Require help about CFD analysis of turbomachines

  • Thread starter Thread starter jayaero
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Analysis Cfd
Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
4 replies · 3K views
jayaero
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
hi,
I want to learn turbo machines analysis in GAMBIT and Fluent...
Anyone who have experience of CFD please help me...
please give me if u have any tutorials (apart from given within softwares)...
I am working for my masters thesis on effect of stagger angle on turbine blade cascade.
Thank you.
 
on Phys.org
You really need to learn CFD principles in general. People who use CFD or even FEA for that matter can be dangerous; seriously. It is way to easy to throw a model into Fluent/CFX/etc, and get an answer. Without background, you'll have no idea how accurate that answer is.

An experienced and inexperienced CFD'er solving the exact same problem could be as far off as 50%. Find some tutorials, but if you're doing a masters, Sign up for Computational Fluid Dynamics!. Write a 1D solver. Then write a pseudo 2D solver. Then learn principles of meshing. Then start your thesis. You have plenty of time, don't rush it.
 
hi
Thanks for reply.
I know the fundamentals of CFD and I have also done a course on CFD in first year of M.Tech. degree.I am B.E.(Aeronautical) so I have CFD background.I have written some small programs on C for heat transfer and 2-D fluid flow but I don't want to go into coding side.
I agree with u on the thing that experience is required on Fluent and otherwise anyone can solve problem but interpretation plus validation is important.Therefore I need help of some person who can guide me on 1.how to get experimental data on turbo machines 2.how to get some good tutorials on the same and send any research report if he have and overall any suggestions for how to go about dissertation.
Thank you.
 
Most experimental data I would assume is proprietary first off. Aside from that, you'll probably have to go journal hunting. You can also try the NASA Technical Reports server.