Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dlnhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T17:23:58.757Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Compressible Flow Through Cascade Actuator Discs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 June 2016

J. H. Horlock*
Affiliation:
University Engineering Laboratory, Cambridge
Get access

Summary

A theory of the incompressible flow through two- and three-dimensional cascade actuator discs has been developed by several workers over the past ten years, and its accuracy has been confirmed in several experiments. This theory is briefly reviewed, and a parallel theory for subsonic compressible flow through actuator discs is developed. Approximate solutions for several examples are considered, including a compressible shear flow through a two-dimensional cascade, and a compressible flow through an annular cascade of guide vanes.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Aeronautical Society. 1958

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Merchant, W., Hansford, J. T. and Harrison, P. M. The Flow of an Ideal Fluid in an Annulus. Metropolitan-Vickers Internal Report (unpublished), 1946.Google Scholar
2. Marble, F. E. The Flow of a Perfect Fluid through an Axial Flow Turbo Machine with Pre-described Blade Loading. Journal of the Aeronautical Sciences, Vol. 15, August 1948.Google Scholar
3. Hawthorne, W. R. Three Dimensional Flow in Compressors. Westinghouse Internal Report (unpublished), 1950.Google Scholar
4. Railly, J. W. The Flow of an Incompressible Fluid through an Axial Turbo-Machine with Any Number of Rows. The Aeronautical Quarterly, Vol. III, September 1951.Google Scholar
5. Bragg, S. L. and Hawthorne, W. R. Some Exact Solutions of the How through Annular Cascade Actuator Discs. Journal of the Aeronautical Sciences, Vol. 17, April 1950.Google Scholar
6. Horlock, J. H. Some Actuator Disc Theories for the Flow of Air through Axial Turbo-Machines. R. & M. 3030, 1952.Google Scholar
7. Ruden, P. Investigation of Single Stage Axial Flow Fans. N.A.C.A. T.M. 1062, 1944.Google Scholar
8. Hawthorne, W. R. and Armstrong, W. D. Shear Flow through a Cascade. The Aeronautical Quarterly, Vol. VII, November 1956.Google Scholar
9. Cohen, H. and White, E. M. The Theoretical Determination of the Three-Dimensional Flow in an Axial Compressor, with Special Reference to Constant Reaction Blading. A.R.C 6842, 1943.Google Scholar
10. Horlock, J. H. Experimental and Theoretical Investigations of the Flow of Air through Two Single Stage Compressors. R. & M. 3031, 1955.Google Scholar
11. Keenan, J. H. and Kaye, J. Gas Tables. John Wiley, New York, 1948.Google Scholar
12. Horlock, J. H. and Carmichael, A. D. Actuator Disc Theories Applied to the Design of Axial Compressors. A.R.C. Current Paper 315,1957.Google Scholar
13. Jahnke, E. and Emde, F. Tables of Functions. Dover Publications. New York, 1946.Google Scholar