NASA NACA-TN-3400-1955 Analysis of errors introduced by several methods of weighting nonuniform duct flows《由称量不均匀导管流量一些方法引入的错误分析》.pdf
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1、NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR AERONAUTICS TECHNICAL NOTE 3400 ANALYSIS OF ERRORS INTRODUCED BY SEVERAL METHODS OF WEIGHTING NONUNIFORM DUCT FLOWS By DeMarquis D. Wyatt Lewis Flight Propulsion Laboratory Cleveland, Ohio Washington March 1955 Provided by IHSNot for ResaleNo reproduction or networkin
2、g permitted without license from IHS-,-,-NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR AERONAUTICS TECRNICAL NOTE 3400 ANALYSIS OF ERRORS INITODUCED BY SEVERAL METHODS OF WEIGHTING NONUNIFORM DUCT FLOWS By DeMarquis D. Wyatt SUMMARY Various weighting methods are applied to typical nonuniform duct flow profiles to
3、 determine average flow properties. a range of subsonic duct Mach numbers, but is confined to flows having uniform static pressure and total temperature. The analysis covers An averaging method is developed which yields uniform properties that reproduce the mass and momentum of the nonuniform flow.
4、In con- trast, it is shown that the use of conventional weighting methods may result in large errors in these properties. These errors are shown to have varying significance depending on the applications to which the data are applied. It is also shown that nonuniform flows through variable-area duct
5、 passages will cause changes in average flow properties that are not as- sociated with the real thermodynamic flow path. INTRODUCTION In most calculations involving duct air-flow properties, it is not convenient to consider local flow variations within the duct. the properties of the flow are treate
6、d as though they were uniformly distributed, and one-dLmensiona1 equations are applied to this uniform flow. of interest, the equivalent uniform flow must be determined by some method of averaging the properties of the real flow. Therefore, Inasmuch as the real flow seldom approaches uniformity at p
7、lanes This report presents the results of an analytical study made to de- termine the accuracy with which several commonly used averaging or weighting methods reproduce the real flow properties. of inherent errors is illustrated for several common applications of duct flow data. dimensional relation
8、s to the uniform flow are briefly examined. The significance Errors introduced through the application of one- Provided by IHSNot for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-2 NACA TN 3400 The study considers several typical velocity gradients but is con- fined to
9、subsonic compressible flows with uniform static pressures and stagnation temperatures. (Since the present analysis was completed, it has been found that a more generalized, qualitative analysis of the same problem is contained in ref. 1.) ANALYSIS A uniform flow representing the flow properties of a
10、 nonuniform duct flow should satisfy the total energy, mass, and momentum of the real flow. For the special case considered herein in which the flow is assumed to arise from a uniform temperature source and to flow adia- batically to the measuring station, the total energy of the real flow can be re
11、produced by the assumption of constant total temperature in the uniform flow at the source value. The determination of a uniform flow that will simultaneously satisfy the mass flow and the momentum in the real flow is more difficult. Mass-Momentum Method For the special case in which the static pres
12、sure and total tem- perature are constant across the duct, the mass flow is given by the equation n 1 where M is the axial component of the local duct Mach number. (All symbols are defined in appendix A.) In order for the mass flow in the representation to equal this in- tegrated mass flow, the unif
13、orm flow must satisfy the relation 1 where pe and M, are the effective static pressure and Mach number, respectively. The integrated momentum of the real flow can be expressed by UI cn K) M Provided by IHSNot for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-NACA TN 3400
14、 3 Thus, the effective static pressure and Mach number must also satisfy the relation By combining equations (1) to (4), the expression for the effective I Mach number required to satisfy the total energy, mass flow, and momen- tum of the real flow becomes cp 1 + yMg (5) where m and CP are integrate
15、d values determined from equations (1) and (3). Although for this analysis the static pressure is assumed to be constant across the real duct flow, this measured value of pressure cannot be used in conjunction with the effective Mach number determined from equation (5) to satisfy the real flow prope
16、rties. effective static pressure must be determined from either the momentum or the mass-flow equations as Instead, a new n 1 This effective static pressure is never identical to the measured pres- sure if velocity gradients are present in the real flow. To complete the definition of the equivalent
17、uniform flow, an ef- fective total pressure can be determined from the expression Y The flow quantities defined by this method of averaging would be those obtained by mixing the measured profile to a uniform flow in a constant-area duct without wall friction. Mixing losses are inherently contained i
18、n the average flow quantities. Provided by IHSNot for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-4 NACA TN 3400 Conventional Weighting Methods The weighting or averaging methods commonly used to obtain uniform flow representations of nonuniform duct flows require eith
19、er less com- plicated data-collection methods or less tedious calculation techniques than does the exact weighting procedure. herent errors in the representation of one or more of the basic proper- ties of the real flow. The required assumptions and applicable equa- t.i,ocs for three of the more com
20、monly utilized methods fol$ow. Such methods result in in- Mass-derived method. - When the mass flow in the duct is known from some independent measurement, the measured static pressure at a station can be used in conjunction with the geometrical flow area A to define a uniform duct Mach number Mc eq
21、uation that satisfies the mass flow by the From this average Mach number and the measured static pressure, an average total pressure Pc can be calculated as Y - PC The momentum calculated average Mach number becomes (9) from the measured static pressure and the It is evident that the mass flow and t
22、otal energy of the real duct flow are inherently satisfied by the mass-derived method of determining an average flow. fy the momentum of the real flow. There is no attempt in this method, however, to satis- Mass-flow-weighting method. - A pitot-static survey of the flow at the desired duct station i
23、s frequently employed to determine an average uniform flow. If it is assumed that the measured nonuniform flow can be brought to rest without mixing losses, the resultant pressure can be determined from the equation Provided by IHSNot for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license
24、 from IHS-,-,-NACA TN 3400 5 For the special case in which the static pressure and total temperature are constant across the duct, the compressible form of equation (lla) becomes A w w a cn The mass flow and momentum of the uniform flow having a total pres- sure defined by equations (11) are not uni
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