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An unconditionally stable Runge-Kutta method for unsteady flows
32
Citations
15
References
1989
Year
Numerical AnalysisAeroacousticsEngineeringFluid MechanicsMechanical EngineeringTurbulenceStabilityUnsteady FlowIn-cylinder FlowNumerical StabilityUnsteady FlowsHydrodynamic StabilityThin-layer Navier-stokes EquationsPropulsionQuasi-three Dimensional AnalysisFluid MachineryAerospace EngineeringTurbulence ModelingAerodynamicsImplicit Residual Smoothing
A quasi-three dimensional analysis was developed for unsteady rotor-stator interaction in turbomachinery. The analysis solves the unsteady Euler or thin-layer Navier-Stokes equations in a body fitted coordinate system. It accounts for the effects of rotation, radius change, and stream surface thickness. The Baldwin-Lomax eddy viscosity model is used for turbulent flows. The equations are integrated in time using a four stage Runge-Kutta scheme with a constant time step. Implicit residual smoothing was employed to accelerate the solution of the time accurate computations. The scheme is described and accuracy analyses are given. Results are shown for a supersonic through-flow fan designed for NASA Lewis. The rotor:stator blade ratio was taken as 1:1. Results are also shown for the first stage of the Space Shuttle Main Engine high pressure fuel turbopump. Here the blade ratio is 2:3. Implicit residual smoothing was used to increase the time step limit of the unsmoothed scheme by a factor of six with negligible differences in the unsteady results. It is felt that the implicitly smoothed Runge-Kutta scheme is easily competitive with implicit schemes for unsteady flows while retaining the simplicity of an explicit scheme.
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