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    Stall Inception in a Boundary Layer Ingesting Fan

    Source: Journal of Turbomachinery:;2019:;volume 141:;issue 009::page 91007
    Author:
    Perovic, D.
    ,
    Hall, C. A.
    ,
    Gunn, E. J.
    DOI: 10.1115/1.4043644
    Publisher: American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: Jet engines with boundary layer ingestion (BLI) could offer significant reductions in aircraft fuel burn compared with podded turbofans. However, the engine fans must run continuously with severe inlet distortion, which is known to reduce stability. In this paper, an experimental study has been completed on a low-speed rig fan operating with a BLI-type inlet distortion. Unsteady casing static pressure measurements have been made at multiple locations during stall events. Steady-state, full-annulus area traverses have also been performed at rotor inlet and exit at a near-stall operating point. The reduction in stability caused by BLI is found to be small. It is found that with BLI the fan can operate stably despite the presence of localized regions where the rotor operating point lies beyond the stability boundary measured in clean flow. With the BLI-type distortion applied, the measured rotor incidence varies around the annulus due to nonuniform upstream velocity and swirl. The measured amplitude of unsteady casing pressure fluctuations just prior to stall is found to correlate with the circumferential variation of rotor incidence, suggesting that rotor incidence is a key variable affecting the creation and growth of flow disturbances. In regions of high incidence, disturbances resembling local flow separations are initiated. However, in regions of low or negative incidence, any disturbances decay rapidly. Full rotating stall with BLI occurs when high incidence regions are widespread enough to sustain disturbances which can propagate around the entire annulus.
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      Stall Inception in a Boundary Layer Ingesting Fan

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    contributor authorPerovic, D.
    contributor authorHall, C. A.
    contributor authorGunn, E. J.
    date accessioned2019-09-18T09:01:17Z
    date available2019-09-18T09:01:17Z
    date copyright6/12/2019 12:00:00 AM
    date issued2019
    identifier issn0889-504X
    identifier otherturbo_141_9_091007
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4257955
    description abstractJet engines with boundary layer ingestion (BLI) could offer significant reductions in aircraft fuel burn compared with podded turbofans. However, the engine fans must run continuously with severe inlet distortion, which is known to reduce stability. In this paper, an experimental study has been completed on a low-speed rig fan operating with a BLI-type inlet distortion. Unsteady casing static pressure measurements have been made at multiple locations during stall events. Steady-state, full-annulus area traverses have also been performed at rotor inlet and exit at a near-stall operating point. The reduction in stability caused by BLI is found to be small. It is found that with BLI the fan can operate stably despite the presence of localized regions where the rotor operating point lies beyond the stability boundary measured in clean flow. With the BLI-type distortion applied, the measured rotor incidence varies around the annulus due to nonuniform upstream velocity and swirl. The measured amplitude of unsteady casing pressure fluctuations just prior to stall is found to correlate with the circumferential variation of rotor incidence, suggesting that rotor incidence is a key variable affecting the creation and growth of flow disturbances. In regions of high incidence, disturbances resembling local flow separations are initiated. However, in regions of low or negative incidence, any disturbances decay rapidly. Full rotating stall with BLI occurs when high incidence regions are widespread enough to sustain disturbances which can propagate around the entire annulus.
    publisherAmerican Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleStall Inception in a Boundary Layer Ingesting Fan
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume141
    journal issue9
    journal titleJournal of Turbomachinery
    identifier doi10.1115/1.4043644
    journal fristpage91007
    journal lastpage091007-10
    treeJournal of Turbomachinery:;2019:;volume 141:;issue 009
    contenttypeFulltext
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