Investigation on the Potential of Hybrid Aero-Engine System with Electromagnetic-Driving Fan

Author(s):  
Keiichi Okai ◽  
Hitoshi Fujiwara ◽  
Hiroshi Nomura ◽  
Takeshi Tagashira ◽  
Ryoji Yanagi
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Yanhong Ma ◽  
Chong Cao ◽  
Dayi Zhang ◽  
Zhichao Liang ◽  
Jie Hong

A mechanical model for rub-impact was proposed considering the additional constraints caused by rubbing. Based on the constraint mechanical model, some characteristics of response such as resonant range expansion, contact unstability and amplitude jump during rubbing were studied. The influences of typical parameters on rotor’s vibration response with rub constraint were also evaluated. The result reveals that additional constraint stiffness causes the unstable contact range and the resonant range to be wider. While greater friction coefficient between rotor and casing results in smaller response and narrower resonant range. A simplified dynamic model for the aero-engine was built, which takes the constraint effect into account. The numerical simulation result shows that in addition to the resonant range expansion caused by the constraint, the rotor response is also closely related to rubbing location and mode shapes. The rotor response shows a feature of quasi-periodic in slight rubbing, while the rotor motion tends unstable in heavy rubbing.


1990 ◽  
Author(s):  
KENICHI KAJIWARA ◽  
MINORU KATADA
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 132-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wang Tao ◽  
Ding Huapeng ◽  
Tang Jie ◽  
Wang Hao

Author(s):  
Adam Robinson ◽  
Carol Eastwick ◽  
Herve´ Morvan

Within an aero-engine bearing chamber oil is provided to components to lubricate and cool. This oil must be efficiently removed (scavenged) from the chamber to ensure it does not overheat and degrade. Bearing chambers typically contain a sump section with an exit pipe leading to a scavenge pump. In this paper a simplified geometry of a sump section, here simply made of a radial off-take port on a walled inclined plane, is analysed computationally. This paper follows on work presented within GT2008-50634. In the previous paper it was shown that simple gravity draining from a static head of liquid cold be modelled accurately, for what was akin to a deep sump situation fond in integrated gear boxes for example. The work within this paper will show that the draining of flow perpendicular to a moving film can be modelled. This situation is similar to the arrangements found in transmission bearing chambers. The case modelled is of a walled gravity driven film running down a plane with a circular off-take port, this replicates experimental work similar to that reported in GT2008-50632. The commercial computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code, Fluent 6 [1] has been employed for modelling, sing the Volume of Fluid (VOF) approach of Hirt and Nichols [2, 3] to capture the physics of both the film motion and the two phase flow in the scavenge pipe system. Surface tension [4] and a sharpening algorithm [5] are used to complement the representation of the free surface and associated effects. This initial CFD investigation is supported and validated with experimental work, which is only depicted briefly here as it is mainly sued to support the CFD methodology. The case has been modelled in full as well as with the use of a symmetry plane running down the centre of the plane parallel to the channel walls. This paper includes details of the meshing methodology, the boundary conditions sued, which will be shown to be of critical importance to accurate modelling, and the modelling assumptions. Finally, insight into the flow patterns observed for the cases modelled are summarised. The paper further reinforces that CFD is a promising approach to analysing bearing chamber scavenge flows although it can still be relatively costly.


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