Aeroacoustic Computation of a Contra Rotating Open Rotor Model with Test Rig Installation Effects

Author(s):  
Fabrice Falissard ◽  
Ronan Boisard ◽  
Gregory Delattre
Author(s):  
Christopher A. Perullo ◽  
Jimmy C. M. Tai ◽  
Dimitri N. Mavris

Recent increases in fuel prices and increased focus on aviation’s environmental impacts have reignited focus on the open rotor engine concept. This type of architecture was extensively investigated in previous decades but was not pursued through to commercialization due to relatively high noise levels and a sudden, sharp decrease in fuel prices. More recent increases in fuel prices and increased government pressure from taxing carbon-dioxide production mean the open rotor is once again being investigated as a viable concept. Advances in aero-acoustic design tools have allowed industry and academia to re-investigate the open rotor with an increased emphasis on noise reduction while retaining the fuel burn benefits due to the increased propulsive efficiency. Recent research with conceptual level multidisciplinary considerations of the open rotor has been performed [1], but there remains a need for a holistic approach that includes the coupled effects of the engine and airframe on fuel burn, emissions, and noise. Years of research at Georgia Institute of Technology have led to the development of the Environmental Design Space (EDS) [2]. EDS serves to capture interdependencies at the conceptual design level of fuel burn, emissions, and noise for conventional and advanced engine and airframe architectures. Recently, leveraging NASA Environmentally Responsible Aviation (ERA) modeling efforts, EDS has been updated to include an open rotor model to capture, in an integrated fashion, the effects of an open rotor on conventional airframe designs. Due to the object oriented nature of EDS, the focus has been on designing modular elements that can be updated as research progresses. A power management scheme has also been developed with the future capability to trade between fuel efficiency and noise using the variable pitch propeller system. Since the original GE open rotor test was performed using a military core, there is interest in seeing the effect of modern core-engine technology on the integrated open rotor performance. This research applies the modular EDS open rotor model in an engine cycle study to investigate the sensitivity of thermal efficiency improvements on open rotor performance, including the effects on weight and vehicle performance. The results are that advances in the core cycle are necessary to enable future bypass ratio growth and the trades between core operating temperatures and size become more significant as bypass ratio continues to increase. A general benefit of a 30% reduction in block fuel is seen on a 737–800 sized aircraft.


Author(s):  
Qingkai Han ◽  
Li Wang ◽  
Hongliang Yao ◽  
Zhaohui Ren ◽  
Bangchun Wen

A dynamical model of a four-span rotor system with multi-discs is built up, considering nonlinear oil-film forces, based on a 300 thousand kilowatt turbine-generator test rig. The bifurcation features of the system are studied with numerical integration technique. It is revealed that the proposed multi-span rotor model can express the fundamental dynamic characteristics of such a nonlinear system. Some bifurcations and chaotic motions may occur according to the calculated results. In coupling analyses, each rotor span also affects dynamically on the other, and the second span affects on the whole system in a serious way.


Author(s):  
Yongliang Wang ◽  
Zhansheng Liu ◽  
Guanghui Zhang ◽  
Liquan Sun

Dynamic characteristics of a 600MW steam turbine rotor model supported by cylindrical bearings and elliptical bearings were investigated respectively. Differences between the linear and nonlinear characteristics of rotor-bearing systems were studied by numerical simulations, and the performances of rotor systems using different bearings were also presented. Dynamic tests were performed on the 600MW turbine generator group model test rig, while sustained by different types of bearings, to study the oil whirl and whip phenomenon. Comparisons of the numerical results with experimental data show that the nonlinear model is more accurate than the linear model, and the elliptical bearing has the advantage of better dynamic stability over cylindrical bearings.


Author(s):  
Christopher A. Perullo ◽  
Jimmy C. M. Tai ◽  
Dimitri N. Mavris

Recent increases in fuel prices and increased focus on aviation's environmental impacts have reignited focus on the open rotor engine concept. This type of architecture was extensively investigated in previous decades but was not pursued through to commercialization due to relatively high noise levels and a sudden, sharp decrease in fuel prices. More recent increases in fuel prices and increased government pressure from taxing carbon-dioxide production mean the open rotor is once again being investigated as a viable concept. Advances in aero-acoustic design tools have allowed industry and academia to re-investigate the open rotor with an increased emphasis on noise reduction while retaining the fuel burn benefits due to the increased propulsive efficiency. Recent research with conceptual level multidisciplinary considerations of the open rotor has been performed (Bellocq et al., 2010, “Advanced Open Rotor Performance Modeling For Multidisciplinary Optimization Assessments,” Paper No. GT2010-2963), but there remains a need for a holistic approach that includes the coupled effects of the engine and airframe on fuel burn, emissions, and noise. Years of research at Georgia Institute of Technology have led to the development of the Environmental Design Space (EDS) (Kirby and Mavris, 2008, “The Environmental Design Space,” Proceedings of the 26th International Congress of the Aeronautical Sciences). EDS serves to capture interdependencies at the conceptual design level of fuel burn, emissions, and noise for conventional and advanced engine and airframe architectures. Recently, leveraging NASA environmentally responsible aviation (ERA) modeling efforts, EDS has been updated to include an open rotor model to capture, in an integrated fashion, the effects of an open rotor on conventional airframe designs. Due to the object oriented nature of EDS, the focus has been on designing modular elements that can be updated as research progresses. A power management scheme has also been developed with the future capability to trade between fuel efficiency and noise using the variable pitch propeller system. Since the original GE open rotor test was performed using a military core, there is interest in seeing the effect of modern core-engine technology on the integrated open rotor performance. This research applies the modular EDS open rotor model in an engine cycle study to investigate the sensitivity of thermal efficiency improvements on open rotor performance, including the effects on weight and vehicle performance. The results are that advances in the core cycle are necessary to enable future bypass ratio growth and the trades between core operating temperatures and size become more significant as bypass ratio continues to increase. A general benefit of a 30% reduction in block fuel is seen on a 737-800 sized aircraft.


Author(s):  
Dara Childs ◽  
Andrew Crandall

A new flexible-pinion-shaft rotor model is presented to predict the response of the pinion shaft of an integrally geared compressor (IGC). The motion of the pinion shaft is driven by: (1) its own imbalance and (2) the axial reaction force developed by relative axial motion at the thrust collar (TC) that connects it to the pinion. The axial reaction force at the TC arises because of the relative axial motion between the pinion shaft and the bull gear (BG) at the overlapping area of the TC. The relative axial motion arises because of: (1) absolute axial motion of the pinion (assumed to be a rigid body), (2) pitch and yaw motion of the pinion at the TC, and (3) absolute axial motion of the BG at the TC overlap area. Because the axial reaction force acts at a radial distance from the mass center of the TC disk, it creates moments that couple the relative axial motion of the pinion and BG shafts to the radial motion of the pinion. The present model includes the local flexural stiffness of the BG. Excitation for the model is provided by: (1) runout from the BG at its running speed, Ω, acting through the axial reaction force of the TC, (2) runout from the pinion at its running speed, ω, acting through the axial reaction force of the TC, and (3) pinion TC mass imbalance at ω. Measured axial runouts of the BG and TC were taken from a test rig at the authors’ laboratory. Predictions for the TC oil-film axial stiffness and damping come from a proprietary Reynolds equation solution to the TC oil-film. The local axial stiffness of the BG at the overlap area was obtained from a finite element analysis of the authors’ test rig. The base rotordynamic model for the pinion was provided for a production IGC pinion by an IGC manufacturer including the bearings and structural dynamics model. Waterfall plots are presented from the model’s predictions of radial motion at the IGC’s Stage 1 compressor impeller. The response is dominated by synchronous response at the pinion speed, ω, and tracking subsynchronous response at the BG speed, Ω. The response at ω comes from the pinion’s imbalance, not the pinion runout at the TC. The response at Ω comes from the BG runout acting across the TC. The IGC manufacturer’s representatives state that predictions from the model are consistent with measurements from real IGCs, particularly in regard to the presence (and amplitudes) of tracking subsynchronous response amplitudes at the BG frequency. Obviously, more detailed models can be developed for the rotordynamics of IGCs, but the authors feel that this relatively simple, one-rotor model, is adequate to predict the observed tracking phenomena in IGCs. The analysis can be produced by modifying an existing rotor code or by simply downloading the rotor’s [M], [K], and [C] matrices over a range of speeds and then using MATLAB or similar codes.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document