Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
ldev,
Is blade frequency being called screech?
For only that would be eliminated by the modified M88 core.
Real screech is due to organ pipe resonance from jet exhaust.
Is blade frequency being called screech?
For only that would be eliminated by the modified M88 core.
Real screech is due to organ pipe resonance from jet exhaust.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Ramana,ramana wrote:ldev and prasad, I thought screech or jet engine noise is due to the mixing of turbulent flow from the the combustion and is like air flow in an organ pipe or flute.
In supersonic flow there is expansion and contraction similar to an accordion which adds to the phenomenon. So it needs nozzle exhaust tinkering.
Helmholtz resonator is if the casing vibrates. That's not screech but case vibration due to resonance. They can add stiffening ribs on case and make the frequency go higher and avoid acoustic range.
i think there is confusion in the reporting.
The reporting states that it is the turbulent mixing of the hot exhaust with the cooler by-pass air that is creating a shock wave with a high frequency which cannot exit because the nozzles are smaller. This high frequency shock wave is being called a screech. Again, according to the reporting the hot exhaust is not uniform in pressure across all injectors which may be the cause which in turn could be because of the placement/spacing of the injectors, or the spacing between individual injectors and the flameholder.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Ok so the phenomena is the well known acoustic noise due to organ pipe effect. So how would a modified core change the screech effect?
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Hi Ramana,ramana wrote:Ok so the phenomena is the well known acoustic noise due to organ pipe effect. So how would a modified core change the screech effect?
Again, according to the reporting, the screech in Kaveri could come from any of the following factors:
Fuel spray injector locations
Non-uniformity in the fuel-air fraction
Atomization process
Evaporation rates
Ignition process
Quality of the upstream flow
Blockages if any
Flameholder geometry
Quality of the upstream flow would include a modified core. Apparently Safran did CFD modeling on the engine to reach these conclusions. But where was it done and were folks from GTRE present is unknown.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Dev, Can you point me to the reports?
agupta thanks
agupta thanks
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
There are many who have studied this in yinjineering, so please correct if i'm wrong. Screech is high frequency transverse and buzz is low frequency longitudinal combustion instability. Exhaust after LP turbine passes over afterburner assembly where more fuel is injected and ignited to generate more thrust. Jet pipe is obviously gonna get hot and hence you have a cheese grater type liner so that cooler bypass air enters the pipe to cool down the surface by not letting the afterburner exhaust touch the metal/composite surface and melt it.ramana wrote:ldev and prasad, I thought screech or jet engine noise is due to the mixing of turbulent flow from the the combustion and is like air flow in an organ pipe or flute.
In supersonic flow there is expansion and contraction similar to an accordion which adds to the phenomenon. So it needs nozzle exhaust tinkering.
Helmholtz resonator is if the casing vibrates. That's not screech but case vibration due to resonance. They can add stiffening ribs on case and make the frequency go higher and avoid acoustic range.
i think there is confusion in the reporting.
We've heard that it has been fixed fwiw. There are a lot of papers on this with work ongoing. So who knows.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
This is Part 1 of the issues Kaveri is facing aired on August 2, 2019 - all in Hindiramana wrote:Dev, Can you point me to the reports?
agupta thanks
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6kpPugsUzew
This is Part 2 of the issues Kaveri is facing aired on August 7, 2019 - all in Hindi
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vuwkyz2ImNw
This is where he comments on the termination of the Safran relationship and possible rumors
of a tie up with Rolls-Royce, could be pure speculation aired on August 17, 2019 - all in Hindi
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9bhbNdPtfvs
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Ldev, Will watch. Glad folks are following it in Hindi so more people can follow and not only English speaking folks.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
agutpa, I have seen those characteristic shock vortices/Mach waves in rocket exhaust also.
Thanks for the paper.
The sound intensity as a function of Mach Number aka eighth power law is first formulated by Dr. Lighthill. You might be surprised but IIT Madras had quite a few books in the library on jet engine noise long back.
See the last picture on that page the need to have a rounded edge for the exhaust nozzle to reduce separation. The radius as a ratio of the exhaust velocity is the key parameter to ensure reduce flow separation that generates the mixing flow.
Thanks for the paper.
The sound intensity as a function of Mach Number aka eighth power law is first formulated by Dr. Lighthill. You might be surprised but IIT Madras had quite a few books in the library on jet engine noise long back.
See the last picture on that page the need to have a rounded edge for the exhaust nozzle to reduce separation. The radius as a ratio of the exhaust velocity is the key parameter to ensure reduce flow separation that generates the mixing flow.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
You are talking about the shock diamonds, I suppose. They are formed due to over expanded nozzle. Basically the nozzle is designed for altitude condition where ambient pressure is low, so at ground level, the nozzle ends up over expanding the flow.ramana wrote:agutpa, I have seen those characteristic shock vortices/Mach waves in rocket exhaust also.
Thanks for the paper.
The sound intensity as a function of Mach Number aka eighth power law is first formulated by Dr. Lighthill. You might be surprised but IIT Madras had quite a few books in the library on jet engine noise long back.
See the last picture on that page the need to have a rounded edge for the exhaust nozzle to reduce separation. The radius as a ratio of the exhaust velocity is the key parameter to ensure reduce flow separation that generates the mixing flow.
Just one point, the screech in context of Kaveri is related to the combustion instability in the Afterburner (where flow is actually low subsonic, so no shocks involved). Screech is due to the acoustic waves generated by the thermo-fluidic instabilities which results in lower than expected thrust. The F135 engine which powers F-35 also had same issue, PW fixed it later.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
once saw video of the same guy on LCA MK2. He is basically copy pasting stuff from all over the internet. Which is not bad in itself. But I don't think he understands all that he is talking about well enough. Half knowledge could be worse than no knowledge. just sayin.ramana wrote:Ldev, Will watch. Glad folks are following it in Hindi so more people can follow and not only English speaking folks.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
He is copying visuals from other sites to help explain his narration. Listen to the narration which is accurate. In fact YT has warned him about copyright issues and he has now issued a disclaimer that he only uses visuals from other sites to help explain/educate his viewers on his explanations. In the absence of the visuals in his videos would anybody other than an jet engine designer be able to understand what the issues are?JayS wrote:once saw video of the same guy on LCA MK2. He is basically copy pasting stuff from all over the internet. Which is not bad in itself. But I don't think he understands all that he is talking about well enough. Half knowledge could be worse than no knowledge. just sayin.ramana wrote:Ldev, Will watch. Glad folks are following it in Hindi so more people can follow and not only English speaking folks.
In fact it was only on this site that I learnt that the final offer from Safran was supply of modified M-88 cores to meet their offset obligations under the 36 Rafale contract without any TOT. All other MSM sites and in fact even so called defence correspondents by omission made it sound as if there was a dispute over the amount i.e. Euro 250 + Euro 500 for supply of TOT which is not the case at all. And GTRE/DRDO is right to walk away from such an offer which is in fact a non-offer.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
What I meant is, the Jet screech references you guys were discussing were of cases where screech originated due to the jet itself, without any upstream influence from the flow. So one can have screech even when entire engine is working OK, but if there is some issue with the nozzle exit geometry itself perhaps which gives rise to feedback of acoustic waves to the nozzle exit setting a cyclic response with high frequency. But in case of Kaveri the problem is one of "Screech in Afterburner", as far as my understanding goes. And due to improper combustion there, the thrust augmentation does not happen to the full extent, hence the loss of thrust.agupta wrote:JayS wrote:
Just one point, the screech in context of Kaveri is related to the combustion instability in the Afterburner (where flow is actually low subsonic, so no shocks involved). Screech is due to the acoustic waves generated by the thermo-fluidic instabilities which results in lower than expected thrust. The F135 engine which powers F-35 also had same issue, PW fixed it later.
Err...not quite, JayS. Yes - Absolutely correct its in the afterburner fuel injectors - and the region where the combustion instability sets up ("the driver") may be subsonic, but does not change the fact that "screech" is associated with supersonic jet flows. Remember usually the AB injectors are upstream of (variable geometry) throats of (usually for military) supersonic nozzles.
See here: reference to "when" (full afterburner)
https://www.military.com/dodbuzz/2011/0 ... -fix-found
When you get screech, you cannot throttle / power/ augment the engine as aggressively as you want to, hence reduced thrust. The instability , or the acoustic waves by themselves, do not result in lower thrust...but maybe here I am just being too literal with your words vs. your intent ! In which case sorry in advance.
Here is a PhD thesis from IISC. The work might have been associated with Kaveri itself.
http://cgpl.iisc.ernet.in/site/Portals/ ... Thesis.pdf
Two types of instabilities are encountered in afterburners. They are buzz and
screech. Reheat buzz is a low frequency, self-excited oscillation that can occur
above a certain fuel-air ratio. Screech is accompanied by high frequency pressure
oscillations that may be of such magnitude as to cause rapid deterioration of the
burner. Screech might be, or closely related to, some form of resonant oscillation
or also known as flame-driven resonant oscillations or combustion instability.
The afterburner-inlet conditions at which screech occur differs widely for various
afterburner designs. Combustion-driven flow oscillations that arise in combustors
and the afterburners are difficult to predict
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Can our Resident Experts comment on HTFE & HTSE also?
What's the comparison between say, HTSE & Airdiden-3 Turbomeca engine?
Similarly, Al-55 & HTFE?
Are the specifications realistic, achievable? Are the engines future ready?
What's the comparison between say, HTSE & Airdiden-3 Turbomeca engine?
Similarly, Al-55 & HTFE?
Are the specifications realistic, achievable? Are the engines future ready?
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
HAL has a tender to outsource Single Crystal Blade casting for LPT and HPT blades. My best guess, this is for Adour 871 engine. Because this doesn't look like its for either Al31FP or HTSE/HTFE. Looks like this is one of the Desikaran initiative and word reverse engineering is used in it...!!
https://hal-india.co.in/Tender_Details. ... ivkey=OQ==
https://hal-india.co.in/Tender_Details. ... ivkey=OQ==
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
The tenders says that the HPT blade is for a turboshaft engine while the LPT blade is for a turbofan engine.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
in English please
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Thanks for pointing that out. I did not catch that one.Indranil wrote:The tenders says that the HPT blade is for a turboshaft engine while the LPT blade is for a turbofan engine.
So HPT SCB could be either Shakti or HTSE-1200, later being the obviously likely one.
LPT blades are for Adour 871, its LPT has 94 blades and the material is a RR developed alloy.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Should not HAL be doing this Single Crystal blade casting. After all who else in India would have such technology lying around? And it's odd that we have still not indigenised Adour Engine after 40 years
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Adour 871 (for Hawk, not Jags) - is the current LPT - SC or DS (from RR that is?)? Are we upping it to SC blade? (Maybe to get experience). Same Q as Gyan, why the tender. It is not that Abdul has this technology in his Garage, most likely 1-2 shops (Karaput? or some DRDO lab - MDNL?) has that technology, why this charade? to be above board and not anyone accused of hanky panky?
Answering my own question it does
https://watermark.silverchair.com/v002t ... o8bmpHXESc
Answering my own question it does
https://watermark.silverchair.com/v002t ... o8bmpHXESc
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
^^ Link doesn't work.
Adour 871 uses SCB for LPT.
unless we know who will end up making the SCB, lot of questions will remain unanswered. But given this is an indigenization efforts, it must be some desi entity. Would it be a MNC owned pvt subsidiary or shuddh desi company..? Who knows.
Adour 871 uses SCB for LPT.
unless we know who will end up making the SCB, lot of questions will remain unanswered. But given this is an indigenization efforts, it must be some desi entity. Would it be a MNC owned pvt subsidiary or shuddh desi company..? Who knows.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
tech available only in govt/public sector in India unless some Indian player is able to outsource it abroad.fanne wrote:Adour 871 (for Hawk, not Jags) - is the current LPT - SC or DS (from RR that is?)? Are we upping it to SC blade? (Maybe to get experience). Same Q as Gyan, why the tender. It is not that Abdul has this technology in his Garage, most likely 1-2 shops (Karaput? or some DRDO lab - MDNL?) has that technology, why this charade? to be above board and not anyone accused of hanky panky?
Answering my own question it does
https://watermark.silverchair.com/v002t ... o8bmpHXESc
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
If HAL/DRDO are looking at Reaper and Avenger Class UCAVs then we will need both Turboprop engine and turbofan engine
Turbofan Engine requirement will met by HTFE and Kaveri.
I wonder if HTSE can have a turboprop variant of 1500hp class for a Reaper Class UCAV
Turbofan Engine requirement will met by HTFE and Kaveri.
I wonder if HTSE can have a turboprop variant of 1500hp class for a Reaper Class UCAV
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Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Is Hal trying to upgrade the Jag engine in-house? That would be something...
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
What is most interesting to me is that HAL does not consider its crown jewels to protect. Or, it really wants to become the systems' integrator. Both of which are great signs.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Adour engine project has been ongoing for a while now. compressor side appears to be done and turbine side is being done now. Blades were machined by a private company in bangalore earlier. Not sure if they're being done now also.Cain Marko wrote:Is Hal trying to upgrade the Jag engine in-house? That would be something...
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Do you mean to say, screech cannot be generated by the instabilities in the jet itself..?
Anyway this is off topic for Kaveri.
Anyway this is off topic for Kaveri.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Err, if it helps explain the issues of screech on Kaveri its quite germane right here.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Kaveri is dead, there is hardly any news on what progress has been made in last 10+ years. Same vague info about about snecma core, screech issue, spreadsheet pressure ratios etc. are recycled every few years for time pass discussion here. I don't think this is really informing anybody (you have a poster who had put 2+2 together to to come to the conclusion that "screech" issue was solved by replacing the core with the French one).
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
^^ Remembering reading about a comment on some Kaveri related article by some poster about how the tons of stuff happening under wraps will be revealed at the right time and there will be good news.
Not sure if just some random kite flying or something ongoing under a gag order inside GTRE
Not sure if just some random kite flying or something ongoing under a gag order inside GTRE
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Indigenisation of Adour HPT DS blades is almost 8 year old hand - Read herePrasad wrote:Adour engine project has been ongoing for a while now. compressor side appears to be done and turbine side is being done now. Blades were machined by a private company in bangalore earlier. Not sure if they're being done now also.Cain Marko wrote:Is Hal trying to upgrade the Jag engine in-house? That would be something...
Quote from the 2011 Tech Focus article ...
Normally LPTs are either at a similar, or may be one level lower, in tech level than the HPTs blades/vanes - though there is no such hard and fast rule. So this SC casted LPT blades for Adour is quite interesting.DMRL also took up the extremely challenging assignment of developing technology for production of high-pressure turbine (HPT) rotor blades of Jaguar aircraft's ADOUR MK811 engine.The blades had complex aerofoil geometry with tight dimensional tolerances and stringent metallurgical specifications. Processing technology for this critical and complex directionally solidified (DS) aerofoil casting was fully developed by DMRL and the blades were delivered to HAL, Koraput.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
^^ Betw from the same TF 2011 doc ...
Producing SC casted blades/vanes are much more technology intensive than simply being able to Vacuum Investment Casting of blades/vanes (one such intricacy is vanes are much more challenging to cast, SC or DS, than blades etc etc) ... someday I'll able to finish the 4th part of the series (from the prev page).The process is currently being used for making silica cores for Kaveri aerofoil castings that include HPT turbine blades and vanes and LPT blades. It is being adapted for making alumina cores that are required for producing single crystal aerofoil casting
Last edited by maitya on 27 Aug 2019 12:56, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
India cancels Jaguar upgrade over Honeywell’s $2.4B price tag
sorry if it is already posted
sorry if it is already posted
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Guys, I have some queries regarding screech issue with Kaveri.
I ask as I have no clue what so ever regarding a jet engine.
1) If it is related to after burner then non after burning application should still have a flyable engine? Correct?
2) the screech, is it is physical issue that will adversely effect the safety of the aircraft?
I ask as I have no clue what so ever regarding a jet engine.
1) If it is related to after burner then non after burning application should still have a flyable engine? Correct?
2) the screech, is it is physical issue that will adversely effect the safety of the aircraft?
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
GE 414 Engine is only USD 5 Million, how come Jaguar upgrade engineering be is USD 13 Million each?
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Screech is a phenomenon characterized by high frequency tonal acoustic waves. Again, what you are talking about is for Supersonic Jets - jet screech. And there is screech in context of After burner induced by combustion instability which is separate from the jet screech, that you have been referring to. These acoustic waves generated by the combustion instability in the A/B are trapped inside the jet pipe (they cannot travel downstream of the nozzle beyond the throat as flow becomes supersonic there and are reflected. They cannot travel upstream as well, due to presence of turbines, so they keep getting reflected back and forth in the jet pipe. ) and they can damage the HW inside. To attenuate them, acoustic liner with holes is used inside the jet pipe. If the frequency is low like 100Hz, they are called Rumble or buzz ( there is another buzz phenomenon for supersonic inlets but that's different one) and if the frequency is high like 500Hz they are call Screech.agupta wrote:JayS wrote:Do you mean to say, screech cannot be generated by the instabilities in the jet itself..?
Anyway this is off topic for Kaveri.
No that's not what I meant. Just saying screech is defined as a sub-set of (and happens only in) supersonic jet phenomena. Some instability (wether driven by a sharp lip or a afterburner flame/combustion dynamics) creates the disturbances that then become part of feedback loops.
See here: http://people.ece.umn.edu/users/mihailo ... reech.html or even on wiki https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jet_noise
"Screech is produced by a feedback mechanism in which a disturbance convecting in the shear layer generates sound as it traverses the standing system of shock waves in the jet" ..... the disturbance triggers can be different
These screech waves produced by A/B may or may not induce Jet screech, depending on whether they can induce flow instabilities in the flow at the throat of the nozzle strong enough that would travel thru the diffuser and then in the outside jet shock structure. I am not too sure about this part whether it will at all kick start screech outside in the jet. But the acoustic waves remain inside as they cannot pass thru the throat (its a physical boundary for them) and are reflected back.
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Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
should be because of amortization over 1000 engines and no design/ip inputsGyan wrote:GE 414 Engine is only USD 5 Million, how come Jaguar upgrade engineering be is USD 13 Million each?
PS: 1500 engine was delivered in 2015
Last edited by ArjunPandit on 27 Aug 2019 16:49, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Adour 871 (AJT Hawk) has SCB LPT blades.maitya wrote:Indigenisation of Adour HPT DS blades is almost 8 year old hand - Read herePrasad wrote: Adour engine project has been ongoing for a while now. compressor side appears to be done and turbine side is being done now. Blades were machined by a private company in bangalore earlier. Not sure if they're being done now also.
Quote from the 2011 Tech Focus article ...Normally LPTs are either at a similar, or may be one level lower, in tech level than the HPTs blades/vanes - though there is no such hard and fast rule. So this SC casted LPT blades for Adour is quite interesting.DMRL also took up the extremely challenging assignment of developing technology for production of high-pressure turbine (HPT) rotor blades of Jaguar aircraft's ADOUR MK811 engine.The blades had complex aerofoil geometry with tight dimensional tolerances and stringent metallurgical specifications. Processing technology for this critical and complex directionally solidified (DS) aerofoil casting was fully developed by DMRL and the blades were delivered to HAL, Koraput.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
1. That's why Ghatak is going ahead with dray Kaveri.Pratyush wrote:Guys, I have some queries regarding screech issue with Kaveri.
I ask as I have no clue what so ever regarding a jet engine.
1) If it is related to after burner then non after burning application should still have a flyable engine? Correct?
2) the screech, is it is physical issue that will adversely effect the safety of the aircraft?
2. Screech or rumble related to the A/B can damage the engine from inside. That's a safety issue. Loss of thrust is another issue, but it need not be a safety issue.
Re: Kaveri & Aero-Engine: News & Discussion
Overview of Gas Turbine Augmentor Design, operation
And Combustion Oscillation
https://engineering.purdue.edu/AAECours ... r%20Review
And Combustion Oscillation
https://engineering.purdue.edu/AAECours ... r%20Review
The phenomenon referred to as “screech” (see Section 6.2) is a type of combustion instability
characterized by high frequency, high amplitude pressure oscillations. The high pressures and
temperatures accompanying low-altitude, high-speed flight is conducive to screech. The onset
of screech during the combustion process contributes to an increased rate of flame propagation
and improved augmentor combustion efficiency. However, screech also results in higher
operating temperatures in the augmentor. Moderate to severe screeching conditions can cause
rapid deterioration and failure of the augmentor liner, flameholder, and the fuel injection
system. Numerous documented hardware failures have been encountered affecting the
augmentor liner, flameholders and fuel system components after only a few minutes of
operation during screeching conditions (Refs. 14, 17-26, 34). To counteract this, practical
augmentors are designed with a screech liner that consists of a hot (core) side and cold (fan
duct) side. This allows for film cooling and some amount of screech suppression. The screech
liner is generally designed to address high frequency combustion oscillations (> 1000 Hz).
Due to hardware damage of the augmentor during screech operating conditions, it is essential
that an understanding of the screech phenomenon is gained and methods for eliminating
screech are devised. Several investigators have studied augmentor screech phenomena (Refs.
20, 26, 34). From these studies, several theories have emerged that attempt to describe the
screech phenomenon. Thus far, the capability of these analyses to predict screech and the low
pressure acoustic coupling referred to as “rumble” has been limited. Rumble is a phenomenon
similar to screech caused by low frequency oscillations in the augmentor. Rumble is a concern
because it causes extreme structural vibrations in the engine, which can cause the engine to
break apart, resulting in mission failure and, in extreme cases, loss of the entire aircraft.