Publication Date:
2019-06-28
Description:
A primary objective of turbine research is to obtain information that will aid in the design of gas turbines for any given application with minimum losses. As part of a program to obtain such information, flow surveys downstream of both the stator and the rotor of an experimental turbine were made in order to obtain detailed information about the flow conditions and the losses within the machine. The single-stage, low-radius-ratio turbine studied is relatively conservative in design, having low rotor-inlet relative Mach number, low turning angle, and high reaction at the rotor-root section. Surveys of the flow conditions and of the losses within the turbine are presented. The measured over-all losses are analyzed in order to approximate the magnitudes of the various components of loss. It was found that the major losses in the turbine were in the rotor near the blade extremities. The losses in the tip region were considerably greater than those near the hub. The existence of secondary flows at the exit of both the stator and the rotor was indicated by the presence of low-velocity cores near both the hub and the tip sections. Analysis of the losses by an empirical method indicated that the rotor-profile and tip-clearance losses are 31 and 9 percent of the adjusted measured total rotor loss, respectively. The remaining 60 percent loss was attributed to secondary flows.
Type:
NACA-RM-E53A16
Format:
application/pdf
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