In a jet engine bleed off-takes on the hub and casing endwalls, part way through the compressor, supply high-pressure air for cooling, sealing, de-icing, and aircraft cabin air applications; bleed also assists compressor operation at part-speed conditions. Two separate issues are of interest: the bleed off-take air pressure and the interaction of the bleed off-take with the primary flow through the blade passage. In this paper, the aerodynamic behavior is presented for a circular-hole bleed off-take at three endwall locations within a stationary cascade blade passage: at midpassage; near the blade pressure surface; and near the blade suction surface. Results from low-speed cascade experiments are complemented by three-dimensional numerical calculations using an unstructured mesh-based solver, in which the blade passage and bleed off-take geometry are fully modeled. The bleed off-take location and the magnitude of bleed rate influence the off-take air pressure and the interaction with the primary passage flow. For optimum design at zero and low bleed rates, off-takes near the blade pressure surface give the highest bleed air pressures and minimum loss in the blade passage. For minimum blade passage loss at higher bleed rates, however, it is necessary to take bleed near the blade suction surface. The paper discusses the causes for this pattern of behavior.
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October 2007
Research Papers
Effects of Bleed Rate and Endwall Location on the Aerodynamic Behavior of a Circular Hole Bleed Off-Take
B. A. Leishman,
B. A. Leishman
Rolls-Royce plc.
, Derby DE24 8BJ, UK
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N. A. Cumpsty,
N. A. Cumpsty
Rolls-Royce plc.
, Derby DE24 8BJ, UK
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J. D. Denton
J. D. Denton
Whittle Laboratory,
University of Cambridge
, Cambridge CB3 0DY, UK
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B. A. Leishman
Rolls-Royce plc.
, Derby DE24 8BJ, UK
N. A. Cumpsty
Rolls-Royce plc.
, Derby DE24 8BJ, UK
J. D. Denton
Whittle Laboratory,
University of Cambridge
, Cambridge CB3 0DY, UKJ. Turbomach. Oct 2007, 129(4): 645-658 (14 pages)
Published Online: December 21, 2006
Article history
Received:
December 7, 2006
Revised:
December 21, 2006
Connected Content
A correction has been published:
Mechanism of the Interaction of a Ramped Bleed Slot With the Primary Flow
A correction has been published:
Effects of Inlet Ramp Surfaces on the Aerodynamic Behavior of Bleed Hole and Bleed Slot Off-Take Configurations
Citation
Leishman, B. A., Cumpsty, N. A., and Denton, J. D. (December 21, 2006). "Effects of Bleed Rate and Endwall Location on the Aerodynamic Behavior of a Circular Hole Bleed Off-Take." ASME. J. Turbomach. October 2007; 129(4): 645–658. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.2752191
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