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Computation of unsteady transonic flows through rotating and stationary cascades. 1: Method of analysis
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1977
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Numerical AnalysisAeroacousticsEngineeringFluid MechanicsMechanical EngineeringRotor DynamicComputational MechanicsUnsteady FlowCompressible FlowCyclic ProcedureHydrodynamic StabilityStationary CascadesPropulsionFluid MachineryAerospace EngineeringTurbulence ModelingNumerical MethodAerodynamicsUnsteady Transonic FlowsVortex Induced VibrationShock Structure
A numerical method of solution of the inviscid, compressible, two-dimensional unsteady flow on a blade-to-blade stream surface through a stage (rotor and stator) or a single blade row of an axial flow compressor or fan is described. A cyclic procedure has been developed for representation of adjacent blade-to-blade passages which asymptotically achieves the correct phase between all passages of a stage. A shock-capturing finite difference method is employed in the interior of the passage, and a method of characteristics technique is used at the boundaries. The blade slipstreams form two of the passage boundaries and are treated as moving contact surfaces capable of supporting jumps in entropy and tangential velocity. The Kutta condition is imposed by requiring the slipstreams to originate at the trailing edges, which are assumed to be sharp. Results are presented for several transonic fan rotors and compared with available experimental data, consisting of holographic observations of shock structure and pressure contour maps. A subcritical stator solution is also compared with results from a relaxation method. Finally, a periodic solution for a stage consisting of 44 rotor blades and 46 stator blades is discussed.