Abstract

In this paper, the tip clearance effects on the aeroelastic stability of a last-stage steam turbine model are investigated. Most of the unsteady aerodynamic work contributing to flutter of the long blades of the last-stage of a steam turbine is done near the tip of the blade. The flow in this region is transonic and sensitive to geometric parameters such as the tip clearance height. The KTH Steam Turbine Flutter Test Case was chosen as the test case, which is an open geometry with similar parameters to modern free-standing last-stage steam turbines. The energy method based on 3D URANS simulation was applied to investigate the flutter characteristics of the rotor blade with five tip gap height varying from 0–5% of the chord length. The numerical results show that the global aerodynamic damping for the least stable inter-blade phase angle (IBPA) increases with the tip gap height. Three physical mechanisms are found to cause this phenomenon. The primary cause of the variation in total aerodynamic damping is the interaction between tip clearance vortex and the trailing edge shock from the adjacent blade. Another mechanism is the acceleration of the flow near the aft side of the suction surface in the tip region due to the well-developed tip leakage vortex when the tip clearance height is greater than 2.5% of chord. This causes a stabilizing effect at the least stable IBPA. The third mechanism is the oscillation of the tip leakage vortex due to the blade vibration. This has a negative influence on the aeroelastic stability.

Highlights

  • Flutter is a critical problem in modern steam turbines, as the trend for these blades is to be designed with high aerodynamic loading and a high aspect ratio to meet the demand for high efficiency

  • The influence of tip clearance flow on the stage performance is generally insignificant in last-stage steam turbines, for the tip gap height is much smaller than the span height [19]

  • The influence of the tip gap height on the aeroelastic stability of a realistic-scale last-stage steam turbine model was investigated in this paper

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Summary

Introduction

Flutter is a critical problem in modern steam turbines, as the trend for these blades is to be designed with high aerodynamic loading and a high aspect ratio to meet the demand for high efficiency. Researchers are concerned with the influence of tip clearance flow on the aeroelastic stability of turbomachinery, while most of the previous research focused on low speed and low stagger angle cascades. Bell and He [1] experimentally investigated the impact of tip gap height on the unsteady pressure during blade oscillation using a single-blade low-speed turbine model.

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