In this article, we describe a recent work in which we compared the advantages and disadvantages of the steady and transient approaches to the analysis of a four-bladed aircraft propeller. In the study, we examined a concept model of a ground based turbo-prop engine operating within an enclosure.


As engineers routinely applying CFD to a wide range of
turbomachinery and aerospace applications, we often face technical
judgments as to the applicability of certain numerical approaches or
physical models used in a simulation. One such judgment for rotating
machinery relates to the choice of either applying a time accurate
transient moving mesh approach or a simplified steady-state multiple
rotating frames (MRF) approach. This modeling decision can be
critical especially when simulating the flow through rotating systems
which contain a low blade count.


We used STAR-CD to consider several facets of the propeller design,
principally:
i) maximum torque load on the propeller blades
ii) time varying cyclical loading of the blades
iii) mass flow through the system
iv) engine outlet temperature
v) flow over the tip of the propeller blades
Our overriding question concerned the trade off between the expense
of the numerical calculation technique and the accuracy of the
solution it predicted. In order for a computational method to qualify
as a valid and useful simulation technique, calculations are required
to be both accurate and practical. We needed to understand whether
the Implicit MRF approach could meet the technical challenge and
whether the transient moving mesh approach could meet the
schedule requirements of the project.


The CAD geometry of the concept design examined in the study was
built in STAR-Design (Figure 1). All the components were created and
meshed separately, using trimmed cell technology (Figure 2) before
being assembled into a single model (Figure 3). The final assembly
consisted of 1.75 million computational cells. Fixed pressure boundaries
were prescribed at inflow and outflow regions, and
rotating wall boundaries to the surface of the propeller (Figure 4). The
flow was considered compressible, consisting of large temperature
gradients in the system due to the hot exhaust of the gas turbine
engine. Identical flow properties, solver settings and geometric
configurations were simulated for both the MRF and moving mesh
approaches.


Our analysis revealed that both the steady MRF and the transient
moving mesh approaches proved meritorious. The steady analysis
was computationally stable and converged monotonically in a timely
fashion. The steady simulation captured the basic flow structure
across the propeller tips, as well as the temperature mixing of the
engine exhaust. The MRF predicted a fixed torque loading on the
blades; however, due to the steady nature of MRF, the analysis is not
able to predict the cyclic torque loading that the blade experiences
naturally during rotation. The steady analysis provided quick, general
results in which the gross flow structure was predicted (Figure 5).|
The transient moving mesh analysis provided more than the gross
flow structure; the analysis additionally provided critical engineering
data concerning the effects of the blade rotation in time. Specifically,
we noticed a high torque loading experienced by all blades as they
passed a particular point in the 360° revolution (Figure 6 & 7).
The
time accurate results of transient blade loading provided torque spike
magnitudes; the results allowed us to determine if additional
engineering of the engine mounting system was warranted to
mitigate the high cyclic loading. The transient analysis also captured
the temperature mixing as did the steady analysis, and predicted a
system mass flow rate 4% higher than that of the steady case. The
transient simulation required approximately 4-6 times more
computational runtime to establish a “cyclically steady” solution,
yet
the analysis provided more insight for understanding the flow physics
of the system.
From our examination, we conclude that the transient moving mesh
analysis more appropriately captures high resolution, high accuracy
flow behavior and cyclic fatigue characteristics. Although MRF is less
expensive and acceptable for understanding the basic flow structure,
the steady state MRF approach is not able to provide potentially
critical time accurate information.
Jacobs Sverdrup provides a range of advanced technology
engineering services to government and industry. One of our core
customer bases is the aerospace and defense industry, for which
we deliver a full range of design and build services for aero-propulsion
and space systems facilities.
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