Abstract:
This thesis aims to contribute to the understanding of transitional flows in
the blade boundary layers of axial compressors. Two experiments are described,
the first examining in detail the transitional boundary layer on a
simulated controlled-diffusion blade and the second surveying the mid-height
flowfield in an embedded
stage of a low-speed axial compressor. The velocity
distribution on the simulated blade is identical to the Velocity distribution on
the suction surface of the blades in the axial compressor.
At 2
Reynolds numbers and 3 levels of freestream turbulence, a single hot
wire was used to conduct a boundary layer survey on a simulated controlled-diffusion
blade.
Integral parameters of the boundary layers are explored to
dene the
length and nature of transition.
At low Reynolds number there is a separated or near separated region at the
leading edge which does not lead to turbulence. Transition covers a length of
approximately 20% of the blade chord, starting between 20% and 30% chord.
The
position of transition is strongly influenced by the level of freestream
turbulence. Most of the transition process occurs within the decelerating flow
region which exists from 20% of the chord. At high Reynolds number, a leading
edge separation bubble leads to transition within 2% of the blade chord.
Abu-Ghannam & Shaws correlation for the start and length of transition
was found to
predict the start of transition well for attached flows, but could
not be relied
upon for separated flows. It is apparent that the correlation was
not
designed for the very strong Velocity gradients in the leading edge region,
and
probably not for separated flow. _
Three flow conditions in the axial compressor were used: design speed, peak
efficiency, low Reynolds number at peak efficiency (the machine was slowed
to
one-quarter speed) and design speed near the stall. Using hot wires at
mid-height, axial and circumferential velocity and turbulence information was
obtained.
Wakes and structure within wakes are visible in the turbulence and Reynolds
stress distributions. The wakes of more than one upstream blade row are visible;
the region where two wakes intersect gives some information about interaction
between a stator blade Wake and a rotor blade boundary layer. Some
information is available about the length scale 'distribution inside and outside
wakes.
Secondary flow in the axial-circumferential plane shows motion within
wakes and a vortex in the near-stall flowfield, shed preferentially at one point
in the
blade-passing cycle.