Applications
Design of a Cooling Fan
Design of a Double-Suction Fan Stage
Design High Performance Axial Turbine Stages with More Uniform Exit Flow
Design of a 3 Stage Axial LP Turbine for Aeroengine Applications
Design of an Inducer Pump with High Suction Performance and Backflow Control
Design High Performance Centrifugal Compressor Vaned Diffusers
Publications
- Development of An (Adaptive) Unstructured 2-D Inverse Design Method for Turbomachinery Blade
- A Viscous Transonic Inverse Design Method for Turbomachinery Blades
- Application of a three-dimensional viscous transonic inverse method to NASA rotor 67
- Application of Simulated Annealing to Inverse Design of Transonic Turbomachinery Cascades
- On Design of Transonic Fan Rotors 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 Application Used in Ebara Shinwa Cooling Tower Fan
- Design of a Second Stage Hydrogen Rocket Turbopump by TURBOdesign1
- Designing Optimal Fans Using TURBOdesign1 at Ebm-papst Mulfingen
A Three-Dimensional Viscous Transonic Inverse Design Method
The development and application of a three-dimensional inverse methodology is presented for the design of turbomachinery blades. The method is based on the mass-averaged swirl, rVθ distribution and computes the necessary blade changes directly from the discrepancies between the target and initial distributions. The flow solution and blade modification converge simultaneously giving the final blade geometry and the corresponding steady state flow solution. The flow analysis is performed using a cell-vertex finite volume time-marching algorithm employing the multistage Runge-Kutta integrator in conjunction with accelerating techniques (local time stepping and grid sequencing). To account for viscous effects, dissipative forces are included in the Euler solver using the log-law and mixing length models. The design method can be used with any existing solver solving the same flow equations without any modifications to the blade surface wall boundary condition. Validation of the method has been carried out using a transonic annular turbine nozzle and NASA rotor 67. Finally, the method is demonstrated on the re-design of the blades.

