• Title/Summary/Keyword: Separation cascade

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Three-dimensional Flow and Aerodynamic Loss Downstream of First-Stage Turbine Vane Cascade (터빈 제1단 정익 익렬 하류에서의 3차원 유동 및 압력손실)

  • Jeong, Jae Sung;Bong, Seon Woo;Lee, Sang Woo
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers B
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    • v.41 no.8
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    • pp.521-529
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    • 2017
  • Three-dimensional flow characteristics within a high-acceleration first-stage turbine vane passage has been investigated in a newly-built vane cascade for propulsion. The result shows that there is a strong favorable pressure gradient on the vane pressure surface. On its suction surface, however, there exists not only a much stronger favorable pressure gradient than that on the pressure surface upstream of the mid-chord but also a subsequent adverse pressure gradient downstream of it. By employing two different oil-film methods with upstream coating and full-coverage coating, a four-vortex model horseshoe vortex system can be identified ahead of each leading edge in the cascade, and the separation line of inlet boundary layer flow as well as the separation line of re-attached flow is provided as well. In addition, basic flow data such as secondary flow, aerodynamic loss, and flow turning angle downstream of the cascade are obtained.

Compressor Cascade Flow Analysis by Using Upwind Flux Difference Splitting Method (풍상차분법을 이용한 압축기 익렬유동 해석)

  • 권창오;송동주;강신형
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers
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    • v.18 no.3
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    • pp.653-661
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    • 1994
  • In this paper the CSCM type upwind flux difference splitting Navier-Stokes method has been applied to study the ARL-SL19 supersonic/transonic compressor cascade flow. H-type grid was chosen for its simplicity in applying cyclic tridiagonal matrix algorithm along with conventional slip/no-slip boundary conditions. The thin-layer algebraic model of Baldwin-Lomax was employed for the calculation of turbulent flows. The test case inlet Mach No. was 1.612 and inlet/exit pressure ratio($P_2/P_1$) was 2.15. The results were compared with experimental results from current method were compared well in suction surface with the experiments and other computational results; however, not well in pressure surface. It might be due to the complex flowfields such as shock/boundary layer interaction, turbulence, and flow separation, etc. In the future, a proper turbulence modelling and adaptive grid system will be studied to improve the solution quality.

A Numerical Study of Shock Wave/Boundary Layer Interaction in a Supersonic Compressor Cascade

  • Song, Dong-Joo;Hwang, Hyun-Chul;Kim, Young-In
    • Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology
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    • v.15 no.3
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    • pp.366-373
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    • 2001
  • A numerical analysis of shock wave/boundary layer interaction in transonic/supersonic axial flow compressor cascade has been performed by using a characteristics upwind Navier-Stokes method with various turbulence models. Two equation turbulence models were applied to transonic/supersonic flows over a NACA 0012 airfoil. The results are superion to those from an algebraic turbulence model. High order TVD schemes predicted shock wave/boundary layer interactions reasonably well. However, the prediction of SWBLI depends more on turbulence models than high order schemes. In a supersonic axial flow cascade at M=1.59 and exit/inlet static pressure ratio of 2.21, k-$\omega$ and Shear Stress Transport (SST) models were numerically stables. However, the k-$\omega$ model predicted thicker shock waves in the flow passage. Losses due to shock/shock and shock/boundary layer interactions in transonic/supersonic compressor flowfields can be higher losses than viscous losses due to flow separation and viscous dissipation.

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Effects of Combustor-Level High Free-Stream Turbulence on Blade-Surface Heat/Mass Transfer in the Three-Dimensional Flow Region near the Endwall of a High-Turning Turbine Rotor Cascade

  • Lee Sang Woo;Kwon Hyun Goo;Park Byung-Kyu
    • Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology
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    • v.19 no.6
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    • pp.1347-1357
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    • 2005
  • Effects of combustor-level high free-stream turbulence on the blade-surface heat/mass transfer have been investigated in the three-dimensional flow region near the endwall within a high-turning turbine rotor cascade passage. Free-stream turbulence intensity and integral length scale in the high turbulence case are 14.7 percents and 80 mm, respectively. The result shows that there is no considerable discrepancy in the blade heat/mass transfer near the endwall between the low and high turbulence cases. As departing from the endwall, however, the deviation between the two cases becomes larger, particularly in the region where flow separation and re-attachment occur. Under the high turbulence, flow disturbances such as boundary-layer separation and re-attachment seem to be suppressed, which makes the blade heat/mass transfer more uniform. Moreover, there are some evidences that endwall vortices tend to be weakened under the high turbulence.

Effects of Combustor-Level High Inlet Turbulence on the Endwall Flow and Heat/Mass Transfer of a High-Turning Turbine Rotor Cascade

  • Lee, Sang-Woo;Jun, Sang-Bae;Park, Byung-Kyu;Lee, Joon-Sik
    • Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology
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    • v.18 no.8
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    • pp.1435-1450
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    • 2004
  • Experimental data are presented which describe the effects of a combustor-level high free-stream turbulence on the near-wall flow structure and heat/mass transfer on the endwall of a linear high-turning turbine rotor cascade. The end wall flow structure is visualized by employing the partial- and total-coverage oil-film technique, and heat/mass transfer rate is measured by the naphthalene sublimation method. A turbulence generator is designed to provide a highly-turbulent flow which has free-stream turbulence intensity and integral length scale of 14.7% and 80mm, respectively, at the cascade entrance. The surface flow visualizations show that the high free-stream turbulence has little effect on the attachment line, but alters the separation line noticeably. Under high free-stream turbulence, the incoming near-wall flow upstream of the adjacent separation lines collides more obliquely with the suction surface. A weaker lift-up force arising from this more oblique collision results in the narrower suction-side corner vortex area in the high turbulence case. The high free-stream turbulence enhances the heat/mass transfer in the central area of the turbine passage, but only a slight augmentation is found in the end wall regions adjacent to the leading and trailing edges. Therefore, the high free-stream turbulence makes the end wall heat load more uniform. It is also observed that the heat/mass transfers along the locus of the pressure-side leg of the leading-edge horseshoe vortex and along the suction-side corner are influenced most strongly by the high free-stream turbulence. In this study, the end wall surface is classified into seven different regions based on the local heat/mass transfer distribution, and the effects of the high free-stream turbulence on the local heat/mass transfer in each region are discussed in detail.

Performance Evaluation of Stator-Rotor Cascade System Considering Flow Viscosity and Aeroelastic Deformation Effects (유동점성 및 공탄성 변형효과를 고려한 스테이터-로터 케스케이드 시스템의 성능평가)

  • Kim, Dong-Hyun;Kim, Yu-Sung
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Aeronautical & Space Sciences
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    • v.36 no.1
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    • pp.72-78
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    • 2008
  • In this study, advanced (fluid-structure interaction (FSI)) analysis system has been developed in order to predict turbine cascade performance with blade deformation effect due to aerodynamic loads. Intereference effects due to the relative movement of the rotor cascade with respect to the stator cascade are also considered. Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes equations with one equation Spalart-Allmaras and two-equation k-ω SST turbulence models are solved to accurately predict fluid dynamic loads considering flow separation effects. A fully implicit time marching scheme based on the (coupled Newmark time-integration method) with high artificial damping is efficiently used to compute the complex fluid-structure interaction problem. Predicted aerodynamic performance considering structural deformation effect of the blade shows somewhat different results compared to the case of rigid blade model. Cascade performance evaluations for different elastic axis positions are importantly presented and its aeroelastic effects are investigated.

PREDICTION OF A MUTUAL SEPARATION OF ACTINIDE AND RARE EARTH GROUPS IN A MULTISTAGE REDUCTIVE EXTRACTION SYSTEM

  • Yoo, Jae-Hyung;Lee, Han-Soo;Kim, Eung-Ho
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.39 no.5
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    • pp.663-672
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    • 2007
  • The mutual separation behavior of actinides and rare earths in a countercurrent multistage reductive extraction system was predicted by computer calculation. The distribution information for actinides and rare earths in the reductive extraction systems of LiCl-KCl/Cd and LiCl-KCl/Bi was collected from literature and then it was used for the calculation of a multistage extraction. The results of the concentration profiles throughout the extraction cascade, recovery yields of various metal solutes, and separation factors between the actinides and rare earths were calculated. The effects of the major process parameters, such as reducing agent content in the metal phase, number of stages, and salt/metal flow ratio, etc., on the extraction behavior were also examined.

An experimental study on the secondary flow and losses in turbine cascades (익렬 통로 내의 2차유동 및 손실에 관한 실험 연구)

  • Jeong, Yang-Beom;Sin, Yeong-Ho;Kim, Sang-Hyeon
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers B
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    • v.22 no.1
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    • pp.12-24
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    • 1998
  • The paper presents the mechanism of secondary flows and the associated total pressure losses occurring in turbine cascades with turning angle of about 127 and 77 degree. Velocity and pressure measurements are taken in seven traverse planes through the cascade passage using a prism type five hole probe. Oil-film flow visualization is also conducted on blade and endwall surfaces. The characteristics of the limiting streamlines show that the three dimensional separation is an important flow feature of endwall and blade surfaces. The larger turning results in much stronger contribution of the secondary flows to the loss developing mechanism. A large part of the endwall loss region at downstream pressure side is found to be very thin when compared to that of the cascade inlet and suction side endwall. Evolution of overall loss starts quite early within the cascade and the rate of the loss growth is much larger in the blade of large turning angle than in the blade of small turning angle.

Distribution of the Reynolds Stress Tensor Inside Tip Leakage Vortex of a Linear Compressor Cascade (I) - Effect of Inlet Flow Angle - (선형 압축기 익렬에서 발생하는 익단 누설 와류내의 레이놀즈 응력 분포 (I) -입구 유동각 변화의 영향-)

  • Lee, Gong-Hee;Park, Jong-Il;Baek, Je-Hyun
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers B
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    • v.28 no.8 s.227
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    • pp.902-909
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    • 2004
  • A steady-state Reynolds averaged Navier-Stokes simulation was conducted to investigate the distribution of the Reynolds stress tensor inside tip leakage vortex of a linear compressor cascade. Two different inlet flow angles ${\beta}=29.3^{\circ}$(design condition) and $36.5^{\circ}$(off-design condition) at a constant tip clearance size of $1\%$ blade span were considered. Classical methods of solid mechanics, applied to view the Reynolds stress tensor in the principal direction system, clearly showed that the high anisotropic feature of turbulent flow field was dominant at the outer part of tip leakage vortex near the suction side of the blade and endwall flow separation region, whereas a nearly isotropic turbulence was found at the center of tip leakage vortex. There was no significant difference in the anisotropy of the Reynolds normal stresses inside tip leakage vortex between the design and off-design condition.

Numerical Study for 3D Turbulent Flow in High Incidence Compressor Cascade (고입사각 압축기 익렬 내의 3차원 난류유동에 관한 수치적 연구)

  • 안병진;정기호;김귀순;임진식;김유일
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Propulsion Engineers
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    • v.6 no.3
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    • pp.29-36
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    • 2002
  • A numerical analysis based on two-dimensional and three-dimensional incompressible Wavier-Stokes equations has been carried out for double-circular-arc compressor cascades and the results are compared with available experimental data at various incidence angles. The 2-D and 3-D computational codes based on SIMPLE algorithm adopt pressure weighted interpolation method for non-staggered grid and hybrid scheme for the convective terms. Turbulence modeling is very important for prediction of cascade flows, which are extremely complex with separation and reattachment by adverse pressure gradient. Considering computation times, $\kappa$-$\varepsilon$ turbulence model with wall function is used.