Applications
Design High Performance Axial Turbine Stages with More Uniform Exit Flow
Design of a 3 Stage Axial LP Turbine for Aeroengine Applications
Design High Performance Centrifugal Compressor Vaned Diffusers
Design of an Automobile Torque Converter
Design of a Cooling Fan
Design of a Double-Suction Fan Stage
Redesign of an Industrial Compressor Stage
Design High Efficiency Impellers with Splitter Blades
Design High Performance Centrifugal Compressor Impellers
Design of Refrigeration Compressor Stage in R134a
Design of an Inducer Pump with High Suction Performance and Backflow Control
Publications
- Application of a three-dimensional viscous transonic inverse method to NASA rotor 67
- Application of Simulated Annealing to Inverse Design of Transonic Turbomachinery Cascades
- A Viscous Transonic Inverse Design Method for Turbomachinery Blades
- A Three-Dimensional Viscous Transonic Inverse Design Method
- Suppression of Secondary Flows in a Turbine Nozzle with Controlled Stacking Shape and Exit Circulation by 3D Inverse Design Method
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
- TURBOdesign1 is Extensively Used at Voith Turbo for the Design of Hydrodynamic Torque Converters
- TURBOdesign1 Application Used in Ebara Shinwa Cooling Tower Fan
- Design of a Compact Reactor Coolant Pump with Higher Efficiency and Cavitation Performance by using TURBOdesign1
Development of An (Adaptive) Unstructured 2-D Inverse Design Method for Turbomachinery Blade
An aerodynamics inverse design method for turbomachinery blades using fully (adaptive) unstructured meshes is presented. In this design method, the pressure loading (i.e. pressure jump across the blades) and thickness distribution are prescribed. The design method then computes the blade shape that would accomplish this loading. This inverse design method is implemented using a cell-centred finite volume method which solves the Euler equations on Delaunay unstructured triangular meshes using upwind flux vector splitting scheme. The analysis/direct Euler solver first is validated against some test cases of cascades flow. Computational grid and solution adaptation is performed to capture any flow behaviors such as shock waves using some error indicators. In the inverse design method, blade geometry is updated at the end of each design iteration process. A flexible and fast remeshing process based on a classical ‘spring’ methodology is adopted. An improved spring smoothing methodology for large changes of blades geometry is also presented. This flexible remeshing method can be used in designing a real blade (i.e. round leading and trailing edge) and also ‘fat’ turbine blades with blunt leading and trailing edge. The inverse design method using unstructured triangular meshes is validated by regeneration of a generic compressor rotor blade geometry subjected to a specified pressure loading and blade thickness. Finally, the method is applied to the design of the tip section of Nasa Rotor 67. The result shows that the design method is very useful in controlling shock waves.

