Abstract

The tandem airfoil has potential to do more work as a compressor blade than a single airfoil without incurring higher losses. The goal of this work is to evaluate the fluid mechanics of a tandem rotor in the rear stages of a core compressor. As such, the results are constrained to shock-free fully turbulent flow with thick endwall boundary layers at the inlet. A high hub-to-tip ratio 3D blade geometry was developed based on the best-case tandem airfoil configuration from a previous 2D study. The 3D tandem rotor was simulated in isolation, in order to scrutinize the fluid mechanisms of the rotor, which had not been previously well documented. A geometrically similar single blade rotor was also simulated under the same conditions for a baseline comparison. The tandem rotor was found to outperform its single blade counterpart by attaining a higher work coefficient, polytropic efficiency, and numerical stall margin. An examination of the tandem rotor fluid mechanics revealed that the forward blade acts in a similar manner to a conventional rotor. The aft blade is strongly dependent on the flow it receives from the forward blade, and tends to be more three-dimensional and nonuniform than the forward blade.

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