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Shock-free turbomachinery blade designA computational method for designing shock-free, quasi-three-dimensional, transonic, turbomachinery blades is described. Shock-free designs are found by implementing Sobieczky's fictitious gas principle in the analysis of a baseline shape, resulting in an elliptic solution that is incorrect in the supersonic domain. Shock-free designs are obtained by combining the subsonic portion of this solution with a characteristic calculation of the correct supersonic flow using the sonic line data from the fictitious elliptic solution. This provides a new, shock-free blade design. Examples presented include the removal of shocks from two blades in quasi-three-dimensional flow and the development of a series of shock-free two-dimensional stators. The new designs all include modifications to the upper surface of an experimental stator blade developed at NASA Lewis Research Center. While the designs presented here are for inviscid flow, the same concepts have been successfully applied to the shock-free design of airfoils and three-dimensional wings with viscous effects. The extension of the present method to viscous flows is straightforward given a suitable analysis algorithm for the flow.
Document ID
19850039713
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Beauchamp, P. P.
(General Electric Co. Lynn, MA, United States)
Seebass, A. R.
(Colorado, University Boulder, CO, United States)
Date Acquired
August 12, 2013
Publication Date
February 1, 1985
Publication Information
Publication: AIAA Journal
Volume: 23
ISSN: 0001-1452
Subject Category
Aerodynamics
Accession Number
85A21864
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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