Blade pressure measurements
Abstract
Three measurement techniques which enable rotating pressures to be measured during the normal operation of a gas turbine or a component test rig are described. The first technique was developed specifically to provide steady and transient blade surface pressure data to aid both fan flutter research and general fan performance development. This technique involves the insertion of miniature high frequency response pressure transducers into the fan blades of a large civil gas turbine. The other two techniques were developed to measure steady rotating pressures inside and on the surface of engine or rig turbine blades and also rotating pressures in cooling feed systems. These two low frequency response systems are known as the "pressure pineapple' (a name which resulted from the shape of the original prototype) and the rotating scanivalve.
- Publication:
-
In Von Karman Inst. for Fluid Dyn. Meas. Tech. in Turbomachines 21 p (SEE N83-12260 03-31
- Pub Date:
- 1981
- Bibcode:
- 1981mtt..vkif.....C
- Keywords:
-
- Fan Blades;
- Flow Measurement;
- Pressure Measurement;
- Pressure Sensors;
- Turbine Blades;
- Centrifugal Force;
- Correction;
- Gas Turbines;
- Rotation;
- Rotor Aerodynamics;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer