Abstract

At present, there are very few vibration test designs for compressor stator blades in damped blade test research, and there is a lack of consideration of the holding ring structure of the blade installation. In recent years, compressor designs have become more elaborate, and their structures have become more compact. For improving compressor stator blade design, it is necessary to study the blade vibration response considering contact and friction. In this paper, a compressor stator blade vibration test system with a holding ring structure is designed and built. The composition of the system and the flow of vibration are tested. Then, the nonlinear vibration rules of the model stator blades are experimentally studied through the built test bench. The experimental conditions include excitation forces of 1 N, 2 N, 3 N and 4 N, respectively. At the same time, the normal load of the outer holding ring and the blade contact surface includes 10 N, 20 N, 30 N and 40 N working conditions. The nonlinear vibration law of the test model blade considering contact friction is analyzed using a numerical method and experimental data. The experimental data agree well with the numerical analysis results, and the relative error of measurement is basically less than 5%. It is concluded that the damping vibration rule of the test model blade is related to the exciting force applied by the exciter and the contact surface normal load applied by the adjusting bolt. When these two parameters change, the movement behavior of the contact surface will switch between macro-slip, fretting slip and even a viscous state. Therefore, the amplitude of the blade will change and show nonlinear vibration characteristics. The experimental data in this paper can provide a reference for research on stator ring vibration safety in compressors.

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