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Windage Torque Reduction in Low-Pressure Turbine Cavities Part 2: Experimental and Numerical Results

Jackson, Richard; Lock, Gary D.; Sangan, Carl M.; Scobie, James A.; Li, Zhihui; Christodoulou, Loizos; Jefferson-Loveday, Richard; Ambrose, Stephen

Authors

Richard Jackson

Gary D. Lock

Carl M. Sangan

James A. Scobie

Zhihui Li

Richard Jefferson-Loveday



Abstract

Minimizing the losses within a low-pressure turbine (LPT) system is critical for the design of next-generation ultra-high bypass ratio aero-engines. The stator-well cavity windage torque can be a significant source of loss within the system, influenced by the ingestion of mainstream annulus air with a tangential velocity opposite to that of the rotor. This paper presents experimental and numerical results of three carefully designed Flow Control Concepts (FCCs) — additional geometric features on the stator surfaces, which were optimized to minimize the windage torque within a scaled, engine-representative stator-well cavity. FCC1 and FCC2 featured rows of guide vanes at the inlet to the downstream and upstream wheel-spaces, respectively. FCC3 combined FCC1 and FCC2. Superposed flows were introduced to the upstream section of the cavity, which modelled the low radius coolant and higher radius leakage between the rotor blades. In addition to torque measurements, total and static pressures were collected, from which the cavity swirl ratio was derived. Additional swirl measurements were collected using a five-hole aerodynamic probe, which traversed radially at the entrance and exit of the cavity. A cavity windage torque reduction of 55% on the baseline (which has no flow control) was measured for FCC3, at the design condition with superposed flow. For this concept, an increase in the cavity swirl in both the upstream and downstream wheel-spaces was demonstrated experimentally and numerically. With increasing superposed flow, the contribution of FCC1 surpassed FCC2, due to more mass flow entering the downstream wheel-space across the rotor fins (passing FCC1), and less ingestion from the annulus into the upstream wheel-space (passing FCC2). The torque changes from the concepts are explained using the fluid dynamic evidence from experimental swirl measurements and computational simulations. The simulations allow translation to engine-operating conditions and practical information to the engine designer.

Citation

Jackson, R., Lock, G. D., Sangan, C. M., Scobie, J. A., Li, Z., Christodoulou, L., …Ambrose, S. (2023). Windage Torque Reduction in Low-Pressure Turbine Cavities Part 2: Experimental and Numerical Results. In ASME Turbo Expo 2023: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition (11). https://doi.org/10.1115/gt2023-102311

Presentation Conference Type Conference Paper (Published)
Conference Name ASME Turbo Expo 2023: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition
Start Date Jun 26, 2023
End Date Jun 30, 2023
Acceptance Date Mar 12, 2023
Online Publication Date Sep 28, 2023
Publication Date Jun 26, 2023
Deposit Date Apr 10, 2024
Publisher American Society of Mechanical Engineers
Volume 13B: Turbomachinery — Axial Flow Turbine Aerodynamics
Pages 11
Book Title ASME Turbo Expo 2023: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition
ISBN 9780791887097
DOI https://doi.org/10.1115/gt2023-102311
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/25953607
Publisher URL https://asmedigitalcollection.asme.org/GT/proceedings-abstract/GT2023/87097/V13BT30A015/1168481
Additional Information GT2023-102311, V13BT30A015