The interaction between waves, currents and bottoms in estuarine and coastal regions is ubiquitious, in particular the dynamic mechanism of waves on large-scale slowly varying currents. The wave action concept may be ...The interaction between waves, currents and bottoms in estuarine and coastal regions is ubiquitious, in particular the dynamic mechanism of waves on large-scale slowly varying currents. The wave action concept may be extended and applicated to the study of the mechanism. Considering the effects of moving bottoms and starting from the Navier-Stokes equation of motion of a vinous fluid including the Coriolis force, a generalized mean-flow medel theory for the nearshore region, that is, a set of mean-flow equations and their generalized wave action equation involving the three new kinds of actions termed respectively as the current wave action, the bottom wave action and the dissipative wave action which can be applied to arbitrary depth over moving bottoms and ambient currents with a typical vertical structure, is developed by vertical integration and time-averaglng over a wave peried, thus extending the classical concept, wave action, from the ideal averaged flow conservative system to the real averaged flow dissipative dynamical system, and having a large range of application.展开更多
The increasing performance of modern aeroengines led the research towards the optimization of machine components not deeply analyzed in the past.In this context,the mechanisms driving the interaction process between t...The increasing performance of modern aeroengines led the research towards the optimization of machine components not deeply analyzed in the past.In this context,the mechanisms driving the interaction process between the secondary flows evolving at the hub of low-pressure turbines with the rotor-stator cavity systems have been poorly investigated in the literature.In this work,an experimental and numerical analysis of the interaction between the endwall near wall flow and the leakage flow of a real cavity system is presented.The experimental results were carried out in the annular low-pressure axial flow turbine of the University of Genova.Experimental blade loading and pressure distributions into the cavity,as well as the measured total pressure loss coefficient,have been used for a proper validation of CFD results.Both steady and unsteady calculations were carried out through the commercial solver Numeca.Particularly,several numerical approaches have been tested into this work:RANS,Non Linear Harmonic(NLH),and URANS.The most promising CFD techniques have been firstly identified by comparison with experimental results and then systematically employed to extend the analysis of secondary flow-cavity flow interaction to positions and quantities not available from the experiments.Losses characterizing the mean flow-cavity flow interaction process will be shown to cover a great amount of the overall stage losses and should be properly accounted for the design of future optimized cavity configurations.展开更多
基金This paper was supported bythe Foundationforthe Author of National Excellent Doctoral Dissertation of P.R.China(Grant No.200428) the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos .10272072 and 50424913) +1 种基金theShanghai Natural Science Foundation (Grant No.05ZR14048) the Shanghai Leading Academic Discipline Pro-ject (Grant No. Y0103)
文摘The interaction between waves, currents and bottoms in estuarine and coastal regions is ubiquitious, in particular the dynamic mechanism of waves on large-scale slowly varying currents. The wave action concept may be extended and applicated to the study of the mechanism. Considering the effects of moving bottoms and starting from the Navier-Stokes equation of motion of a vinous fluid including the Coriolis force, a generalized mean-flow medel theory for the nearshore region, that is, a set of mean-flow equations and their generalized wave action equation involving the three new kinds of actions termed respectively as the current wave action, the bottom wave action and the dissipative wave action which can be applied to arbitrary depth over moving bottoms and ambient currents with a typical vertical structure, is developed by vertical integration and time-averaglng over a wave peried, thus extending the classical concept, wave action, from the ideal averaged flow conservative system to the real averaged flow dissipative dynamical system, and having a large range of application.
基金funding from the European Union Seventh Framework Program FP7/2007-2013 under grant agreement No.ACP2-GA-2012-314366-E-BREAK.
文摘The increasing performance of modern aeroengines led the research towards the optimization of machine components not deeply analyzed in the past.In this context,the mechanisms driving the interaction process between the secondary flows evolving at the hub of low-pressure turbines with the rotor-stator cavity systems have been poorly investigated in the literature.In this work,an experimental and numerical analysis of the interaction between the endwall near wall flow and the leakage flow of a real cavity system is presented.The experimental results were carried out in the annular low-pressure axial flow turbine of the University of Genova.Experimental blade loading and pressure distributions into the cavity,as well as the measured total pressure loss coefficient,have been used for a proper validation of CFD results.Both steady and unsteady calculations were carried out through the commercial solver Numeca.Particularly,several numerical approaches have been tested into this work:RANS,Non Linear Harmonic(NLH),and URANS.The most promising CFD techniques have been firstly identified by comparison with experimental results and then systematically employed to extend the analysis of secondary flow-cavity flow interaction to positions and quantities not available from the experiments.Losses characterizing the mean flow-cavity flow interaction process will be shown to cover a great amount of the overall stage losses and should be properly accounted for the design of future optimized cavity configurations.