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Adjoint Aerodynamic Design Optimization for Blades in Multistage Turbomachines—Part I: Methodology and Verification
The adjoint method for blade design optimization will be described in this two-part paper. The main objective is to develop the capability of carrying out aerodynamic blading shape design optimization...
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Design and Optimization of the Internal Cooling Channels of a High Pressure Turbine Blade—Part I: Methodology
This first paper describes the conjugate heat transfer (CHT) method and its application to the performance and lifetime prediction of a high pressure turbine blade operating at a very high inlet tempe...

Adjoint Aerodynamic Design Optimization for Blades in Multistage Turbomachines—Part II: Validation and Application

J. Turbomach.  -- April 2010 --  Volume 132,  Issue 2, 021012 (11 pages)
doi:10.1115/1.3103928

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Author(s):
D. X. Wang
School of Engineering, Durham University, Durham DH1 3LE, UK

L. He
Department of Engineering Science, Oxford University, Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PJ, UK

Y. S. Li and R. G. Wells
Siemens Industrial Turbomachinery Ltd., Ruston House, P.O. Box 1, Waterside South, Lincoln LN5 7FD, UK
This is the second part of a two-part paper. First, the design-optimization system based on the adjoint gradient solution approach as described in Part I is introduced. Several test cases are studied for further validation and demonstration of the methodology and implementation. The base-line adjoint method as applied to realistic 3D configurations is demonstrated in the redesign of the NASA rotor 67 at a near-choke condition, leading to a 1.77% efficiency gain. The proposed adjoint mixing plane is applied to the redesign of a transonic compressor stage (DLR compressor stage) and an IGV-rotor-stator configuration of a Siemens industrial compressor at a single-operating point, both producing measurably positive efficiency gains. An examination on the choice of the operating mass flow condition as the basis for the performance optimization, however, highlights the limitation of the single-point approach for practical applications. For the three-row compressor configuration, a near peak-efficiency point based redesign leads to a measurable reduction in the choke mass flow, while a near-choke point based redesign leads to a significant performance drop in other flow conditions. Subsequently, a parallel multipoint approach is implemented. The results show that a two-point design optimization can produce a consistently better performance over a whole range of mass flow conditions compared with the original design. In the final case, the effectiveness of the present method and system is demonstrated by a redesign applied to a seven-row industrial compressor at the design point, leading to a remarkable 2.4% efficiency gain.

©2010 American Society of Mechanical Engineers

History: Received 17 July 2008; revised 9 February 2009; published 13 January 2010
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/1.3103928

EDITORIALLY RELATED

  1. Adjoint Aerodynamic Design Optimization for Blades in Multistage Turbomachines—Part I: Methodology and Verification
    D. X. Wang et al.
    J. Turbomach. 132, 021011 (2010)

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PUBLICATION DATA

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

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