Applications
Publications
- On Design of Transonic Fan Rotors by 3D Inverse Design Method
- Application of a three-dimensional viscous transonic inverse method to NASA rotor 67
- Application of Simulated Annealing to Inverse Design of Transonic Turbomachinery Cascades
- Development of An (Adaptive) Unstructured 2-D Inverse Design Method for Turbomachinery Blade
- Optimization of fan noise by coupling 3D invese design and automatic optimizer
Case Studies
- Inverse Design of Aeronautical Turbines in Avio S.p.A Design Process
- TURBOdesign1 an efficient design tool for the development of compact fan guide vanes at ebm-papst
- Designing Optimal Fans Using TURBOdesign1 at Ebm-papst Mulfingen
- TURBOdesign1 Application Used in Ebara Shinwa Cooling Tower Fan
- CDI Marine Applies TURBOdesign1 & CFD to Design a Marine Waterjet
Application of a Three-Dimensional Viscous Transonic Inverse Method to NASA Rotor 67
The development and application of a three-dimensional inverse methodology in which the blade geometry is computed on the basis of the specification of static pressure loading distribution is presented. The methodology is based on the intensive use of computational fluid dynamics (CFD) to account for three-dimensional subsonic and transonic viscous flows. In the design computation, the necessary blade changes are determined directly by the discrepancies between the target and initial values, and the calculation converges to give the final blade geometry and the corresponding steady state flow solution. The application of the method is explored using a transonic test case, NASA rotor 67. Based on observations, it is conclusive that the shock formation and its intensity in such a high-speed turbomachinery flow are well defined on the loading distributions. Pressure loading is therefore as effective a design parameter as conventional inverse design quantities such as static pressure. Hence, from an understanding of the dynamics of the flow in the fan in relation to its pressure loading distributions, simple guidelines can be developed for the inverse method in order to weaken the shock formation. A qualitative improvement in performance is achieved in the redesigned fan. The final flowfield result is confirmed by a well-established commercial CFD package.


Design of High Performance Pump Stage
Design of a Cooling Fan
Design of a Double-Suction Fan Stage
Hydraulic Design Optimisation of a Torque Converter
Design of a 3 Stage Axial LP Turbine for Aeroengine Applications