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Keywords = axisymmetric endwall

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16 pages, 9712 KiB  
Article
Effect of Slot Jet Flow on Non-Axisymmetric Endwall Cooling Performance of High-Load Turbines
by Kun Du, Yihao Jia, Hui Song, Lei Chen, Qian Zhang, Tingting Cui and Cunliang Liu
Machines 2023, 11(2), 134; https://doi.org/10.3390/machines11020134 - 18 Jan 2023
Cited by 10 | Viewed by 2115
Abstract
As vane inlet temperatures and turbine loadings are increasing, the aerodynamic and thermal management for the endwalls of gas turbines have received increased attention. Non-axisymmetric endwalls are becoming popular due to their proficient capabilities to modify the secondary flow fields and to change [...] Read more.
As vane inlet temperatures and turbine loadings are increasing, the aerodynamic and thermal management for the endwalls of gas turbines have received increased attention. Non-axisymmetric endwalls are becoming popular due to their proficient capabilities to modify the secondary flow fields and to change the film cooling performance on the endwalls. In this study, by considering the interaction between mainstream and purge flow based on non-axisymmetric endwall contouring, the numerical research model used in the present research was established. Based on the validated numerical method, the influence of the non-axisymmetric endwall contouring on the film-cooling effectiveness and aerodynamic characteristics was studied. Furthermore, the effect of different inclination angles on the film-cooling performance of the contoured endwalls was also investigated. The results indicate that for the high-load turbine vane used in this research, various types of non-axisymmetric endwall contouring can alter the aero-dynamic characteristics and cooling performance simultaneously. By inhibiting the secondary flows, non-axisymmetric endwall contouring can reduce the total cascade pressure loss coefficient by 0.305%. In addition, non-axisymmetric endwall contouring can significantly enhance the effective coverage area of purge flow up to 28.29%, and the endwall near the suction side can achieve better cooling performance. Finally, non-axisymmetric endwall contouring can improve the protective effect of large-angle purge flow. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Selected Papers from CITC2022)
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23 pages, 13347 KiB  
Article
Body Force Model Implementation of Transonic Rotor for Fan/Airframe Simulations
by Andrea Magrini
Aerospace 2022, 9(11), 725; https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace9110725 - 18 Nov 2022
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 2797
Abstract
Three-dimensional throughflow models represent a turbomachinery cascade via a force distribution without the need for detailed geometric modelling in the numerical solution, saving consistent computational resources. In this paper, we present the application of a body force method on an axial transonic fan [...] Read more.
Three-dimensional throughflow models represent a turbomachinery cascade via a force distribution without the need for detailed geometric modelling in the numerical solution, saving consistent computational resources. In this paper, we present the application of a body force method on an axial transonic fan implemented into an in-house tool for axisymmetric throughflow simulations. By a systematic comparison of local and integral quantities with a validated numerical solution, the capabilities and limitations of the model are discussed for different operating regimes. The implementation is first validated at the peak efficiency calibration point, providing a good duplication of blade flow variables and radial profiles. The design total pressure is matched with a 0.6% absolute difference and a slightly higher slope of the characteristic towards the stall. The isentropic efficiency curve is penalised after the choking mass flow rate calibration, presenting an absolute difference close to 2%, although with a consistent off-design trend. In general, the model provides a satisfactory representation of the flow field and the outflow spanwise distributions, with locally larger discrepancies near the endwalls. Finally, the method is applied to simulate the fan and outlet guide vanes installed into an isolated turbofan nacelle. The onset of intake stall at a high angle of attack is compared between the body force and a boundary conditions-based approaches, highlighting the importance of adopting fully coupled solution methods to study fan/airframe interaction problems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Aeronautics)
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21 pages, 9953 KiB  
Article
Research on the Influence of Axisymmetric Endwall on EAT Performance
by Han Teng, Wanyang Wu and Jingjun Zhong
Energies 2021, 14(8), 2215; https://doi.org/10.3390/en14082215 - 15 Apr 2021
Viewed by 1675
Abstract
To improve the performance of electrically assisted turbochargers (EATs), the influences of the hub profile and the casing profile on EAT performance were numerically studied by controlling the upper and lower endwall profiles. An artificial neural network and a genetic algorithm were used [...] Read more.
To improve the performance of electrically assisted turbochargers (EATs), the influences of the hub profile and the casing profile on EAT performance were numerically studied by controlling the upper and lower endwall profiles. An artificial neural network and a genetic algorithm were used to optimize the endwall profile, considering the total pressure ratio and the isentropic efficiency at the peak efficiency point. Different performances of the prototype EAT and the optimized EAT under variable clearance sizes were discussed. The endwall profile affects an EAT by making the main flow structure in the endwall area decelerate and then accelerate due to the expansion and contraction of the meridional surface, which weakens the secondary leakage flow of the prototype EAT and changes the momentum ratio of the clearance leakage flow and the separation flow in the suction surface corner area. Because the tip region flow has a more significant influence on EAT performance, the optimal casing scheme has a better effect than the hub scheme. The optimization design can increase the isentropic efficiency of the maximum efficiency point by 1.5%, the total pressure ratio by 0.67%, the mass flow rate by 1.2%, and the general margin by 6.4%. Full article
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22 pages, 8194 KiB  
Article
Non-Axisymmetric Shroud Profiled Endwall Optimization of an Embedded Stator and Experimental Investigation
by Jiayu Wang, Jun Hu, Chao Jiang and Jun Li
Energies 2020, 13(3), 726; https://doi.org/10.3390/en13030726 - 7 Feb 2020
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 2610
Abstract
Turbomachinery has been widely used in the energy systems as an energy conversion device, such as gas turbine and aero-engine. The losses in the turbomachinery, especially in the multi-stage conditions, restrict the energy conversion efficiency and corresponding fuel economy. Previous studies show that [...] Read more.
Turbomachinery has been widely used in the energy systems as an energy conversion device, such as gas turbine and aero-engine. The losses in the turbomachinery, especially in the multi-stage conditions, restrict the energy conversion efficiency and corresponding fuel economy. Previous studies show that non-axisymmetric endwall could be used to decrease the losses in compressors, but the real effects in the rig tests are usually inconsistent with the numerical simulation. In this paper, a shroud profiled endwall optimization method with the strategy of local loss as the objective function is proposed, aiming at reducing the tip loss of an embedded stator under the operating point. The traditional total loss coefficient and four local loss functions are studied to investigate how the objective functions influence the optimization results. Three optimized endwall geometries are tested in the embedded test platform. It showed that the strategy of loss coefficient above 90% span as the objective function was best at decreasing the stator loss in the tip region as well as the whole span. Under this strategy, the loss above 90% span was suppressed by 48.17% and the loss of the whole span decreased 9.27%, which proved the PEW optimization design method with the strategy of local loss as the objective function is potential. Full article
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21 pages, 11445 KiB  
Article
Secondary Flow and Endwall Optimization of a Transonic Turbine
by Abdul Rehman, Bo Liu and Muhammad Afzaal Asghar
Energies 2019, 12(21), 4103; https://doi.org/10.3390/en12214103 - 28 Oct 2019
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 4135
Abstract
A detailed numerical analysis of secondary flows in a transonic turbine is presented in this paper. The turbine stage is optimized by mitigating secondary flow through the method of non-axisymmetric endwall design. An automated optimization platform of NUMECA/Design3D was coupled with Euranus as [...] Read more.
A detailed numerical analysis of secondary flows in a transonic turbine is presented in this paper. The turbine stage is optimized by mitigating secondary flow through the method of non-axisymmetric endwall design. An automated optimization platform of NUMECA/Design3D was coupled with Euranus as a flow solver for the numerical investigation. The contoured endwalls of the stator and the rotor hub were designed based on equidistant Bézier curves along the camber line in the blade channel. The initial design samples were ten times the number of the design variables, and were generated through the LHS method for database generation. The optimization of the endwalls was achieved by using a state-of-the-art multi-objective optimization algorithm, NSGA-II, connected with the BPNN to increase the isentropic efficiency and decrease the secondary kinetic energy, while the mass flow and the degree of reaction were constrained to remain on the datum value as in the original geometry. The individual optimization of the hub endwalls of the stator and the rotor produced an increase in the efficiency of 0.27% and 0.25%, respectively, resulting in a cumulative improvement of 0.46% in the efficiency. The increase in the performance was analyzed at part-load conditions, and it was further confirmed through unsteady simulations. Full article
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12 pages, 5183 KiB  
Article
Advanced Endwall Contouring for Loss Reduction and Outflow Homogenization for an Optimized Compressor Cascade
by Oliver Reutter, Magdalena Rozanski, Alexander Hergt and Eberhard Nicke
Int. J. Turbomach. Propuls. Power 2017, 2(1), 1; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtpp2010001 - 16 Mar 2017
Cited by 11 | Viewed by 6358
Abstract
The following paper deals with the development of an optimized non-axisymmetric endwall contour for reducing the total pressure loss and for homogenizing the outflow of a highly-loaded compressor cascade. In contrast to former studies using a NACA-65 K48 cascade airfoil this study starts [...] Read more.
The following paper deals with the development of an optimized non-axisymmetric endwall contour for reducing the total pressure loss and for homogenizing the outflow of a highly-loaded compressor cascade. In contrast to former studies using a NACA-65 K48 cascade airfoil this study starts with the design of a new high-performance airfoil which is based on the aerodynamic boundary conditions of the NACA-65 K48 cascade. This new airfoil is then used as a basis. Optimizations of the airfoil and of the endwall contour are performed using the German Aerospace Center (DLR) in-house tool AutoOpti and the RANS (Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes)-solver TRACE (Turbomachinery Research Aerodynamic Computational Environment). Three operating points at an inflow Mach number of 0.67 with different inflow angles are used to secure a wide operating range. The optimized endwall contour changes the secondary flow in such a way that the corner stall is reduced which, in turn, significantly reduces the total pressure loss. The endwall contour in the outflow region leads to a considerable homogenization of the outflow in the near wall region. Using non-axisymmetric endwall shaping demonstrates a valuable measure to further improve highly-efficient compressor blading on the vane level. Full article
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