization about the cracked blade are thoroughly investigated. In addition, the results of the nonlinear ROMs are compared to those obtained with linear ROMs as well as blade-alone ROMs. It is shown that several key system vibration characteristics are not captured by the simpler models, but that some insight into the system response can be gained from the blade-alone response predictions. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that while the effects of the crack often appear similar those of mistuning, differences between the effects of mistuning and damage can be discerned by observing and comparing the response across different families of system modes.


1977 ◽  
Vol 9 (10) ◽  
pp. 1257-1261
Author(s):  
O. I. Marusii ◽  
Yu. I. Koval' ◽  
E. N. Kaspruk ◽  
V. N. Torgov

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