A Ground Test Method and the Error Analysis of the Heat Exchanger in the Intake of Aircraft

2014 ◽  
Vol 1025-1026 ◽  
pp. 137-142
Author(s):  
Yu Fei Cai ◽  
Chun Ling Zhu ◽  
Su Qing Shi

A ground test method of the heat exchanger in intake is proposed using simplified method. A theoretical analysis was carried out to investigate its influences on the performance of heat exchanger. The results show that the performance of heat exchanger keeps invariable with the density of gas if the temperature and mass flow rate remain the same. The error caused by substituting total pressure of free stream for inlet entrance was analyzed and the results show that for subsonic inlet the experimental error is relatively small and the experimental error increasing rapidly as flight Mach number exceed 1.2 and flight altitude has little impact on the experimental error while the error increasing slightly with flight altitude.

Author(s):  
Srinivasan Karuppannan ◽  
Dalton Maurya ◽  
Raju D. Navindgi ◽  
N. Muthuveerappan

Relight envelope of the combustor needs to be experimentally generated and established during the design and development of an aero gas turbine engine. Usually, during development stage of engine, compressor characteristics are not readily available at such low speeds and hence, it becomes difficult to specify the combustor inlet conditions such as pressure, temperature and Mach number during the engine light up studies. This paper compares the experimental test data generated on an annular combustor for windmill conditions during stand-alone mode and engine level tests under simulated flight conditions. The stand-alone combustor trials were conducted for the range of total pressure and temperature relevant to the flight altitude and Mach number range. During the engine level tests, combustor relight tests were conducted under simulated conditions (ISA+15) for altitudes ranging from 5.5 km to 10 km, flight Mach numbers in the range of 0.45 to 0.80. In this paper, effect of altitude and flight Mach number on the windmill spool speed, combustor pressure and temperature are studied.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Phil Ligrani

The influences of a variety of different physical phenomena are described as they affect the aerodynamic performance of turbine airfoils in compressible, high-speed flows with either subsonic or transonic Mach number distributions. The presented experimental and numerically predicted results are from a series of investigations which have taken place over the past 32 years. Considered are (i) symmetric airfoils with no film cooling, (ii) symmetric airfoils with film cooling, (iii) cambered vanes with no film cooling, and (iv) cambered vanes with film cooling. When no film cooling is employed on the symmetric airfoils and cambered vanes, experimentally measured and numerically predicted variations of freestream turbulence intensity, surface roughness, exit Mach number, and airfoil camber are considered as they influence local and integrated total pressure losses, deficits of local kinetic energy, Mach number deficits, area-averaged loss coefficients, mass-averaged total pressure loss coefficients, omega loss coefficients, second law loss parameters, and distributions of integrated aerodynamic loss. Similar quantities are measured, and similar parameters are considered when film-cooling is employed on airfoil suction surfaces, along with film cooling density ratio, blowing ratio, Mach number ratio, hole orientation, hole shape, and number of rows of holes.


Author(s):  
Savvas S. Xanthos ◽  
Yiannis Andreopoulos

The interaction of traveling expansion waves with grid-generated turbulence was investigated in a large-scale shock tube research facility. The incident shock and the induced flow behind it passed through a rectangular grid, which generated a nearly homogeneous and nearly isotropic turbulent flow. As the shock wave exited the open end of the shock tube, a system of expansion waves was generated which traveled upstream and interacted with the grid-generated turbulence; a type of interaction free from streamline curvature effects, which cause additional effects on turbulence. In this experiment, wall pressure, total pressure and velocity were measured indicating a clear reduction in fluctuations. The incoming flow at Mach number 0.46 was expanded to a flow with Mach number 0.77 by an applied mean shear of 100 s−1. Although the strength of the generated expansion waves was mild, the effect on damping fluctuations on turbulence was clear. A reduction of in the level of total pressure fluctuations by 20 per cent was detected in the present experiments.


Author(s):  
Wu Guochuan ◽  
Zhuang Biaonan ◽  
Guo Bingheng

24 double circular are tandem blade cascades of three different chord-ratios were investigated under different displacements in peripheral and axial direction. The inlet Mach number was 0.3. The Reynolds number based on blade chord was 2.7×105. The characteristics of the tandem blade cascades, such as the dependence of turning angle and coefficient of total pressure loss on incidence angle were obtained. The ranges of main geometrical parameters under optimal conditions were recommended.


Author(s):  
Toyotaka Sonoda ◽  
Markus Olhofer ◽  
Toshiyuki Arima ◽  
Bernhard Sendhoff

In this study, a numerical shape optimization method based on evolutionary algorithms coupled with a verified CFD solver has been applied to the ambitious target of a shock free 2-D supersonic inlet Mach number compressor cascade. The study is based on the DLR-PAV-1.5 supersonic compressor cascade designed by the pre-compression blading concept. The DLR cascade airfoil has been optimized using a verified CFD code. A superior performance of the optimized supersonic cascade with about 24% reduction of the total pressure loss coefficient compared to the original cascade has been realized. The flow mechanisms observable around the blade with improved performance and the resulting design concept are discussed in this paper.


2018 ◽  
Vol 857 ◽  
pp. 878-906 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Nagata ◽  
T. Nonomura ◽  
S. Takahashi ◽  
Y. Mizuno ◽  
K. Fukuda

In this study, direct numerical simulation of the flow around a rotating sphere at high Mach and low Reynolds numbers is conducted to investigate the effects of rotation rate and Mach number upon aerodynamic force coefficients and wake structures. The simulation is carried out by solving the three-dimensional compressible Navier–Stokes equations. A free-stream Reynolds number (based on the free-stream velocity, density and viscosity coefficient and the diameter of the sphere) is set to be between 100 and 300, the free-stream Mach number is set to be between 0.2 and 2.0, and the dimensionless rotation rate defined by the ratio of the free-stream and surface velocities above the equator is set between 0.0 and 1.0. Thus, we have clarified the following points: (1) as free-stream Mach number increased, the increment of the lift coefficient due to rotation was reduced; (2) under subsonic conditions, the drag coefficient increased with increase of the rotation rate, whereas under supersonic conditions, the increment of the drag coefficient was reduced with increasing Mach number; and (3) the mode of the wake structure becomes low-Reynolds-number-like as the Mach number is increased.


2021 ◽  
Vol 91 (4) ◽  
pp. 558
Author(s):  
А.В. Потапкин ◽  
Д.Ю. Москвичев

The problem of a sonic boom generated by a slender body and local regions of supersonic flow heating is solved numerically. The free-stream Mach number of the air flow is 2. The calculations are performed by a combined method of phantom bodies. The results show that local heating of the incoming flow can ensure sonic boom mitigation. The sonic boom level depends on the number of local regions of incoming flow heating. One region of flow heating can reduce the sonic boom by 20% as compared to the sonic boom level in the cold flow. Moreover, consecutive heating of the incoming flow in two regions provides sonic boom reduction by more than 30%.


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