Accurate predictions of unsteady forcing on turbine blades are essential for the avoidance of high-cycle-fatigue issues during turbine engine development. Further, if one can demonstrate that predictions of unsteady interaction in a turbine are accurate, then it becomes possible to anticipate resonant-stress problems and mitigate them through aerodynamic design changes during the development cycle. A successful reduction in unsteady forcing for a transonic turbine with significant shock interactions due to downstream components is presented here. A pair of methods to reduce the unsteadiness was considered and rigorously analyzed using a three-dimensional, time resolved Reynolds-Averaged Navier Stokes (RANS) solver. The first method relied on the physics of shock reflections itself and involved altering the stacking of downstream components to achieve a bowed airfoil. The second method considered was circumferentially-asymmetric vane spacing which is well known to spread the unsteadiness due to vane-blade interaction over a range of frequencies. Both methods of forcing reduction were analyzed separately and predicted to reduce unsteady pressures on the blade as intended. Then, both design changes were implemented together in a transonic turbine experiment and successfully shown to manipulate the blade unsteadiness in keeping with the design-level predictions. This demonstration was accomplished through comparisons of measured time-resolved pressures on the turbine blade to others obtained in a baseline experiment that included neither asymmetric spacing nor bowing of the downstream vane. The measured data were further compared to rigorous post-test simulations of the complete turbine annulus including a bowed downstream vane of non-uniform pitch.
Skip Nav Destination
ASME Turbo Expo 2018: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition
June 11–15, 2018
Oslo, Norway
Conference Sponsors:
- International Gas Turbine Institute
ISBN:
978-0-7918-5099-2
PROCEEDINGS PAPER
Effects of Downstream Vane Bowing and Asymmetry on Unsteadiness in a Transonic Turbine
John P. Clark,
John P. Clark
AFRL/RQTT, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH
Search for other works by this author on:
Richard J. Anthony,
Richard J. Anthony
AFRL/RQTT, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH
Search for other works by this author on:
Michael K. Ooten,
Michael K. Ooten
AFRL/RQTT, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH
Search for other works by this author on:
John M. Finnegan,
John M. Finnegan
AFRL/RQTT, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH
Search for other works by this author on:
Ron-Ho Ni
Ron-Ho Ni
AeroDynamic Solutions, Inc., Danville, CA
Search for other works by this author on:
John P. Clark
AFRL/RQTT, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH
Richard J. Anthony
AFRL/RQTT, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH
Michael K. Ooten
AFRL/RQTT, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH
John M. Finnegan
AFRL/RQTT, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH
P. Dean Johnson
FTT America, Jupiter, FL
Ron-Ho Ni
AeroDynamic Solutions, Inc., Danville, CA
Paper No:
GT2018-76735, V02AT45A029; 11 pages
Published Online:
August 30, 2018
Citation
Clark, JP, Anthony, RJ, Ooten, MK, Finnegan, JM, Johnson, PD, & Ni, R. "Effects of Downstream Vane Bowing and Asymmetry on Unsteadiness in a Transonic Turbine." Proceedings of the ASME Turbo Expo 2018: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition. Volume 2A: Turbomachinery. Oslo, Norway. June 11–15, 2018. V02AT45A029. ASME. https://doi.org/10.1115/GT2018-76735
Download citation file:
30
Views
0
Citations
Related Proceedings Papers
Related Articles
The Effect of Manufacturing Variations on Unsteady Interaction in a Transonic Turbine
J. Turbomach (May,2018)
Influence of Geometric Design Parameters Onto Vibratory Response and High-Cycle Fatigue Safety for Turbine Blades With Friction Damper
J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power (April,2019)
Improved Performance Rhenium Containing Single Crystal Alloy Turbine Blades Utilizing PPM Levels of the Highly Reactive Elements Lanthanum and Yttrium
J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power (January,1999)
Related Chapters
Outlook
Closed-Cycle Gas Turbines: Operating Experience and Future Potential
Control and Operational Performance
Closed-Cycle Gas Turbines: Operating Experience and Future Potential
Advances in the Stochastic Modeling of Constitutive Laws at Small and Finite Strains
Advances in Computers and Information in Engineering Research, Volume 2