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Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power, Volume 9, Issue 1 (March 2024) – 11 articles

Cover Story (view full-size image): The acoustic properties of a centrifugal pump are studied via 3D CFD simulations and experiments. In both cases, a four-pole approach in the frequency domain is used to determine the pump’s acoustic transmission and excitation characteristics. The results indicate a significant influence of the structural compliance of the volute casing in terms of a fluid–structure interaction. Using a 1D model approach, the effective speed of sound within the pump is calculated to be 607 m/s. This makes the simulation and experimental results for excitation parameters at blade-passing frequency (BPF) quantitatively comparable. A further observation made during the numerical investigations is that the excitation mechanisms at BPF are probably independent of the piping system’s acoustic impedance. View this paper
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23 pages, 8359 KiB  
Review
Turbomachinery Noise Review
by Stéphane Moreau and Michel Roger
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2024, 9(1), 11; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp9010011 - 13 Mar 2024
Viewed by 1024
Abstract
The present paper is aimed at providing an updated review of prediction methods for the aerodynamic noise of ducted rotor–stator stages. Indeed, ducted rotating-blade technologies are in continuous evolution and are increasingly used for aeronautical propulsion units, power generation and air conditioning systems. [...] Read more.
The present paper is aimed at providing an updated review of prediction methods for the aerodynamic noise of ducted rotor–stator stages. Indeed, ducted rotating-blade technologies are in continuous evolution and are increasingly used for aeronautical propulsion units, power generation and air conditioning systems. Different needs are faced from the early design stage to the final definition of a machine. Fast-running, approximate analytical approaches and high-fidelity numerical simulations are considered the best-suited tools for each, respectively. Recent advances are discussed, with emphasis on their pros and cons. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Critical Aspects of Turbomachinery Components and Systems)
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18 pages, 3967 KiB  
Article
Quantification of Blade Vibration Amplitude in Turbomachinery
by Alexandra P. Schneider, Benoit Paoletti, Xavier Ottavy and Christoph Brandstetter
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2024, 9(1), 10; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp9010010 - 04 Mar 2024
Viewed by 1012
Abstract
Experimental monitoring of blade vibration in turbomachinery is typically based on blade-mounted strain gauges. Their signals are used to derive vibration amplitudes which are compared to modal scope limits, including a safety factor. According to industrial guidelines, this factor is chosen conservatively to [...] Read more.
Experimental monitoring of blade vibration in turbomachinery is typically based on blade-mounted strain gauges. Their signals are used to derive vibration amplitudes which are compared to modal scope limits, including a safety factor. According to industrial guidelines, this factor is chosen conservatively to ensure safe operation of the machine. Within the experimental campaign with the open-test-case composite fan ECL5/CATANA, which is representative for modern lightweight Ultra High Bypass Ratio (UHBR) architectures, measurements close to the stability limit have been conducted. Investigation of phenomena like non-synchronous vibrations (NSV) and rotating stall require a close approach to the stability limit and hence demand for accurate (real-time) quantification of vibration amplitudes to ensure secure operation without exhaustive safety margins. Historically, short-time Fourier transforms of vibration sensors are used, but the complex nature of the mentioned coupled phenomena has an influence on amplitude accuracy, depending on evaluation parameters, as presented in a previous study using fast-response wall-pressure transducers. The present study investigates the sensitivity of blade vibration data to evaluation parameters for different spectral analysis methods and provides guidelines for fast and robust surveillance of critical vibration modes. Full article
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13 pages, 922 KiB  
Article
Low-Noise Airfoils for Turbomachinery Applications: Two Examples of Optimization
by Nicola Casari, Ettore Fadiga, Stefano Oliani, Mattia Piovan, Michele Pinelli and Alessio Suman
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2024, 9(1), 9; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp9010009 - 02 Mar 2024
Viewed by 897
Abstract
Automotive fans, small wind turbines, and manned and unmanned aerial vehicles (MAVs/UAVs) are just a few examples in which noise generated by the flow’s interaction with aerodynamic surfaces is a major concern. The current work shows the potential of a new airfoil shape [...] Read more.
Automotive fans, small wind turbines, and manned and unmanned aerial vehicles (MAVs/UAVs) are just a few examples in which noise generated by the flow’s interaction with aerodynamic surfaces is a major concern. The current work shows the potential of a new airfoil shape to minimize noise generation, maintaining a high lift-to-drag ratio in a prescribed Reynolds regime. This investigation uses a multifidelity approach: a low-fidelity semiempirical model is exploited to evaluate the sound pressure level (SPL). Fast evaluation of a low-cost function enables the computation of a large range of possible profiles, and accuracy is added to the low-fidelity response surface with high-fidelity CFD data. The constraint of maintaining a predefined range of the lift coefficient and lift-to-drag ratio ensures the possibility of using this profile in usual design procedures. Full article
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24 pages, 7241 KiB  
Article
Numerical and Experimental Investigations on the Acoustic Characteristics of a Single-Stage Centrifugal Pump
by Christian Lehr, Pascal Munsch, Romuald Skoda and Andreas Brümmer
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2024, 9(1), 8; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp9010008 - 01 Mar 2024
Viewed by 992
Abstract
The acoustic properties of a single-stage centrifugal pump with low specific speed are investigated by means of compressible 3D CFD simulations (URANS) and experiments. In order to determine the pump’s acoustic transmission and excitation characteristics, a four-pole approach in the frequency domain is [...] Read more.
The acoustic properties of a single-stage centrifugal pump with low specific speed are investigated by means of compressible 3D CFD simulations (URANS) and experiments. In order to determine the pump’s acoustic transmission and excitation characteristics, a four-pole approach in the frequency domain is used. The transmission parameters determined by simulation are compared to experiments in water and air as functions of the Helmholtz number. The results indicate that the acoustic transmission characteristics within the experiments are significantly influenced by the structural compliance of the volute casing in terms of a fluid–structure interaction (FSI). A modelling approach for a one-dimensional representation of the centrifugal pump’s acoustic transmission characteristics in the time and frequency domains is applied to the current pump. As one model parameter, the effective speed of sound in the 1D model needs to be reduced to 607 ms1 to account for the FSI. The agreement of the simulation results and the experiments underlines the above statement about the influence of the FSI. In a last step, the acoustic excitation parameter, depicted as monopole and dipole amplitudes, at two different blade-passing frequencies (fBP[111;169] Hz) are determined for several operating points. Especially for dipole amplitudes, a good agreement between experiments and simulations can be seen. The monopole amplitudes are also of similar orders of magnitude, but show stronger deviations. The cause of discrepancies between the 3D CFD simulations and experiments is believed to be the neglected influence of the FSI and surface roughness as well as the inaccurate reproduction of flow separation at the volute’s tongue due to the use of wall functions. A final important observation made during the numerical investigations is that the excitation mechanisms at the blade-passing frequency are probably independent of the piping system’s acoustic impedance. Full article
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15 pages, 1794 KiB  
Article
Multidisciplinary Automation in Design of Turbine Vane Cooling Channels
by Sanjay Nambiar, Anan Ashrabi Ananno, Herman Titus, Anton Wiberg and Mehdi Tarkian
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2024, 9(1), 7; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp9010007 - 19 Feb 2024
Viewed by 1036
Abstract
In the quest to enhance the efficiency of gas turbines, there is a growing demand for innovative solutions to optimize high-pressure turbine blade cooling. However, the traditional methods for achieving this optimization are known for their complexity and time-consuming nature. We present an [...] Read more.
In the quest to enhance the efficiency of gas turbines, there is a growing demand for innovative solutions to optimize high-pressure turbine blade cooling. However, the traditional methods for achieving this optimization are known for their complexity and time-consuming nature. We present an automation framework to streamline the design, meshing, and structural analysis of cooling channels, achieving design automation at both the morphological and topological levels. This framework offers a comprehensive approach for evaluating turbine blade lifetime and enabling multidisciplinary design analyses, emphasizing flexibility in turbine cooling design through high-level CAD templates and knowledge-based engineering. The streamlined automation process, supported by a knowledge base, ensures continuity in both the mesh and structural simulation automations, contributing significantly to advancements in gas turbine technology. Full article
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16 pages, 4850 KiB  
Article
Genetic Algorithm-Based Optimisation of a Double-Wall Effusion Cooling System for a High-Pressure Turbine Nozzle Guide Vane
by Michael van de Noort and Peter T. Ireland
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2024, 9(1), 6; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp9010006 - 02 Feb 2024
Viewed by 1100
Abstract
Double-Wall Effusion Cooling schemes present an opportunity for aeroengine designers to achieve high overall cooling effectiveness and convective cooling efficiency in High-Pressure Turbine blades with reduced coolant usage compared to conventional cooling technologies. This is accomplished by combining impingement, pin-fin and effusion cooling. [...] Read more.
Double-Wall Effusion Cooling schemes present an opportunity for aeroengine designers to achieve high overall cooling effectiveness and convective cooling efficiency in High-Pressure Turbine blades with reduced coolant usage compared to conventional cooling technologies. This is accomplished by combining impingement, pin-fin and effusion cooling. Optimising these cooling schemes is crucial to ensuring that cooling is achieved sufficiently at high-heat-flux regions and not overused at low-heat-flux ones. Due to the high number of design variables employed in these systems, optimisation through the use of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) simulations can be a computationally costly and time-consuming process. This study makes use of a Low-Order Flow Network Model (LOM), developed, validated and presented previously, which quickly assesses the pressure, temperature, mass flow and heat flow distributions through a Double-Wall Effusion Cooling scheme. Results generated by the LOM are used to rapidly produce an ideal cooling system design through the use of an Evolutionary Genetic Algorithm (GA) optimisation process. The objective is to minimise the coolant mass flow whilst maintaining acceptable metal cooling effectiveness around the external surface of the blade and ensuring that the Backflow Margin for all film holes is above a selected threshold. For comparison, a Genetic Aggregation model-based optimisation using CFD simulations in ANSYS Workbench is also conducted. Results for both the reduction of coolant mass flow and the total optimisation runtime are analysed alongside those from the LOM, demonstrating the benefit of rapid low-order solving techniques. Full article
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18 pages, 6331 KiB  
Article
Design of a 130 MW Axial Turbine Operating with a Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Mixture for the SCARABEUS Project
by Abdelrahman S. Abdeldayem, Salma I. Salah, Omar A. Aqel, Martin T. White and Abdulnaser I. Sayma
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2024, 9(1), 5; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp9010005 - 02 Feb 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1350
Abstract
Supercritical carbon dioxide (sCO2) can be mixed with dopants such as titanium tetrachloride (TiCl4), hexafluoro-benzene (C6F6), and sulphur dioxide (SO2) to raise the critical temperature of the working fluid, allowing it to condense [...] Read more.
Supercritical carbon dioxide (sCO2) can be mixed with dopants such as titanium tetrachloride (TiCl4), hexafluoro-benzene (C6F6), and sulphur dioxide (SO2) to raise the critical temperature of the working fluid, allowing it to condense at ambient temperatures in dry solar field locations. The resulting transcritical power cycles have lower compression work and higher thermal efficiency. This paper presents the aerodynamic flow path design of a utility-scale axial turbine operating with an 80–20% molar mix of CO2 and SO2. The preliminary design is obtained using a mean line turbine design method based on the Aungier loss model, which considers both mechanical and rotor dynamic criteria. Furthermore, steady-state 3D computational fluid dynamic (CFD) simulations are set up using the k-ω SST turbulence model, and blade shape optimisation is carried out to improve the preliminary design while maintaining acceptable stress levels. It was found that increasing the number of stages from 4 to 14 increased the total-to-total efficiency by 6.3% due to the higher blade aspect ratio, which reduced the influence of secondary flow losses, as well as the smaller tip diameter, which minimised the tip clearance losses. The final turbine design had a total-to-total efficiency of 92.9%, as predicted by the CFD results, with a maximum stress of less than 260 MPa and a mass flow rate within 1% of the intended cycle’s mass flow rate. Optimum aerodynamic performance was achieved with a 14-stage design where the hub radius and the flow path length are 310 mm and 1800 mm, respectively. Off-design analysis showed that the turbine could operate down to 88% of the design reduced mass flow rate with a total-to-total efficiency of 80%. Full article
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21 pages, 7591 KiB  
Article
Turbulence Measurements Downstream of a Combustor Simulator Designed for Studies on the Combustor–Turbine Interaction
by Andrea Notaristefano, Giacomo Persico and Paolo Gaetani
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2024, 9(1), 4; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp9010004 - 10 Jan 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1317
Abstract
Turbulence intensity impacts the performance of turbine stages and it is an important inlet boundary condition for CFD computations; the knowledge of its value at the turbine inlet is then of paramount importance. In combustor–turbine interaction experimental studies, combustor simulators replace real combustors [...] Read more.
Turbulence intensity impacts the performance of turbine stages and it is an important inlet boundary condition for CFD computations; the knowledge of its value at the turbine inlet is then of paramount importance. In combustor–turbine interaction experimental studies, combustor simulators replace real combustors and allow for the introduction of flow perturbation at the turbine inlet. Therefore, the turbulence intensity of a combustor simulator used in a wide experimental campaign at Politecnico di Milano is characterized using a hot-wire probe in a blow-down wind tunnel, and the results are compared to URANS CFD computations. This combustor simulator can generate a combination of a swirl profile with a steady/unsteady temperature disturbance. In the cold unsteady disturbance case, hot-wire measurements are phase-averaged at the frequency of the injected perturbation. The combustor simulator turbulence intensity is measured at two different axial positions to understand its evolution. Full article
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15 pages, 5194 KiB  
Article
An Experimental Database for the Analysis of Bursting of a Laminar Separation Bubble
by Matteo Dellacasagrande, Davide Lengani, Daniele Simoni and Marina Ubaldi
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2024, 9(1), 3; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp9010003 - 10 Jan 2024
Viewed by 1307
Abstract
The bursting phenomenon consists in the switch of a laminar separation bubble from a short to a long configuration. In the former case, reduced effects on profile pressure distribution are typically observed with respect to the attached condition. On the contrary, long bubbles [...] Read more.
The bursting phenomenon consists in the switch of a laminar separation bubble from a short to a long configuration. In the former case, reduced effects on profile pressure distribution are typically observed with respect to the attached condition. On the contrary, long bubbles provoke significant variations in the loading coefficient upstream of the separation position, with increased risk of stall of the lifting surfaces. The present work presents an experimental database describing separated boundary layers evolving under different Reynolds numbers, adverse pressure gradients and free-stream turbulence levels. Overall, more than 80 flow conditions were tested concerning short and long bubbles for the characterization of separated flows under turbine-like conditions. Measurements were performed on a flat plate geometry using a fast-response Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) system. For each flow case, two sets of 6000 flow records were acquired with an acquisition frequency equal to 300 and 1000 Hz. Based on existing criteria for the identification of the bursting phenomenon, the flow cases were clustered in terms of short and long bubble states. Additionally, the kind of instability (i.e., convective or absolute) developing into the separated boundary layer was identified based on flow statistics. The present data captures the existing link between the bursting of a laminar separation bubble and the onset of the absolute instability of the separated shear layer, with stationary vortices forming in the dead air region. Full article
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16 pages, 6117 KiB  
Article
Comparison Study of the kkLω and γReθ Transition Model in the Open-Water Performance Prediction of a Rim-Driven Thruster
by Bao Liu, Maarten Vanierschot and Frank Buysschaert
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2024, 9(1), 2; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp9010002 - 09 Jan 2024
Viewed by 1381
Abstract
The present work examines the capabilities of two transition models implemented in ANSYS Fluent in the open-water performance prediction of a rim-driven thruster (RDT). The adopted models are the three-equation kkLω and the four-equation [...] Read more.
The present work examines the capabilities of two transition models implemented in ANSYS Fluent in the open-water performance prediction of a rim-driven thruster (RDT). The adopted models are the three-equation kkLω and the four-equation γReθ models. Both of them are firstly tested on a ducted propeller. The numerical results are compared with available experimental data, and a good correlation is found for both models. The simulations employing two transition models are then carried out on a four-bladed rim-driven thruster model and the results are compared with the SST kω turbulence model. It is observed that the streamline patterns on the blade surface are significantly different between the transition and fully turbulent models. The transition models can reveal the laminar region on the blade while the fully turbulent model assumes the boundary layer is entirely turbulent, resulting in a considerable difference in torque prediction. It is noted that unlike the fully turbulent model, the transition models are quite sensitive to the free-stream turbulence quantities such as turbulent intensity and turbulent viscosity ratio, as these quantities determine the onset of the transition process. The open-water performance of the studied RDT and resolved flow field are also presented and discussed. Full article
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12 pages, 13823 KiB  
Article
Effect of Leading-Edge Erosion on the Performance of Transonic Compressor Blades
by Alexander Hergt, Tobias Danninger, Joachim Klinner, Sebastian Grund, Manfred Beversdorff and Christian Werner-Spatz
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2024, 9(1), 1; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp9010001 - 09 Jan 2024
Viewed by 1406
Abstract
In this paper, an experimental and numerical investigation of the effect of leading-edge erosion in transonic blades was performed. The measurements were carried out on a linear blade cascade in the Transonic Cascade Wind Tunnel of DLR in Cologne at two operating points [...] Read more.
In this paper, an experimental and numerical investigation of the effect of leading-edge erosion in transonic blades was performed. The measurements were carried out on a linear blade cascade in the Transonic Cascade Wind Tunnel of DLR in Cologne at two operating points with an inflow Mach number of 1.05 and 1.12. The numerical simulations were performed by ANSYS Germany. The type and specifications of the erosion for the study were derived from real engine blades and applied to the leading edges of the experimental cascade blades using a waterjet process, as well as modeled in detail and meshed within the numerical setup. Numerical simulations and extensive wake measurements were carried out on the cascades to evaluate the aerodynamic performance. The increase in losses was quantified to be 4 percent, and a reduction in deflection and a rise in pressure were detected at both operating points. Full article
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