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Axial compressor

About: Axial compressor is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 12035 publications have been published within this topic receiving 127766 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an approach to endwall contouring has been developed with the goal of reducing secondary losses in highly loaded axial flow turbines, and an experimental assessment of the performance of the contouring approach implemented in a low-speed linear cascade test facility is described.
Abstract: An approach to endwall contouring has been developed with the goal of reducing secondary losses in highly loaded axial flow turbines. The present paper describes an experimental assessment of the performance of the contouring approach implemented in a low-speed linear cascade test facility. The study examines the secondary flows of a cascade composed of Pratt & Whitney PAKB airfoils. This airfoil has been used extensively in low-pressure turbine research, and the present work adds intrapassage pressure and velocity measurements to the existing database. The cascade was tested at design incidence and at an inlet Reynolds number of 126,000 based on inlet midspan velocity and axial chord. Quantitative results include seven-hole pneumatic probe pressure measurements downstream of the cascade to assess blade row losses and detailed seven-hole probe measurements within the blade passage to track the progression of flow structures. Qualitative results take the form of oil surface flow visualization on the endwall and blade suction surface. The application of endwall contouring resulted in lower secondary losses and a reduction in secondary kinetic energy associated with pitchwise flow near the endwall and spanwise flow up the suction surface within the blade passage. The mechanism of loss reduction is discussed in regard to the reduction in secondary kinetic energy.

57 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the stator response due to the upstream vortical disturbance reaches a maximum when the wake impinges against the suction surface immediately downstream of the leading edge.
Abstract: This paper demonstrates reduction of stator unsteady loading due to forced response in a large-scale, low-speed, rotor/stator/rotor axial compressor rig by clocking the downstream rotor. Data from the rotor/stator configuration showed that the stator response due to the upstream vortical disturbance reaches a maximum when the wake impinges against the suction surface immediately downstream of the leading edge. Results from the stator/rotor configuration revealed that the stator response due to the downstream potential disturbance reaches a minimum with a slight time delay after the rotor sweeps pass the stator trailing edge. For the rotor/stator/rotor configuration, with Gap1 = 10 percent chord and Gap2 = 30 percent chord, results showed a 60 percent reduction in the stator force amplitude by clocking the downstream rotor so that the time occurrence of the maximum force due to the upstream vortical disturbance coincides with that of the minimum force due to the downstream potential disturbance. This is the first time, the authors believe, that beneficial use of flow unsteadiness is definitively demonstrated to reduce the blade unsteady loading.

57 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the transient processes of rotating stall evolution in a low-speed axial compressor stage with three stator-rotor gaps and found that stall inception is detected by a spiky short length-scale disturbance, and the number of spiky waves increases to generate the high frequency waves.
Abstract: The transient processes of rotating stall evolution have been investigated experimentally in a low-speed axial compressor stage with three stator-rotor gaps. The pressure traces at 8 circumferential locations on the casing wall near the rotor leading edge have been analyzed by the wavelet transforms. With the appropriate mother wavelets, the evolution of short and long length-scale disturbances leading to the stall can be captured clearly.Behavior of these disturbances is different depending on the stator-rotor gap. For the large and middle gap, the stall inception is detected by a spiky short length-scale disturbance, and the number of spiky waves increases to generate the high frequency waves. They becomes the short length-scale part-span stall cells at the mild stall for the large gap, while they turn into a big stall cell with growth of a long length-scale disturbance for the middle gap. In the latter case, therefore, the stalling process was identified with ‘high frequency stall inception’. For the small stator-rotor gap, the stalling process is identified with ‘long wave-length stall inception’, and supported the recent computational model for the short wave-length stall inception by showing that closing the rotor-stator gaps suppressed the growth of short length-scale disturbances.From the measurement of the pressure field traces on the casing wall, a hypothesis has been built up that the short length-scale disturbance should result from a separation vortex from a blade surface to reduce circulation. The processes of the stall evolution are discussed on this hypothesis.Copyright © 2001 by ASME

57 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focused on finding the best vane angle from aerodynamic aspects for the combustion applications, and they used the standard k-e model and Reynolds stress model for weak and strong swirls respectively.

57 citations

Patent
Bernard L Koff1
01 Jun 1970
TL;DR: In this article, a system for cooling the rotor of an axial flow compressor incorporated in a gas turbine engine is described, where cooling air flows to the downstream end of the rotor and is then ducted back into the compressor inlet.
Abstract: The disclosure shows a system for cooling the rotor of an axial flow compressor incorporated in a gas turbine engine. Air is ducted from the first compressor stage discharge into the interior of the rotor. This cooling air flows to the downstream end of the rotor and is then ducted back into the compressor inlet.

56 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202398
2022304
2021217
2020288
2019316
2018353