Applied Sciences (Jun 2022)

Influence of Wake Intensity on the Unsteady Flow Characteristics of the Integrated Aggressive Interturbine Duct

  • Zhijun Lei,
  • Hongrui Liu,
  • Gang Li,
  • Jianbo Gong,
  • Yanfeng Zhang,
  • Xingen Lu,
  • Gang Xu,
  • Junqiang Zhu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app12136655
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 13
p. 6655

Abstract

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The interturbine transition duct (ITD), located between the high-pressure (HP) and low-pressure (LP) turbines of aeroengines, tends to be designed as an aggressive ITD integrated with wide-chord struts to meet the requirements of civil aeroengines for high bypass ratios and thrust–weight ratios. This paper presents a detailed unsteady numerical investigation of the effects of the HP rotor trailing-edge radius on the unsteady flow characteristics in the integrated aggressive interturbine transition duct (AITD), including the transport and dissipation of HP rotor wakes, the control mechanism of HP rotor wakes on flow separation and the influence of wake parameters. A sweeping rod, with a nondimensional diameter ranging from d/s = 0.056~0.143 (based on the pitch (s) of wide-chord struts at the midspan) and a reduced frequency (f) of 1.07, is used to simulate the HP rotor wake to decouple its influence from other secondary flows. Using the k-ω SST turbulence model and gamma–theta transition model, a structured grid with 6.3 million nodes can achieve similar global results. The wake in the lower part of the AITD channel dissipates rapidly because of the stretching between its own circumferential motion and the radial upward secondary flow, especially for a small d/s. Only the residual wake in the upper part can reach wide-chord struts in the case with large d/s. A sweeping rod with a large d/s can reduce the radial pressure gradient in the AITD, inhibit the internal secondary flow to a certain extent, reduce the dissipation rate of the wake, enhance its suppression effect on flow separation on a wide-chord strut, and decrease the flow loss. However, the wake can also enhance the passage vortex due to the increasing circumferential pressure gradient in the wide-chord strut channel, resulting in increasing blade profile loss. In the scope of this study, the aerodynamic gain of the wake is still not enough to compensate for its loss increment (including its own dissipation loss). Therefore, selecting a small trailing-edge radius of the HP rotor is conducive to improving the aerodynamic performance of the integrated AITD.

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