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A Computational Fluid Dynamics Study of Transitional Flows in Low-Pressure Turbines Under a Wide Range of Operating Conditions
Author(s) -
Yildirim Suzen,
Ping Huang,
David E. Ashpis,
Ralph J. Volino,
Thomas Corke,
Flint O. Thomas,
Junhui Huang,
James Lake,
Paul King
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of turbomachinery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.972
H-Index - 112
eISSN - 1528-8900
pISSN - 0889-504X
DOI - 10.1115/1.2218888
Subject(s) - intermittency , turbulence , turbulence modeling , mechanics , turbine , computational fluid dynamics , range (aeronautics) , flow (mathematics) , computation , statistical physics , physics , thermodynamics , computer science , engineering , aerospace engineering , algorithm
A transport equation for the intermittency factor is employed to predict the transitional flows in low-pressure turbines. The intermittent behavior of the transitional flows is taken into account and incorporated into computations by modifying the eddy viscosity, mu(sub p) with the intermittency factor, gamma. Turbulent quantities are predicted using Menter's two-equation turbulence model (SST). The intermittency factor is obtained from a transport equation model which can produce both the experimentally observed streamwise variation of intermittency and a realistic profile in the cross stream direction. The model had been previously validated against low-pressure turbine experiments with success. In this paper, the model is applied to predictions of three sets of recent low-pressure turbine experiments on the Pack B blade to further validate its predicting capabilities under various flow conditions. Comparisons of computational results with experimental data are provided. Overall, good agreement between the experimental data and computational results is obtained. The new model has been shown to have the capability of accurately predicting transitional flows under a wide range of low-pressure turbine conditions.

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