Abstract

Resonant response of turbomachinery blades can lead to high cycle fatigue (HCF) if the vibration amplitudes are significant. Therefore, the dangerousness assessment of the resonance crossing is important. It requires accurate predictions of the aerodynamic excitation, damping, and response, which will consume immense computational costs. The novel aspect of this study is the development of an efficient approach, which incorporates the time transformation (TT) method to predict the aerodynamic excitations and the harmonic forced response method to obtain the response levels. The efficiency and accuracy of this method were evaluated by comparing with traditional methods for the resonance crossing excited by upstream wake in a 1.5 multistage compressor. For the aerodynamic excitation, discrepancies of ±2% at the mean pressure and ±25% at the harmonic pressure in most areas expect for the blade root were observed, but the calculation time required by the TT method was only 5% of that by the time-marching method. Moreover, response levels with the same aerodynamic forces were compared between the harmonic forced-response and transient dynamic methods. Small differences in the displacement and stress variables were observed; the relative deviation was smaller than 2% with only 1% computing time compared with the transient method, indicating the high accuracy and efficiency of the efficient approach.

Highlights

  • Forced vibration is an important aero-elastic phenomenon in turbomachines caused by aerodynamic or mechanical excitations, which can lead to high cycle fatigue (HCF)

  • A weak coupling approach was utilized to assess the blade vibration response levels caused by the wake excitation in a 1.5 multistage compressor

  • The required aerodynamic excitation and damping were calculated by the CFD simulations

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Forced vibration is an important aero-elastic phenomenon in turbomachines caused by aerodynamic or mechanical excitations, which can lead to high cycle fatigue (HCF). It can be divided into two types according to the excitation sources [1]. One is the classical forced vibration with the excitation from the wake and potential disturbances of the adjacent blade rows. The excitation frequencies, which are the blade passing frequency (BPF) and its harmonics, are relatively high and excite vibrations of higher order modes [2,3]. The other is caused by a loss of symmetry, such as the inlet distortion or non-uniform temperature field [4,5]. The excitation frequencies are usually lower and called low engine order (LEO) excitations

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call