1997
DOI: 10.1115/1.2841142
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Boundary Layer Development in Axial Compressors and Turbines: Part 2 of 4—Compressors

Abstract: This is Part Two of a four-part paper. It begins with Section 6.0 and continues to describe the comprehensive experiments and computational analyses that have led to a detailed picture of boundary layer development on airfoil surfaces in multistage turbomachinery. In this part, we present the experimental evidence used to construct the composite picture for compressors given in the discussion in Section 5.0 of Part 1. We show the data from the surface hot-film gages and the boundary layer surveys, give a thoro… Show more

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Cited by 74 publications
(53 citation statements)
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“…Also, errors of 20% or more arise when hot films calibrated in a laminar flow are used to measure a turbulent flow. The hot film sensors were used on the aft part of suction surfaces and were therefore likely to see laminar, turbulent, calmed and separated flow at different positions of the upstream rotor, see Halstead et al [17] or Banieghbal et al [18]. Calibration for all these conditions would be extremely difficult and quite probably impossible.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Also, errors of 20% or more arise when hot films calibrated in a laminar flow are used to measure a turbulent flow. The hot film sensors were used on the aft part of suction surfaces and were therefore likely to see laminar, turbulent, calmed and separated flow at different positions of the upstream rotor, see Halstead et al [17] or Banieghbal et al [18]. Calibration for all these conditions would be extremely difficult and quite probably impossible.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With low or moderate kinematic perturbation by the impinging wakes, the induction of Klebanoff distortions is similar as with mean steady flow, as observed experimentally by, e.g., Liu and Rodi [25] and by Orth [26]. A general description of the transition under wake paths and in between wake paths was given by Halstead et al [27][28][29][30] for axial turbomachines, based on tests covering a broad range of Reynolds numbers and loading levels, but always with a sufficiently high level of background turbulence such that natural transition did not occur. Figure 1 is a schematic of the different zones in a time-space diagram (t = time; x = streamwise distance along the blade surface).…”
Section: Wake-induced Transitionmentioning
confidence: 72%
“…The study presented and interpreted the data from the surface hot film probes and the boundary layer survey for baseline operating conditions. The study by Halstead et al (1995) has contributed to better understanding the flow physics through an LP-turbine component.…”
Section: Turbine Stage Investigationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a four-part study, Halstead et al (1995) investigated the boundary layer development in axial compressors and turbines. Part 3 of the study focused on unsteady flow and the effects of the wakes on the performance of LP-turbines.…”
Section: Turbine Stage Investigationsmentioning
confidence: 99%