Tip leakage flow (TLF) and endwall blockage formation are closely associated with the inception of rotating stall in tip-critical transonic axial flow compressor (AFC) rotors. The present study proposes a critical endwall blockage attenuation-based optimization method of casing treatment design for transonic AFC. First, a well-defined endwall blockage quantification method is developed to reveal the development of the endwall blockage at near-stall, and two blockages of the maximum endwall blockage and the near trailing edge endwall blockage are identified as the critical values for stall inception. Next, both adiabatic efficiency at design point and critical endwall blockages at near-stall are used as optimization objectives in an adaptive surrogate-based optimization procedure to deal with the design of nonuniform multiple grooves casing treatment (NMGCT) for the NASA Stage 35, thus avoiding the extremely time-consuming simulations of compressor performance curves. The analysis of the representative optimal designs demonstrates that the NMGCT can act on the tip flow field in a variety of ways, e.g. lowering the maximum endwall blockage can suppress the intensity of the TLF-shock wave interaction, or lowering the near trailing edge endwall blockage is able to control both the trajectory of the TLF closer to the suction surface and the thickness of the suction surface boundary layer. These achievements can help improving the stall margin of the tip-critical transonic AFC. However, in the case of AFC similar to Stage 35, reducing the maximum endwall blockage can achieve greater stall margin improvement and smaller peak efficiency penalty.

Critical endwall blockage attenuation-based automatic optimization of casing treatment design for transonic axial flow compressor

Benini E.;
2022

Abstract

Tip leakage flow (TLF) and endwall blockage formation are closely associated with the inception of rotating stall in tip-critical transonic axial flow compressor (AFC) rotors. The present study proposes a critical endwall blockage attenuation-based optimization method of casing treatment design for transonic AFC. First, a well-defined endwall blockage quantification method is developed to reveal the development of the endwall blockage at near-stall, and two blockages of the maximum endwall blockage and the near trailing edge endwall blockage are identified as the critical values for stall inception. Next, both adiabatic efficiency at design point and critical endwall blockages at near-stall are used as optimization objectives in an adaptive surrogate-based optimization procedure to deal with the design of nonuniform multiple grooves casing treatment (NMGCT) for the NASA Stage 35, thus avoiding the extremely time-consuming simulations of compressor performance curves. The analysis of the representative optimal designs demonstrates that the NMGCT can act on the tip flow field in a variety of ways, e.g. lowering the maximum endwall blockage can suppress the intensity of the TLF-shock wave interaction, or lowering the near trailing edge endwall blockage is able to control both the trajectory of the TLF closer to the suction surface and the thickness of the suction surface boundary layer. These achievements can help improving the stall margin of the tip-critical transonic AFC. However, in the case of AFC similar to Stage 35, reducing the maximum endwall blockage can achieve greater stall margin improvement and smaller peak efficiency penalty.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3459436
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