Numerical Investigation of Bleed Effects on Supersonic Inlet under Various Bleed and Inlet Conditions

Author(s):  
Yohan Choe ◽  
Chongam Kim
2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Fangyuan Lou ◽  
John Charles Fabian ◽  
Nicole Leanne Key

This paper investigates the aerodynamics of a transonic impeller using static pressure measurements. The impeller is a high-speed, high-pressure-ratio wheel used in small gas turbine engines. The experiment was conducted on the single stage centrifugal compressor facility in the compressor research laboratory at Purdue University. Data were acquired from choke to near-surge at four different corrected speeds (Nc) from 80% to 100% design speed, which covers both subsonic and supersonic inlet conditions. Details of the impeller flow field are discussed using data acquired from both steady and time-resolved static pressure measurements along the impeller shroud. The flow field is compared at different loading conditions, from subsonic to supersonic inlet conditions. The impeller performance was strongly dependent on the inducer, where the majority of relative diffusion occurs. The inducer diffuses flow more efficiently for inlet tip relative Mach numbers close to unity, and the performance diminishes at other Mach numbers. Shock waves emerging upstream of the impeller leading edge were observed from 90% to 100% corrected speed, and they move towards the impeller trailing edge as the inlet tip relative Mach number increases. There is no shock wave present in the inducer at 80% corrected speed. However, a high-loss region near the inducer throat was observed at 80% corrected speed resulting in a lower impeller efficiency at subsonic inlet conditions.


Author(s):  
Cleopatra Cuciumita ◽  
Christian Oliver Paschereit

Abstract Pulsed detonation combustion is not a new research topic. However, since the detonation process was first observed in 1881, the interest in it grew substantially in the last decades. Because the gas turbines have reached their technological maturity, the scientific community has started looking into novel thermodynamic cycles, such as detonation-based cycles. Numerous studies have been recently published in the field of pulsed detonation combustion, both numerical and experimental and major breakthroughs have been achieved in understanding and controlling the phenomena. However, the topic remains of mostly academic interest, one of the reasons is that practical implementation of it is reliant turbomachinery that would efficiently convert the pulsed, high peak, pressure into useful work. The few studies conducted on classical, existing turbines, show an efficiency of around 50% when coupled with a PDC. The low efficiency has been directly connected with the shock wave losses. For this reason, the design of turbines with supersonic inlet, and associated performance assessments have been researched. This work, however, has supersonic steady inlet Mach number or sinusoidal pulsating conditions around an average subsonic value. No public literature exists on the performances of turbines operating at pulsating inlet conditions similar to the outlet of a PDC. The current paper tackles exactly this issue. The geometry for a turbine stator row was designed based on supersonic inlet design criteria. This geometry was then subjected to CFD numerical simulations. First, the pressure losses associated with a constant supersonic inlet were numerically determined to be a little over 26%. The next step was to assess the pressure losses of the same turbine row geometry in a transient approach. This time, the inlet conditions were set to be variable in time. The values were taken from a 1D in-house code computing the parameters at the outlet of a PDC working on hydrogen and air under stoichiometric conditions. This inlet conditions give a much better insight with respect to the flow within a turbine row when coupled with a PDC. It was observed that the pressure losses, computed as a time average for a period corresponding to the PDC functioning frequency were of 12%. This value is much less than that for a constant supersonic inlet, mostly due to the turbine being exposed to the shock waves for less time.


1991 ◽  
Author(s):  
JUNJI SHIGEMATSU ◽  
KAZUOMI YAMAMOTO ◽  
KAZUO SHIRAISHI ◽  
ATSUSHIGE TANAKA

2018 ◽  
Vol 168 ◽  
pp. 02007
Author(s):  
Petr Straka ◽  
Jaromír Příhoda ◽  
David Fenderl ◽  
Bartoloměj Rudas

The contribution deals with the numerical simulation of 2D compressible flow though the tip-section turbine blade cascade with the supersonic inlet boundary conditions. The simulation was carried out by the in-house numerical code using the explicit algebraic Reynolds stress model completed by the bypass transition model with the algebraic equation for the intermittency coefficient. The γ-Re model implemented in the commercial code Fluent was used for the comparison. Predictions carried out for the nominal conditions were focused on the effect of inlet free-stream turbulence on the flow structure in the blade cascade under supersonic inlet conditions. Numerical results were compared with experimental data.


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