Airborne Acquisition of Blade Tip Displacements and Vortices on a Coaxial Helicopter

2018 ◽  
Vol 55 (5) ◽  
pp. 1995-2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
André Bauknecht ◽  
Markus Raffel ◽  
Benedikt Grebing
Keyword(s):  
2011 ◽  
Vol 42 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gongnan Xie ◽  
Bengt Sunden ◽  
Lieke Wang ◽  
Esa Utriainien
Keyword(s):  
Pin Fins ◽  

Materials ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (21) ◽  
pp. 3552 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chun-Yi Zhang ◽  
Jing-Shan Wei ◽  
Ze Wang ◽  
Zhe-Shan Yuan ◽  
Cheng-Wei Fei ◽  
...  

To reveal the effect of high-temperature creep on the blade-tip radial running clearance of aeroengine high-pressure turbines, a distributed collaborative generalized regression extremum neural network is proposed by absorbing the heuristic thoughts of distributed collaborative response surface method and the generalized extremum neural network, in order to improve the reliability analysis of blade-tip clearance with creep behavior in terms of modeling precision and simulation efficiency. In this method, the generalized extremum neural network was used to handle the transients by simplifying the response process as one extremum and to address the strong nonlinearity by means of its nonlinear mapping ability. The distributed collaborative response surface method was applied to handle multi-object multi-discipline analysis, by decomposing one “big” model with hyperparameters and high nonlinearity into a series of “small” sub-models with few parameters and low nonlinearity. Based on the developed method, the blade-tip clearance reliability analysis of an aeroengine high-pressure turbine was performed subject to the creep behaviors of structural materials, by considering the randomness of influencing parameters such as gas temperature, rotational speed, material parameters, convective heat transfer coefficient, and so forth. It was found that the reliability degree of the clearance is 0.9909 when the allowable value is 2.2 mm, and the creep deformation of the clearance presents a normal distribution with a mean of 1.9829 mm and a standard deviation of 0.07539 mm. Based on a comparison of the methods, it is demonstrated that the proposed method requires a computing time of 1.201 s and has a computational accuracy of 99.929% over 104 simulations, which are improvements of 70.5% and 1.23%, respectively, relative to the distributed collaborative response surface method. Meanwhile, the high efficiency and high precision of the presented approach become more obvious with the increasing simulations. The efforts of this study provide a promising approach to improve the dynamic reliability analysis of complex structures.


Measurement ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 176 ◽  
pp. 109168
Author(s):  
Suiyu Chen ◽  
Yongmin Yang ◽  
Haifeng Hu ◽  
Fengjiao Guan ◽  
Guoji Shen ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 147
Author(s):  
Zhenye Sun ◽  
Weijun Zhu ◽  
Wenzhong Shen ◽  
Qiuhan Tao ◽  
Jiufa Cao ◽  
...  

In order to develop super-large wind turbines, new concepts, such as downwind load-alignment, are required. Additionally, segmented blade concepts are under investigation. As a simple example, the coned rotor needs be investigated. In this paper, different conning configurations, including special cones with three segments, are simulated and analyzed based on the DTU-10 MW reference rotor. It was found that the different force distributions of upwind and downwind coned configurations agreed well with the distributions of angle of attack, which were affected by the blade tip position and the cone angle. With the upstream coning of the blade tip, the blade sections suffered from stronger axial induction and a lower angle of attack. The downstream coning of the blade tip led to reverse variations. The cone angle determined the velocity and force projecting process from the axial to the normal direction, which also influenced the angle of attack and force, provided that correct inflow velocity decomposition occurred.


Author(s):  
Shuming Wu ◽  
Zengkun Wang ◽  
Haoqi Li ◽  
Zhibo Yang ◽  
Shaohua Tian ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Zainab J Saleh ◽  
Eldad J Avital ◽  
Theodosios Korakianitis

Increasing the gas temperature at the inlet to the high pressure turbine of gas turbine engines is known as a proven method to increase the efficiency of these engines. However, this will expose the blades’ surface to very high heat load and thermal damages. In the case of the un-shrouded turbine blades, the blade tip will be exposed to a significant thermal load due to the developed leakage flows in the tip gap, this leads to in-service burnout which degrades the blade tip and shortens its operational life. This paper studies the in-service burnout effect of the transonic tip flows over a cavity tip which is a configuration commonly used to reduce the tip leakage flows. This investigation is carried out experimentally within a transonic wind tunnel and computationally using steady and unsteady Reynolds Averaged Navier Stokes approaches. Various flow measurements are established and different flow behaviour including separation bubbles, shockwave development and distinct flow interactions are captured and discussed. It is found that when the tip is exposed to the in-service burnout, leakage flow behaves in a significantly different way. In addition, the effective tip gap becomes much larger and allows higher leakage mass flow rate in comparison to the sharp-edge tip (i.e. a tip at the beginning of its operational life). The tip leakage losses are found much higher for the round-edge cavity tip (i.e. a tip exposed to burn-out effect). Experimental and computational flow visualisations, surface pressure measurements and discharge coefficient variation are given and analysed for several pressure ratios across the tip gap.


Author(s):  
Weijie Wang ◽  
Shaopeng Lu ◽  
Hongmei Jiang ◽  
Qiusheng Deng ◽  
Jinfang Teng ◽  
...  

Numerical simulations are conducted to present the aerothermal performance of a turbine blade tip with cutback squealer rim. Two different tip clearance heights (0.5%, 1.0% of the blade span) and three different cavity depths (2.0%, 3.0%, and 6.0% of the blade span) are investigated. The results show that a high heat transfer coefficient (HTC) strip on the cavity floor appears near the suction side. It extends with the increase of tip clearance height and moves towards the suction side with the increase of cavity depth. The cutback region near the trailing edge has a high HTC value due to the flush of over-tip leakage flow. High HTC region shrinks to the trailing edge with the increase of cavity depth since there is more accumulated flow in the cavity for larger cavity depth. For small tip clearance cases, high HTC distribution appears on the pressure side rim. However, high HTC distribution is observed on suction side rim for large tip clearance height. This is mainly caused by the flow separation and reattachment on the squealer rims.


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