This collection includes most of the ASU Theses and Dissertations from 2011 to present. ASU Theses and Dissertations are available in downloadable PDF format; however, a small percentage of items are under embargo. Information about the dissertations/theses includes degree information, committee members, an abstract, supporting data or media.

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Description
A major concern in the operation of present-day gas turbine engines is the ingestion of hot mainstream gas into rotor-stator disk cavities of the high-pressure turbine stages. Although the engines require high gas temperature at turbine entry for good performance efficiency, the ingested gas shortens the lives of the cavity

A major concern in the operation of present-day gas turbine engines is the ingestion of hot mainstream gas into rotor-stator disk cavities of the high-pressure turbine stages. Although the engines require high gas temperature at turbine entry for good performance efficiency, the ingested gas shortens the lives of the cavity internals, particularly that of the rotor disks. Steps such as installing seals at the disk rims and injecting purge (secondary) air bled from the compressor discharge into the cavities are implemented to reduce the gas ingestion. Although there are advantages to the above-mentioned steps, the performance of a gas turbine engine is diminished by the purge air bleed-off. This then requires that the cavity sealing function be achieved with as low a purge air supply rate as possible. This, in turn, renders imperative an in-depth understanding of the pressure and velocity fields in the main gas path and within the disk cavities. In this work, experiments were carried out in a model 1.5-stage (stator-rotor-stator) axial air turbine to study the ingestion of main air into the aft, rotor-stator, disk cavity. The cavity featured rotor and stator rim seals with radial clearance and axial overlap and an inner labyrinth seal. First, time-average static pressure distribution was measured in the main gas path upstream and downstream of the rotor as well as in the cavity to ensure that a nominally steady run condition had been achieved. Main gas ingestion was determined by measuring the concentration distribution of tracer gas (CO2) in the cavity. To map the cavity fluid velocity field, particle image velocimetry was employed. Results are reported for two main air flow rates, two rotor speeds, and four purge air flow rates.
ContributorsJunnarkar, Nihal (Author) / Roy, Ramendra P (Thesis advisor) / Mignolet, Marc (Committee member) / Lee, Taewoo (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2010
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Description
Ingestion of high temperature mainstream gas into the rotor-stator cavities of a gas turbine is one of the major problems faced by the turbine designers. The ingested gas heats up rotor disks and induces higher thermal stresses on them, giving rise to durability concern. Ingestion is usually reduced by installing

Ingestion of high temperature mainstream gas into the rotor-stator cavities of a gas turbine is one of the major problems faced by the turbine designers. The ingested gas heats up rotor disks and induces higher thermal stresses on them, giving rise to durability concern. Ingestion is usually reduced by installing seals on the rotor and stator rims and by purging the disk cavity by secondary air bled from the compressor discharge. The geometry of the rim seals and the secondary air flow rate, together, influence the amount of gas that gets ingested into the cavities. Since the amount of secondary air bled off has a negative effect on the gas turbine thermal efficiency, one goal is to use the least possible amount of secondary air. This requires a good understanding of the flow and ingestion fields within a disk cavity. In the present study, the mainstream gas ingestion phenomenon has been experimentally studied in a model single-stage axial flow gas turbine. The turbine stage featured vanes and blades, and rim seals on both the rotor and stator. Additionally, the disk cavity contained a labyrinth seal radially inboard which effectively divided the cavity into a rim cavity and an inner cavity. Time-average static pressure measurements were obtained at various radial positions within the disk cavity, and in the mainstream gas path at three axial locations at the outer shroud spread circumferentially over two vane pitches. The time-average static pressure in the main gas path exhibited a periodic asymmetry following the vane pitch whose amplitude diminished with increasing distance from the vane trailing edge. The static pressure distribution increased with the secondary air flow rate within the inner cavity but was found to be almost independent of it in the rim cavity. Tracer gas (CO2) concentration measurements were conducted to determine the sealing effectiveness of the rim seals against main gas ingestion. For the rim cavity, the sealing effectiveness increased with the secondary air flow rate. Within the inner cavity however, this trend reversed -this may have been due to the presence of rotating low-pressure flow structures inboard of the labyrinth seal.
ContributorsThiagarajan, Jayanth kumar (Author) / Roy, Ramendra P (Thesis advisor) / Lee, Taewoo (Committee member) / Mignolet, Marc (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2013
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Description
Ultra-fast 2D/3D material microstructure reconstruction and quantitative structure-property mapping are crucial components of integrated computational material engineering (ICME). It is particularly challenging for modeling random heterogeneous materials such as alloys, composites, polymers, porous media, and granular matters, which exhibit strong randomness and variations of their material properties due to

Ultra-fast 2D/3D material microstructure reconstruction and quantitative structure-property mapping are crucial components of integrated computational material engineering (ICME). It is particularly challenging for modeling random heterogeneous materials such as alloys, composites, polymers, porous media, and granular matters, which exhibit strong randomness and variations of their material properties due to the hierarchical uncertainties associated with their complex microstructure at different length scales. Such uncertainties also exist in disordered hyperuniform systems that are statistically isotropic and possess no Bragg peaks like liquids and glasses, yet they suppress large-scale density fluctuations in a similar manner as in perfect crystals. The unique hyperuniform long-range order in these systems endow them with nearly optimal transport, electronic and mechanical properties. The concept of hyperuniformity was originally introduced for many-particle systems and has subsequently been generalized to heterogeneous materials such as porous media, composites, polymers, and biological tissues for unconventional property discovery. An explicit mixture random field (MRF) model is proposed to characterize and reconstruct multi-phase stochastic material property and microstructure simultaneously, where no additional tuning step nor iteration is needed compared with other stochastic optimization approaches such as the simulated annealing. The proposed method is shown to have ultra-high computational efficiency and only requires minimal imaging and property input data. Considering microscale uncertainties, the material reliability will face the challenge of high dimensionality. To deal with the so-called “curse of dimensionality”, efficient material reliability analysis methods are developed. Then, the explicit hierarchical uncertainty quantification model and efficient material reliability solvers are applied to reliability-based topology optimization to pursue the lightweight under reliability constraint defined based on structural mechanical responses. Efficient and accurate methods for high-resolution microstructure and hyperuniform microstructure reconstruction, high-dimensional material reliability analysis, and reliability-based topology optimization are developed. The proposed framework can be readily incorporated into ICME for probabilistic analysis, discovery of novel disordered hyperuniform materials, material design and optimization.
ContributorsGao, Yi (Author) / Liu, Yongming (Thesis advisor) / Jiao, Yang (Committee member) / Ren, Yi (Committee member) / Pan, Rong (Committee member) / Mignolet, Marc (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021