Numerical and experimental investigations of diffusion-induced boundary layer separation on aero-engine nacelles

Date published

2024-10

Free to read from

2024-09-18

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

0142-727X

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Citation

Boscagli L, Sabnis K, MacManus DG, et al., (2024) Numerical and experimental investigations of diffusion-induced boundary layer separation on aero-engine nacelles. International Journal of Heat and Fluid Flow, Volume 109, October 2024, Article number 109530

Abstract

Aero-engine nacelles have to fulfill design requirements at both cruise and off-design conditions. Under engine windmilling conditions the ingested streamtube massflow is relatively low. A key off-design condition is take-off, which, in conjunction with an engine windmilling scenario, results in the stagnation point of the ingested streamtube being located significantly inside the intake. The combination of high angle of attack and low engine massflow rates leads to a strong flow acceleration and subsequent diffusion of the boundary layer on the upper quadrants of the external nacelle cowl, which can terminate with subsonic separation from the leading-edge. Under this condition, Reynolds number effects can play a dominant role on the separation onset and characteristics and 3D-annular wind tunnel tests cannot always achieve Reynolds’ number equivalent to full scale. A novel quasi-2D rig configuration representative of the aerodynamics of a full-size aero-engine nacelle under windmilling end of runway conditions examined in detail the characteristics of the boundary layer on the external cowl of a nacelle prior to diffusion-induced separation. Separation of the boundary layer was independently promoted through changes to represent different engine massflow rates and freestream Mach number on the rig to determine the limits of steady Reynolds Averaged Navier Stokes (RANS) methods to discern the onset of boundary layer separation. For the conditions and geometry investigated, the combined experimental and computational results showed that there was laminar to turbulent transition of the boundary layer ahead of the subsonic diffusion. The work showed that steady RANS can predict the onset of boundary layer separation with an uncertainty of approximately 10% on notional engine massflow rate and 0.05 on freestream Mach number relative to a nominal operating freestream Mach number of 0.25. This provides guidance for the industrial design and optimization of future windmilling-tolerant nacelles for large ultra-high bypass ratio turbofan engines.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

4012 Fluid Mechanics and Thermal Engineering, 40 Engineering, 4001 Aerospace Engineering, Mechanical Engineering & Transports, 4012 Fluid mechanics and thermal engineering, CFD, Windmilling, Turbofan engines, Nacelle, Validation

DOI

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

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Funder/s

This project has received funding from the Clean Sky 2 Joint Undertaking (JU) under grant agreement number 101007598. The JU receives support from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme and the Clean Sky 2 JU members other than the Union.