Vibration and flutter of mistuned bladed-disk assemblies
Author(s) -
K. R. V. Kaza,
Robert E. Kielb
Publication year - 1985
Publication title -
journal of propulsion and power
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.913
H-Index - 101
eISSN - 1533-3876
pISSN - 0748-4658
DOI - 10.2514/3.22806
Subject(s) - flutter , vibration , mechanics , mistuning , aeroelasticity , structural engineering , physics , inertia , aerodynamic force , aerodynamics , turbine blade , classical mechanics , acoustics , engineering , turbine , thermodynamics
An analytical model for investigating vibration and flutter of mistuned bladed disk assemblies is presented. This model accounts for elastic, inertial and aerodynamic coupling between bending and torsional motions of each individual blade, elastic and inertial couplings between the blades and the disk, and aerodynamic coupling among the blades. The disk was modeled as a circular plate with constant thickness and each blade was represented by a twisted, slender, straight, nonuniform, elastic beam with a symmetric cross section. The elastic axis, inertia axis, and the tension axis were taken to be noncoincident and the structural warping of the section was explicitly considered. The blade aerodynamic loading in the subsonic and supersonic flow regimes was obtained from two-dimensional unsteady, cascade theories. All the possible standing wave modes of the disk and traveling wave modes of the blades were included. The equations of motion were derived by using the energy method in conjunction with the assumed mode shapes for the disk and the blades. Continuities of displacement and slope at the blade-disk junction were maintained. The equations were solved to investigate the effects of blade-disk coupling and blade frequency mistuning on vibration and flutter. Results showed that the flexibility of practical disks such as those used for current generation turbufans did not have a significant influence on either the tuned or mistuned flutter characteristics. However, the disk flexibility may have a strong influence on some of the system frequencies and on forced response.
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