Abstract

Abstract With the advancement of modern fan architectures, the lack of experimental benchmarks for the research community became apparent in the recent years. Enormous effort in the method development could not be validated on representative geometries and motivated the development of the open-test-case ECL5/CATANA. A carbon fiber fan stage has been designed by Ecole Centrale de Lyon and shared with the community in 2021. The fan is representative of a modern ultra high bypass ratio (UHBR) architecture with sonic design speed. The reference configuration has been investigated experimentally on a novel test facility with multiphysical instrumentation. In this publication, the results of the first experimental campaign are presented with a detailed analysis of the aerodynamic performance and system symmetry. The presented results comprise full stage mappings across the whole operating range for three main speedlines (55%, 80%, and 100%) using performance rakes, unsteady wall pressure arrays, tip clearance, and stagger angle measurements. Radial profiles of intake boundary layer and rotor exit conditions at selected conditions complete the full validation dataset for steady and unsteady aerodynamic simulations. Results are discussed in comparison to blind-test Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes (RANS) simulations of different international institutes. Significant prediction inaccuracies of the tip flow and corner separations of the stator are observed and reveal the requirement of real blade geometry measurements at running conditions. This article is accompanied by a publication with a focus on aeroelastic instabilities observed near the stability limit. The results represent a comprehensive dimensional benchmark dataset and allow method validation on multiple levels of fidelity for the aerodynamic and aeroelastic research community.

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