This book was retrived from archive.org

NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) : Numerical pdf

NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) : Numerical_bookcover

NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) : Numerical

More Book Details

Description of the Book:

Future generations of ultra high bypass-ratio jet engines will require far higher pressure ratios and operating temperatures than those of current engines. For the foreseeable future, engine materials will not be able to withstand the high temperatures without some form of cooling. In particular the turbine blades, which are under high thermal as well as mechanical loads, must be cooled. Cooling of turbine blades is achieved by bleeding air from the compressor stage of the engine through complicated internal passages in the turbine blades (internal cooling, including jet-impingement cooling) and by bleeding small amounts of air into the boundary layer of the external flow through small discrete holes on the surface of the blade (film cooling and transpiration cooling). The cooling must be done using a minimum amount of air or any increases in efficiency gained through higher operating temperature will be lost due to added load on the compressor stage.

Turbine cooling schemes have traditionally been based on extensive empirical data bases, quasi-one-dimensional computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis, and trial and error. With improved capabilities of CFD, these traditional methods can be augmented by full three-dimensional simulations of the coolant flow to predict in detail the heat transfer and metal temperatures. Several aspects of turbine coolant flows make such application of CFD difficult, thus a highly effective CFD methodology must be used. First, high resolution of the flow field is required to attain the needed accuracy for heat transfer predictions, making highly efficient flow solvers essential for such computations. Second, the geometries of the flow passages are complicated but must be modeled accurately in order to capture all important details of the flow. This makes grid generation and grid quality important issues. Finally, since coolant flows are turbulent and separated the effects of turbulence must be modeled with a low Reynolds number turbulence model to accurately predict details of heat transfer

  • Creator/s: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS
  • Date: 1/1/2000
  • Year: 2000
  • Book Topics/Themes: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), FLOW DISTRIBUTION, ROTATION, COOLANTS, COOLING, JET ENGINES, THREE DIMENSIONAL MODELS, COMPUTATIONAL FLUID DYNAMICS, PRESSURE RATIO, GRID GENERATION (MATHEMATICS), OPERATING TEMPERATURE, TURBINE BLADES, Rigby, David L

An excerpt captured from the PDF book

NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) : Numerical_book-excerpt

Report Broken Link

File Copyright Claim

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Categories

You might be also interested in these Books

Related Posts
PDF Viewer

الرجاء الانتظار بينما يتم تحميل الـ PDF…
HTML Popup Example