NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
The spectral analysis of an aero-engine assembly incorporating a squeeze-film damperAero-engine structures have very low inherent damping and so artificial damping is often introduced by pumping oil into annular gaps between the casings and the outer races of some or all of the rolling-element bearings supporting the rotors. The thin oil films so formed are called squeeze film dampers and they can be beneficial in reducing rotor vibration due to unbalance and keeping to reasonable limits the forces transmitted to the engine casing. However, squeeze-film dampers are notoriously non-linear and as a result can introduce into the assembly such phenomena as subharmonic oscillations, jumps and combination frequencies. The purpose of the research is to investigate such phenomena both theoretically and experimentally on a test facility reproducing the essential features of a medium-size aero engine. The forerunner of this work was published. It was concerned with the examination of a squeeze-film damper in series with housing flexibility when supporting a rotor. The structure represented to a limited extent the essentials of the projected Rolls Royce RB401 engine. That research demonstrated the ability to calculate the oil-film forces arising from the squeeze film from known motions of the bearing components and showed that the dynamics of a shaft fitted with a squeeze film bearing can be predicted reasonably accurately. An aero-engine will normally have at least two shafts and so in addition to the excitation forces which are synchronous with the rotation of one shaft, there will also be forces at other frequencies from other shafts operating on the squeeze-film damper. Theoretical and experimental work to consider severe loading of squeeze-film dampers and to include these additional effects are examined.
Document ID
19890013524
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Holmes, R.
(Southampton Univ.)
Dede, M. M.
(Southampton Univ.)
Date Acquired
September 5, 2013
Publication Date
February 1, 1989
Publication Information
Publication: NASA, Lewis Research Center, Rotordynamic Instability Problems in High-Performance Turbomachinery, 1988
Subject Category
Mechanical Engineering
Accession Number
89N22895
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
No Preview Available