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Active Flow Separation Control of a Stator Vane Using Surface Injection in a Multistage Compressor Experiment
Author(s) -
Dennis E. Culley,
Michelle M. Bright,
Patricia S. Prahst,
A. J. Strazisar
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
nasa technical reports server (nasa)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1115/gt2003-38863
Subject(s) - gas compressor , stator , suction , materials science , flow separation , fluidics , mechanics , casing , injector , axial compressor , flow control valve , flow control (data) , flow (mathematics) , control theory (sociology) , mechanical engineering , engineering , computer science , physics , electrical engineering , turbulence , telecommunications , control (management) , artificial intelligence
Micro-flow control actuation embedded in a stator vane was used to successfully control separation and improve near stall performance in a multistage compressor rig at NASA Glenn. Using specially designed stator vanes configured with internal actuation to deliver pulsating air through slots along the suction surface, a research study was performed to identify performance benefits using this microflow control approach. Pressure profiles and unsteady pressure measurements along the blade surface and at the shroud provided a dynamic look at the compressor during microflow air injection. These pressure measurements lead to a tracking algorithm to identify the onset of separation. The testing included steady air injection at various slot locations along the vane. The research also examined the benefit of pulsed injection and actively controlled air injection along the stator vane. Two types of actuation schemes were studied, including an embedded actuator for on-blade control. Successful application of an online detection and flow control scheme will be discussed. Testing showed dramatic performance benefit for flow reattachment and subsequent improvement in diffusion through the use of pulsed controlled injection. The paper will discuss the experimental setup, the blade configurations, and preliminary CFD results which guided the slot location along the blade. The paper will also show the pressure profiles and unsteady pressure measurements used to track flow control enhancement, and will conclude with the tracking algorithm for adjusting the control.

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