Abstract

In previous studies, a theoretical model was developed after Acoustic Resonance (AR) was experimentally detected in a four-stage compressor, and AR inception was proposed to be triggered by an unknown sound source, which is a pressure perturbation of a specific frequency with a suitable circumferential propagation speed. The present paper, which is not dedicated to the simulation of acoustic field, aims to identify the specific sound source generated by the unsteady tip leakage flow using the unsteady Computational Fluid Mechanics (CFD) approach. After a comprehensive analysis of an Unsteady Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes (URANS) simulation, a pressure perturbation of non-integer multiple of rotor frequency is found at the blade tip. Since the essence of the tip leakage flow is a jet flow driven by the pressure difference between two sides of blade, a simplified tip leakage flow model is adopted using Large Eddy Simulation (LES) in order to simulate the jet flow through a tip clearance. It is found that the convection velocity of shedding vortices fits the expected propagation speed of the sound source, the frequency is also close to one of the dominating frequencies in the URANS simulation, and the resultant combination frequency coincides with the experimentally measured AR frequency. Since such a simplified model successfully captures the key physical mechanisms, it is concluded that this paper provides a piece of unambiguous evidence on the role of unsteady tip leakage vortex in triggering the AR inception of the multistage compressor.

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