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Rake impact on turboshaft compressors, a numerical study

Valeriu Dragan (Department of Computational Fluid Dynamics, National Research and Development Institute for Gas Turbines COMOTI, Bucharest, Romania)
Oana Dumitrescu (Department of Computational Fluid Dynamics, National Research and Development Institute for Gas Turbines COMOTI, Bucharest Romania and Faculty of Power Engineering, Polytechnic University of Bucharest, Bucharest, Romania)
Ion Malael (Department of Computational Fluid Dynamics, National Research and Development Institute for Gas Turbines COMOTI, Bucharest, Romania)
Adrian Daniel Azoitei (Department of Mechanical Engineering, Technische Universiteit Eindhoven, Eindhoven, The Netherlands)

Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology

ISSN: 0002-2667

Article publication date: 29 June 2020

Issue publication date: 21 August 2020

107

Abstract

Purpose

Turboshaft engines usually include one centrifugal compressor due to its high-pressure ratio, stability and compactness. Many designers rely on positive raking to decrease tip gap flow and therefore losses. However recent optimization studies revealed geometries contradicting this canonic view. Hence, this paper aims to investigate how the rake angle alone can influence performance and to which extent.

Design/methodology/approach

A turboshaft representative impeller was chosen and altered for null and +/−30° rake angles. Menter's shear stress transport model is used for steady computational fluid dynamics simulations, sweeping the nominal speedline at various tip clearances. Backsweep distribution is identical in all cases, isolating rake influence.

Findings

Pressure ratio was lowered for the both positively and negatively raked blades, but through distinct aerodynamic mechanisms. Although the flow through the tip gap was lower for the positive rake, this is due to lower blade loading. Splitter comparison reveal that these effects are more pronounced in the radial regions.

Practical implications

Some of the findings may extend beyond turboshaft engines, into turbochargers, home appliances or industrial blowers. However, all extrapolations must consider specific differences between these applications. Turboshaft compressors designers can benefit from this study when setting up their free parameters and penalty functions in the early concept stages.

Originality/value

Only few similar studies can be found in the literature to date, none similar to turboshaft applications. Also, this impeller is designed to eliminate leading edge shocks and suction side boundary layer separation, which makes it easier to isolate the tip gap flow effects. The authors also provide a framework on which semi-empirical design equations can be further developed to incorporate rake into 1D design tools.

Keywords

Citation

Dragan, V., Dumitrescu, O., Malael, I. and Azoitei, A.D. (2020), "Rake impact on turboshaft compressors, a numerical study", Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology, Vol. 92 No. 8, pp. 1169-1176. https://doi.org/10.1108/AEAT-01-2020-0022

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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