Skip navigation.

  ASMEDL.ORG »  Journals »  J. Turbomach. »  Volume 132 »  pp. 21004
Adjust text size: Decrease font size Increase font size

Journal of Turbomachinery
Volume: Page/CID:

Previous Article
Experimental Reduction of Transonic Fan Forced Response by Inlet Guide Vane Flow Control
The main contributor to the high cycle fatigue of compressor blades is the response to aerodynamic forcing functions generated by an upstream row of stators or inlet guide vanes. Resonant response to ...
Next Article
Predictions of Turbulent Flow for the Impeller of a NASA Low-Speed Centrifugal Compressor
The turbulent flow inside a low-speed centrifugal compressor at design condition is investigated using large-eddy simulation (LES) comprising of up to 26×106 computational volume cells. Unlike i...

A Review of Surface Roughness Effects in Gas Turbines

J. Turbomach.  -- April 2010 --  Volume 132,  Issue 2, 021004 (16 pages)
doi:10.1115/1.3066315

You are not logged into the ASME Digital Library.
Log in

Author(s):
J. P. Bons
Department of Aerospace Engineering, Ohio State University, 2300 West Case Road, Columbus, OH 43017
The effects of surface roughness on gas turbine performance are reviewed based on publications in the open literature over the past 60 years. Empirical roughness correlations routinely employed for drag and heat transfer estimates are summarized and found wanting. No single correlation appears to capture all of the relevant physics for both engineered and service-related (e.g., wear or environmentally induced) roughness. Roughness influences engine performance by causing earlier boundary layer transition, increased boundary layer momentum loss (i.e., thickness), and/or flow separation. Roughness effects in the compressor and turbine are dependent on Reynolds number, roughness size, and to a lesser extent Mach number. At low Re, roughness can eliminate laminar separation bubbles (thus reducing loss) while at high Re (when the boundary layer is already turbulent), roughness can thicken the boundary layer to the point of separation (thus increasing loss). In the turbine, roughness has the added effect of augmenting convective heat transfer. While this is desirable in an internal turbine coolant channel, it is clearly undesirable on the external turbine surface. Recent advances in roughness modeling for computational fluid dynamics are also reviewed. The conclusion remains that considerable research is yet necessary to fully understand the role of roughness in gas turbines.

©2010 American Society of Mechanical Engineers

History: Received 13 December 2007; revised 10 September 2008; published 11 January 2010
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/1.3066315

KEYWORDS and PACS

Keywords
PACS

RELATED DATABASES


To view database links for this article,
you need to log in.
To view database links for this article,
you need to log in.

PUBLICATION DATA

Coden:
JOTUEI
ISSN:
0889-504X (print)   1528-8900 (online)
Publisher:
AIP is a member of CrossRef ASME

REFERENCES (127)

For access to fully linked references, you need to log in. For access to fully linked references, you need to Log in.

CITING ARTICLES

For access to citing articles, you need to log in.
For access to citing articles, you need to Log in.