Low aspect ratio vanes, often the result of overall engine architecture constraints, create strong secondary flows and high end-wall loss. In this paper, a splitter concept is demonstrated that reduces secondary flow strength and improves stage performance. An analytic conceptual study, corroborated by inviscid computations, shows that the total secondary kinetic energy (SKE) of the secondary flow vortices is reduced when the number of passages is increased and, for a given number of vanes, when the inlet end-wall boundary layer is evenly distributed between the passages. Viscous computations show that, for this to be achieved in a splitter configuration, the pressure-side leg of the low aspect ratio vane horseshoe vortex, must enter the adjacent passage (and not “jump” in front of the splitter leading edge). For a target turbine application, four vane designs were produced using a multi-objective optimization approach. These designs represent current practice for a low aspect ratio vane, a design exempt from thickness constraints, and two designs incorporating splitter vanes. Each geometry is tested experimentally, as a sector, within a low-speed turbine stage. The vane designs with splitter geometries were found to reduce the measured secondary kinetic energy, by up to 85%, to a value similar to the design exempt from thickness constraints. The resulting flow field was also more uniform in both the circumferential and radial directions. One splitter design was selected for a full annulus test where a mixed-out loss reduction, compared to the current practice design, of 15.3% was measured and the stage efficiency increased by 0.88%.
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September 2017
Research-Article
Secondary Flow Control in Low Aspect Ratio Vanes Using Splitters
Christopher J. Clark,
Christopher J. Clark
Whittle Laboratory,
University of Cambridge,
1 JJ Thomson Avenue,
Cambridge CB3 0DY, UK
e-mail: cjc95@cam.ac.uk
University of Cambridge,
1 JJ Thomson Avenue,
Cambridge CB3 0DY, UK
e-mail: cjc95@cam.ac.uk
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Graham Pullan,
Graham Pullan
Whittle Laboratory,
University of Cambridge,
1 JJ Thomson Avenue,
Cambridge CB3 0DY, UK
University of Cambridge,
1 JJ Thomson Avenue,
Cambridge CB3 0DY, UK
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Eric Curtis,
Eric Curtis
Whittle Laboratory,
University of Cambridge,
1 JJ Thomson Avenue,
Cambridge CB3 0DY, UK
University of Cambridge,
1 JJ Thomson Avenue,
Cambridge CB3 0DY, UK
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Frederic Goenaga
Frederic Goenaga
Rolls Royce,
Bristol BS34 7QE, UK
Bristol BS34 7QE, UK
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Christopher J. Clark
Whittle Laboratory,
University of Cambridge,
1 JJ Thomson Avenue,
Cambridge CB3 0DY, UK
e-mail: cjc95@cam.ac.uk
University of Cambridge,
1 JJ Thomson Avenue,
Cambridge CB3 0DY, UK
e-mail: cjc95@cam.ac.uk
Graham Pullan
Whittle Laboratory,
University of Cambridge,
1 JJ Thomson Avenue,
Cambridge CB3 0DY, UK
University of Cambridge,
1 JJ Thomson Avenue,
Cambridge CB3 0DY, UK
Eric Curtis
Whittle Laboratory,
University of Cambridge,
1 JJ Thomson Avenue,
Cambridge CB3 0DY, UK
University of Cambridge,
1 JJ Thomson Avenue,
Cambridge CB3 0DY, UK
Frederic Goenaga
Rolls Royce,
Bristol BS34 7QE, UK
Bristol BS34 7QE, UK
1Corresponding author.
Contributed by the International Gas Turbine Institute (IGTI) of ASME for publication in the JOURNAL OF TURBOMACHINERY. Manuscript received December 2, 2016; final manuscript received January 11, 2017; published online April 11, 2017. Editor: Kenneth Hall.
J. Turbomach. Sep 2017, 139(9): 091003 (11 pages)
Published Online: April 11, 2017
Article history
Received:
December 2, 2016
Revised:
January 11, 2017
Citation
Clark, C. J., Pullan, G., Curtis, E., and Goenaga, F. (April 11, 2017). "Secondary Flow Control in Low Aspect Ratio Vanes Using Splitters." ASME. J. Turbomach. September 2017; 139(9): 091003. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4036190
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