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Self-Recirculating Casing Treatment Concept for Enhanced Compressor Performance
Author(s) -
Michael D. Hathaway
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
nasa technical reports server (nasa)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1115/gt2002-30368
Subject(s) - stall (fluid mechanics) , casing , gas compressor , aerodynamics , axial compressor , computational fluid dynamics , transonic , mechanics , bleed , mass flow , materials science , mechanical engineering , engineering , aerospace engineering , physics , art , visual arts
A state-of-the-art CFD code (APNASA) was employed in a computationally based investigation of the impact of casing bleed and injection on the stability and performance of a moderate speed fan rotor wherein the stalling mass flow is controlled by tip flow field breakdown. The investigation was guided by observed trends in endwall flow characteristics (e.g., increasing endwall aerodynamic blockage) as stall is approached, and based on the hypothesis that application of bleed or injection can mitigate these trends. The “best” bleed and injection configurations were then combined to yield a self-recirculating casing treatment concept. The results of this investigation yielded: 1) identification of the fluid mechanisms which precipitate stall of tip critical blade rows, and 2) an approach to recirculated casing treatment which results in increased compressor stall range with minimal or no loss in efficiency. Subsequent application of this approach to a high speed transonic rotor successfully yielded significant improvements in stall range with no loss in compressor efficiency.Copyright © 2002 by ASME

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