Abstract

Acoustic resonance is an important factor that contributes to aeroengine compressor failure. In this study, a plane cascade of compressor blades was designed to reproduce acoustic resonance via a low-speed wind tunnel test. A high-frequency hot-wire, microphone and strain gauge were used to synchronously measure the fluid, acoustic and structural parameters. We analysed the variation in the amplitude and frequency of the multi-field parameters with increasing mean flow velocity and explored the multi-field interaction mechanism that induces the acoustic resonance of the plane cascade. The plane cascade effectively reproduced the acoustic resonance phenomenon. The first-order acoustic-mode frequency of the plane cascade flow duct, second-order torsional vibration mode frequency of the blade and shedding mode frequency of the tip clearance leakage vortex were equal under acoustic resonance. The fluid, acoustic and structural fields showed a strong interaction effect, achieving the maximum blade vibration amplitude and causing fatigue cracks of torsional vibration at the blade root. The frequency lock-in region of the compressor plane cascade was divided into an ‘acoustic–structure’ interaction region, a ‘fluid–acoustic–structure’ interaction region and a first-order acoustic-mode dominant region with increasing mean flow velocity, which demonstrates an interesting phenomenon in which the fluid–acoustic–structure modes compete: acoustic mode > blade vibration mode > vortex shedding mode. The results demonstrate a unique approach to the study of acoustic resonance that provides insight into the acoustic resonance mechanism in a cascade of compressor blades.

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