Serpentine ducts are commonly used as intakes for modern lowbypass aero-engines, drawing atmospheric air through to the aero-engine compressor. Because of their highly-bent geometry, serpentine ducts develop significant unsteady flow features that can, in turn, cause compressor instabilities. Quantifying the performance of a coupled intake-compressor system requires analysis ofalargeparameterspace, whichistypicallyundertaken with (U)RANS calculations based on linear eddy-viscosity models. In the present work, we study a highly-bent serpentine intake with three classes of turbulence model, and assess the intake as a turbulence modelling benchmark. A comparison is made between a linear eddy-viscosity model (𝑘 − 𝜔 SST with curvature correction), an explicit algebraic Reynolds-stress model (Wallin Johansson, 2000 with curvature correction), and a differential Reynolds-stress model (the elliptic blending model of Manceau Hanjalić, 2002). Comparisons are made between experimental wall pressure measurements and URANS calculations along the centreline, and radial cross-sections of the intake. Detailed analysis is undertaken in critical near-wall regions of the intake. Finally, based on the outcomes of the flow physics analysis, future modelling opportunities are discussed for algebraic and differential Reynolds-stress models.
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Serpentine ducts are commonly used as intakes for modern lowbypass aero-engines, drawing atmospheric air through to the aero-engine compressor. Because of their highly-bent geometry, serpentine ducts develop significant unsteady flow features that can, in turn, cause compressor instabilities. Quantifying the performance of a coupled intake-compressor system requires analysis ofalargeparameterspace, whichistypicallyundertaken with (U)RANS calculations based on linear eddy-viscosity models. In the...
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