Abstract

Three-dimensional blading is an efficient technique in compressor aerodynamic design, and its function mechanism in the cantilevered stator needs to be addressed. This paper focuses on the sweep and dihedral in the cantilevered stator and seeks to expose their effects through detailed flow field analysis. Results show that the forward sweep could alleviate the corner flow separation by preventing the accumulation of the secondary flow toward the corner region, resulting in stronger flow separation at the blade trailing edge; in summary, forward sweep with appropriate parameters could increase static pressure rise by 14.3%. The positive dihedral will carry the endwall flow to the upper-span sections, thereby reducing blade corner separation; hence, as much as 23.5% improvement in static pressure rise could be obtained with the appropriate dihedral. Moreover, the combination of a relatively large sweep height and a moderate sweep angle with a low dihedral height and a moderate sweep angle provides optimum aerodynamic performance; the static pressure rise coefficient sees an increment of 25.5% at the near stall point. An experiment is then performed to further validate the theory, which shows a 2% improvement in efficiency of 3D blading at small mass flow rates. However, the secondary leakage should be given attention at high mass flow coefficients, while the corner separation needs further elimination at small mass flow rates.

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