Abstract

This paper proposes the circulation redistribution for the low-pressure (LP) rotor of a highly-loaded vaneless counter-rotating turbine (VCRT) to reduce the LP shock losses. The method is to decrease the mid-span circulation and increase the tip circulation at the exit of the LP rotor with unchanged high-pressure (HP) and LP power output. The LP Blade-to-Blade flow field can be considered as a Laval nozzle model. And the high static pressure drop from the throat to the exit results in strong trailing edge (TE) shocks near the LP mid-span. Also, the suction side TE shock (ST) and the reflected shock of the pressure side TE shock (RPT) near the LP mid-span merge into a relatively strong shock very close to the TE. These two factors result in high shock losses. To reduce the shock losses under the design condition, decreasing the stagger angle and the blade exit angle near the LP mid-span are adopted to reduce the LP mid-span exit circulation. This changes the throat area to exit area ratio near the LP mid-span, prompting the actual static pressure drop from the throat to the exit to be reduced and closer to the theoretical value, so that the TE shock strength is reduced. Besides, the intersection of the RPT and the ST is delayed owing to the improved flow angle distributions near the TE, further contributing to the LP mid-span shock loss reduction. Since the LP power output is decreased and the LP tip-leakage flow (TLF) losses are far lower than the HP TLF losses, increasing the stagger angle and the blade exit angle in LP tip regions are employed to increase the LP exit circulation and decrease the HP exit circulation in tip regions. Then the HP and LP efficiency are both raised with unchanged HP and LP power output after optimizing the blade profiles near the mid-span and in tip regions of the LP rotor. The remarkable thing is that the TE shock strength in LP tip and root regions are both reduced after improved because of the decreased ratio of the exit area to the throat area. And the intersection of the RPT and the ST in LP tip and root regions are also both delayed, leading to reduced shock losses. The reduced TE shock losses along the whole LP span appreciably raise the LP and VCRT efficiency by 0.96% and 0.32% respectively.

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