Multi-stage analysis and design of power turbines using APNASA

2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiang Luo ◽  
Chris Twardochleb ◽  
Ulrich Stang ◽  
Eli Razinsky
Author(s):  
Johann Gross ◽  
Malte Krack ◽  
Harald Schoenenborn

The prediction of aerodynamic blade forcing is a very important topic in turbomachinery design. Usually, the wake from the upstream blade row and the potential field from the downstream blade row are considered as the main causes for excitation, which in conjunction with relative rotation of neighboring blade rows, give rise to dynamic forcing of the blades. In addition to those two mechanisms so-called Tyler-Sofrin (or scattered or spinning) modes, which refer to the acoustic interaction with blade rows further up- or downstream, may have a significant impact on blade forcing. In particular, they lead to considerable blade-to-blade variations of the aerodynamic loading. In part 1 of the paper a study of these effects is performed on the basis of a quasi 3D multi-row and multi-passage compressor configuration. Part 2 of the paper proposes a method to analyze the interaction of the aerodynamic forcing asymmetries with the already well-studied effects of random mistuning stemming from blade-to-blade variations of structural properties. Based on a finite element model of a sector, the equations governing the dynamic behavior of the entire bladed disk can be efficiently derived using substructuring techniques. The disk substructure is assumed as cyclically symmetric, while the blades exhibit structural mistuning and linear aeroelastic coupling. In order to avoid the costly multi-stage analysis, the variation of the aerodynamic loading is treated as an epistemic uncertainty, leading to a stochastic description of the annular force pattern. The effects of structural mistuning and stochastic aerodynamic forcing are first studied separately and then in a combined manner for a blisk of a research compressor without and with aeroelastic coupling.


2022 ◽  
Vol 48 ◽  
pp. 104022
Author(s):  
Jingguo Xue ◽  
Xueliang Hou ◽  
Jianli Zhou ◽  
Xiaobing Liu ◽  
Yu Guo

2020 ◽  
pp. 146144482092367
Author(s):  
Samantha Shorey ◽  
Benjamin Mako Hill ◽  
Samuel Woolley

Although socializing is a powerful driver of youth engagement online, platforms struggle to leverage social engagement to promote learning. We seek to understand this dynamic using a multi-stage analysis of over 14,000 comments on Scratch, an online platform designed to support learning about programming. First, we inductively develop the concept of “participatory debugging”—a practice in which users learn through the process of collaborative technical troubleshooting. Second, we use a content analysis to establish how common the practice is on Scratch. Third, we conduct a qualitative analysis of user activity over time and identify three factors that serve as social antecedents of participatory debugging: (1) sustained community, (2) identifiable problems, and (3) what we call “topic porousness” to describe conversations that are able to span multiple topics. We integrate these findings in a framework that highlights a productive tension between the desire to promote learning and the interest-driven sub-communities that drive user engagement in many new media environments.


1971 ◽  
Vol 93 (2) ◽  
pp. 656-658
Author(s):  
H. Libman ◽  
S. Shaanan

An experimental and theoretical study of a “multi-stage torsion spring” is presented. The spring is designed for high torsion (25 kg-m), considerable angular displacement (±20 deg), space limitations, considerable service life, linearity, and hysteresis restrictions. Theoretical and experimental data are found to be in very close agreement.


Author(s):  
Kevin R. Anderson ◽  
Trevor Steele

Abstract This paper presents the analysis and design of a compressor for application to a Fatty Acid Methyl Ester (FAME) Methyl Linoleate (MLL) bio-refrigerant cascade working cycle. This working fluid is being used in the topping cycle of an active electronics payload cooling system design to operate at elevated temperatures and pressures such as those witnessed by a Venus lander. The twin-screw, three-stage compressor operates at escalated temperatures of approximately 520 °C (960 °F). The total compressor power of 143.4 W is shared as 43.5 W, 47.7 W, and 53.3 W over stages 1, 2, and 3, respectively. The screw compressor is baselined with a D = 1 inch diameter rotor and an L/D (stroke/bore) ratio of L/D = 2 per stage. The compression ratio corresponds to a volume ratio of 6.5. The swept volume for a 4+6 rotor configuration is estimated to be 1.13 CFM at 2000 RPM with an asymmetric profile and no leakage. The volumetric efficiency of the compressor is estimated to be on the order of 80% due to the higher molecular weight of the FAME/MLL working fluid. The SCORG turbomachinery software is used to verify the thermodynamics analysis and affords a volumetric displacement of 0.025 L/rev at 2000 RPM and 80% adiabatic efficiency.


Genomics ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 93 (3) ◽  
pp. 235-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tingting Li ◽  
Jian Huang ◽  
Ying Jiang ◽  
Yan Zeng ◽  
Fuchu He ◽  
...  

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