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Gas Dynamics of Turbine Cascades P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department Its Group Performance, What Matters.……

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Presentation on theme: "Gas Dynamics of Turbine Cascades P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department Its Group Performance, What Matters.……"— Presentation transcript:

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2 Gas Dynamics of Turbine Cascades P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department Its Group Performance, What Matters.……

3 Turbine Blade on A Disk

4 Introductory Remarks The science of gas dynamics is becoming more and more applied to turbines. It is of interest to inquire how far the knowledge of aerofoil mechanics is applicable to steam and gas turbines. Almost all steam turbine blades have much greater curvature than basic aerofoils. This is a necessity for utilizing the entire pressure difference of steam/gas in a practicable number of stages.

5 The Influence of Neighbors

6 The group of Aerofois An important point to be examined is whether the crowding together of steam/gas turbine blades has effects similar to those noticed in aeroplane practice. A biplane is stated to have less lifting effect than a monoplane of the same wing surface. The biplane arrangement is analogous to the circumferential pitching of steam/gas turbine blades. Additional wing surfaces in series (one behind the other), analogous to avoiding of pressure compounding in a turbine. The reasons for grouping may have some bearing on turbine blading efficiency.

7 Influence of Neighboring aerofoils

8 The Group Behavior

9 Steps in Analysis of Blade Cascades

10 Nomenclature of Turbine Cascades

11 More Geometrical Specifications of Arrangement of A Cascade V r1 V r2

12 More Geometrical Specifications of Arrangement of A Cascade UbUb

13 Geometrical Details of A Cascade

14 The Cascade

15 Solidity: the first Step in Cascade Design One of the important aspects of cascade design is the selection of the blade solidity. Defined as the ratio of chord or axial chord to blade spacing. A minimum allowable value is usually desired from the standpoint of reducing weight, cooling flow, and cost. An increase in the blade spacing eventually results in decreased blade efficiency due to separated flow. An optimum solidity cascade should be a fully attached flow with maximum blade spacing. The gas dynamic factors affecting solidity are The requirements of velocity diagram The blade loading


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