Fluid-Structure Analysis of a Transonic Rotor
Abstract
This study developed and applied a 2-way fluid-structure interaction model to increase fidelity in numerical simulations of the Naval Postgraduate School Military Fan. The Naval Postgraduate School Military Fan is an existing transonic-rotor geometry undergoing test and evaluation using the Turbopropulsion Lab's Transonic-Compressor Rig. A fluid solution using ANSYS CFX was developed and coupled with an ANSYS Mechanical static-structural solution of the rotor blade to model the hot shape of the rotor. Cold-shape simulations were conducted for 0.42 percent average blade-height (0.381 mm) and 1.41 percent average blade-height (1.27 mm) tip-gap configurations, and hot-shape simulations were conducted for the latter configuration. Performance predictions in terms of total pressure ratios and isentropic efficiencies were compared for cold- and hot-shape analyses and measured for fidelity against experimental data. Hot-shape analyses consistently improved modeling fidelity as compared to cold-shape analyses by allowing for increased mass-flow rates due to radial growth and untwist of the rotor blades at speed. Flow features associated with the transonic regime were identified and discussed for both cold and hot analyses. With the developed experimentally verified modeling procedure, CFD predictions may be conducted for alternate configurations of the evaluated rotor or for other transonic rotor geometries as a supplement to experimental data acquisition.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Jun 01, 2019
- Accession Number
- AD1080470
Entities
People
- Grant D. Thornton
Organizations
- Naval Postgraduate School