Separated Flow Measurements on a Highly Loaded Low-Pressure Turbine Airfoil
J. Turbomach. -- January 2010 -- Volume 132, Issue 1, 011007 (10 pages)
doi:10.1115/1.3104608
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Boundary layer separation, transition, and reattachment have been studied on a new, very high lift, low-pressure turbine airfoil. Experiments were done under low freestream turbulence conditions on a linear cascade in a low speed wind tunnel. Pressure surveys on the airfoil surface and downstream total pressure loss surveys were documented. Velocity profiles were acquired in the suction side boundary layer at several streamwise locations using hot-wire anemometry. Cases were considered at Reynolds numbers (based on the suction surface length and the nominal exit velocity from the cascade) ranging from 25,000 to 330,000. In all cases, the boundary layer separated, but at high Reynolds number the separation bubble remained very thin and quickly reattached after transition to turbulence. In the low Reynolds number cases, the boundary layer separated and did not reattach, even when transition occurred. This behavior contrasts with previous research on other airfoils, in which transition, if it occurred, always induced reattachment, regardless of Reynolds number.
©2010 American Society of Mechanical Engineers
| History: | Received 7 July 2008; revised 2 February 2009; published 16 September 2009 | |
| doi: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/1.3104608 | |



