Effects of Stall Precursor-Suppressed Casing Treatment on a Low-Speed Compressor With Swirl Distortion

2018 ◽  
Vol 140 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xu Dong ◽  
Dakun Sun ◽  
Fanyu Li ◽  
Donghai Jin ◽  
Xingmin Gui ◽  
...  

Swirl inlet distortion is usually encountered in modern flight vehicles since their inlet ducts usually consist of one or two bends, such as S-inlet duct. An experimental device is first designed to simulate the swirl inlet distortion and then used to test the effectiveness of a novel casing treatment (CT) on a low-speed compressor under the swirl distortions of various intensities. The influences of co- and counter-rotating swirl inlet distortion on the test compressor and the stabilization ability of this novel CT are well demonstrated by the illustrations of static pressure rise curves and efficiency curves. The dynamic prestall pressure signals are also captured to reflect the perturbation energy in the flow field through which the mechanism of the novel CT will be indicated. The relevant results show that counter-rotating swirl distortion in small intensity could increase the compressive ability of compressor with small efficiency loss, and the co-rotating swirl distortion always brings about detrimental effects on compressor performance. At the same time, the distortion of twin swirls can cause nonuniform total pressure profile which can seriously damage the compressor performance. Besides, the stall precursor-suppressed (SPS) CT shows a good capability of stall margin (SM) enhancement no matter what swirl inlet distortions are encountered in the test compressor.

1977 ◽  
Vol 99 (1) ◽  
pp. 121-133 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Takata ◽  
Y. Tsukuda

Experiments on the effect of casing treatment were carried out using low-speed axial-flow compressors. Results on the overall compressor performance and on the flow through the blade row as well as the flow within the treatment slots are presented. Then, based on the experiments, a possible mechanism of the stall margin improvement is suggested.


Author(s):  
Huabing Jiang ◽  
Yajun Lu ◽  
Wei Yuan ◽  
Qiushi Li

The non-axisymmetric feature of the compressor separated flow field should be considered when flow control technology is utilized to improve compressor performance. An experiment is performed to investigate the effectiveness of non-axisymmetric flow control using arc curve skewed slot casing treatment in the paper. A simplified non-axisymmetric excitation model is presented with variable circumferential excitation extent and location. FFT analysis results indicate that the frequency spectrum of the non-axisymmetric excitation is similar with that of the whole circumferential excitation. The non-axisymmetric excitation possesses the same dominate frequency, smaller amplitude and wider frequency bandwidth compared to the whole circumferential excitation. A simplified circumferential non-axisymmetric arc curve skewed slot casing treatment is utilized to perform non-axisymmetric excitation on the separated flow field of a low speed single stage axial compressor under both uniform and distorted inlet conditions. Experimental results indicate that the non-axisymmetric slotted casing treatment presents strong flow control capability, which could improve compressor efficiency, total pressure rise coefficient and stall margin. For the distorted inlet condition, the stall margin, total pressure rise and efficiency of the compressor are respectively improved by 47.4%, 12.7% and 0.7% compared to the solid casing, and the compressor efficiency is improved by 1.4% compared to the whole circumferential excitation. For uniform inlet condition, the non-axisymmetric excitation can improve compressor efficiency by 1.0% and 1.5% respectively compared to the solid casing and the whole circumferential excitation. The whole circumferential excitation can also improve the compressor total pressure rise coefficient and stall margin, on the contrary, it decreases compressor efficiency. As a result, the non-axisymmetric slotted casing treatment can achieve more excellent compressor performance than the whole circumferential excitation does. Experimental results also indicate that the circumferential extent and location of the non-axisymmetric excitation can influence the effectiveness of the non-axisymmetric excitation. The best compressor performance can be achieved only when the non-axisymmetric excitation is tuned to match the asymmetric compressor separated flow field. Analysis on the experimental results indicates that compressor efficiency improvement achieved with the non-axisymmetric excitation can not simply attribute to the flow loss reduction induced by fewer casing slots. The flow loss reduction within undistorted sector, the circumferential flow exchange and the dynamic response induced by the non-axisymmetric excitation, the unsteady coupling between the non-axisymmetric excitation and the separated flow field might be the key flow factors to influence the compressor flow field structure, and hence influence the compressor performance.


2015 ◽  
Vol 137 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xu Dong ◽  
Dakun Sun ◽  
Fanyu Li ◽  
Donghai Jin ◽  
Xingmin Gui ◽  
...  

This paper conducts an experimental research of rotating inlet distortion on a low-speed large size test compressor with emphasis on the stability problem of axial fan/compressors, and the stall margin enhancement with a kind of stall precursor-suppressed (SPS) casing treatment. Some results on compressor stall margin and prestall behavior under the restriction of rotating inlet distortion are presented. The experimental results show that whether the inlet distortion is co-rotating or counter-rotating, the SPS casing treatment can still improve the stall margin without leading to additional efficiency loss caused by such configuration. The experiment results also show that the mechanism of the stall margin improvement with such casing treatment is associated with delaying the nonlinear development of the stall precursor waves and weakening the unsteady flow disturbances in a compression system.


Author(s):  
Li Fanyu ◽  
Li Jun ◽  
Dong Xu ◽  
Sun Dakun ◽  
Sun Xiaofeng

The present work develops a stall warning approach with application to a stall enhancement system. This technique is proposed on the basis of the periodicity of pressure signals sampled by the dynamic pressure sensor which is located on the casing wall at the rotor leading edge. A parameter called Rc, defined to evaluate this periodicity, is calculated by pressure signals within 1 blade pitches in the current one and previous one shaft period. Statistical estimates are implemented on Rc within statistical windows which move with sampling. The probabilities of Rc less than a threshold Rcth are calculated and used as a criterion for stall warning. Experiments are carried out on a low speed compressor with a stall precursor-suppressed (SPS) casing treatment, an efficient stall enhancement system. Results show that the probability increases significantly when the stall boundary is approached. At the same work point, the value of probability will decrease when the SPS casing treatment is turned on. This approach successfully generates a stall warning signal and then triggers the SPS casing treatment when the stall margin needs to be extended.


Author(s):  
Dakun Sun ◽  
Jia Li ◽  
Xu Dong ◽  
Benhao Gu ◽  
Xiaofeng Sun

Experimental research about rotating inlet distortion is carried out on a two-stage compressor with emphasis on the compressor stability as well as the stall margin improvement with a kind of stall precursor-suppressed (SPS) casing treatment in this paper. The wire mesh screen is placed at the upstream of the IGV and can rotate at various speeds in co- and counter-direction of the compressor rotor to simulate the rotating inlet distortion in different levels. The results show that the rotating inlet distortion can deteriorate the compressor stall margin and the SPS casing treatment can extend the compressor stall margin (1.95%–7.90%) without additional efficiency loss. The pre-stall behavior of compressor is also analyzed to uncover the mechanism of the stall margin improvement with such casing treatment. Results show that casing treatment of this configuration can weaken the unsteady disturbances in compression system.


Author(s):  
N. K. W. Lee ◽  
E. M. Greitzer

An experimental investigation was carried out to examine the effects on stall margin of flow injection into, and flow removal out of, the endwall region of an axial compressor blade row. A primary objective of the investigation was clarification of the mechanism by which casing treatment (which involves both removal and injection) suppresses stall in turbomachines. To simulate the relative motion between blade and treatment, the injection and removal took place through a slotted hub rotating beneath a cantilevered stator row. Overall performance data and detailed (time-averaged) flowfield measurements were obtained. Flow injection and removal both increased the stalling pressure rise, but neither was as effective as the wall treatment. Removal of high blockage flow is thus not the sole reason for the observed stall margin improvement in casing or hub treatment, as injection can also contribute significantly to stall suppression. The results also indicate that the increase in stall pressure rise with injection is linked to the streamwise momentum of the injected flow, and it is suggested that this should be the focus of further studies.


Author(s):  
M. Ziabasharhagh ◽  
A. B. McKenzie ◽  
R. L. Elder

An experimental investigation has been carried out on the influence of a vaned recessed casing treatment on the stall margin improvement of axial flow fans with different hub to tip ratio, with and without inlet distortion. The inlet distortion tests were conducted on a 0.5 hub to tip ratio fan and significant increases in the flow range with only small drops in operating efficiency were observed. The clean flow tests were conducted on higher hub to tip ratio fans (0.7 and 0.9). In each case the stage characteristic was compared with the results obtained with a solid casing. Significant increases in the flow range, with only modest or no loss in operating efficiency, were observed for optimum configurations at both diameter ratios.


Author(s):  
Baofeng Tu ◽  
Xinyu Zhang ◽  
Liang Li ◽  
Jun Hu

The compressor is a critical component that determines the aerodynamic stability of an aero-engine. Total pressure inlet distortion decreases the thrust and shrinks the stability margin, thus inducing severe performance degradation or even flameout. Generally, tip air injection is used to reduce the adverse influence of total pressure inlet distortion on the aerodynamic stability. In the present work, an experimental investigation on the effects of tip air injection on the stability of a two-stage low-speed axial compressor with total pressure inlet distortion was carried out. A flat baffle generated the total pressure distortion at the inlet of the compressor. The stall margin of the compressor was reduced significantly by the total pressure distortion. When the dimensionless insertion depth of the flat baffle was 0.45, the stall margin decreased to 11.4%. Under the total pressure inlet distortion, tip air injection effectively improved the distortion resistance capability of the compressor. The circumferential layout of the nozzle played a critical role in the stability expansion effect of tip air injection under the inlet flow condition of the total pressure distortion. The modal wave disturbance was likely to occur in the distortion-affected region (the low-pressure region and the mixing region). Tip air injection did not inhibit the generation of the modal wave but restrained the development of the modal wave into the stall cell. It improved the low-speed compressor’s tolerance to the modal wave and allowed a higher amplitude modal wave to occur.


Author(s):  
C. S. Kang ◽  
A. B. McKenzie ◽  
R. L. Elder

An experimental investigation to examine the influence of the vaned recess casing treatment on stall margin, operating efficiency and the flow field of a low speed axial flow fan with aerospace type blade loading is presented. Different geometrical designs of the vaned passages were examined. The best configuration resulted in a stall margin improvement of 67%, a significantly higher pressure rise in the stall region and insignificant change in peak efficiency. Detailed 3-D flow measurements in the endwall region and in the casing recess were carried out with a slanted hot-wire, providing some insight to the operation of the device. The results revealed that the stall margin improvement was largely due to the removal of flow from the blade tip to the recess, and the elimination of the growth of the stall region at the tip, which occurs at stall in the solid casing build.


2017 ◽  
Vol 139 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna M. Young ◽  
Teng Cao ◽  
Ivor J. Day ◽  
John P. Longley

In this paper, experiments and numerical modeling are used to quantify the effects of clearance and eccentricity on compressor performance and to examine the influence of each on flow distribution and stall margin. A change in the size of the tip-clearance gap influences the pressure rise and the stall margin of a compressor. Eccentricity of the tip-clearance gap then further exacerbates the negative effects of increasing tip-clearance. There are few studies in the literature dealing with the combined effect of clearance and eccentricity. There is also little guidance for engine designers, who have traditionally used rules of thumb to quantify these effects. One such rule states that the stall margin of an eccentric machine will be equal to that of a concentric machine with uniform clearance equal to the maximum eccentric clearance. In this paper, this rule of thumb is checked using experimental data and found to be overly pessimistic. In addition, eccentric clearance causes a variation in axial velocity around the circumference of the compressor. The current study uses a three-dimensional model which demonstrates the importance of radial flow gradients in capturing this redistribution. Flow redistribution has been treated analytically in the past, and for this reason, previous modeling has been restricted to two dimensions. The circumferential variation in axial velocity is also examined in terms of the local stability of the flow by considering the stalling flow coefficient of an equivalent axisymmetric compressor with the same local tip-clearance. The large clearance sector of the annulus is found to operate beyond its equivalent axisymmetric stall limit, which means that the small clearance sector of the annulus must be stabilizing the large clearance sector. An improved rule of thumb dealing with the effects of eccentricity is presented.


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