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Acta Aeronautica et Astronautica Sinica ›› 2026, Vol. 47 ›› Issue (2): 132104.doi: 10.7527/S1000-6893.2025.32104

• Fluid Mechanics and Flight Mechanics • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Warm-up characteristics and thrust impact of aero-engines based on fluid-thermal-solid coupled simulation

Faning SHAO1, Chao YANG1, Pingting CHEN1, Feilong WANG1, Weichen ZHAO2, Bo NING2, Junkui MAO1()   

  1. 1.College of Energy and Power Engineering,Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics,Nanjing 210016,China
    2.AECC Shenyang Engine Research Institute,Shenyang 110015,China
  • Received:2025-04-10 Revised:2025-05-06 Accepted:2025-07-02 Online:2025-07-16 Published:2025-07-15
  • Contact: Junkui MAO E-mail:mjkpe@nuaa.edu.cn
  • Supported by:
    National Level Project

Abstract:

Aero-engine requires maintaining high rotational speeds for warm-up operations prior to takeoff; otherwise, thrust degradation may occur during the climb-out phase. To address this issue, this study focuses on a core engine of a small-bypass-ratio turbofan and develops a fluid-thermal-solid coupling computational methodology that integrates a 1D fluid domain model with a 2D axisymmetric finite element model of the solid structure. This approach enables coupled simulation across different scales for solid domain analysis, air system evaluation, multi-component thermal analysis, and deformation prediction. Simulation results reveal that tip clearance exceeding design specifications constitutes the primary cause of thrust reduction during takeoff. Warm-up operations effectively reduce tip clearances, resulting in a 0.85% improvement in high-pressure turbine efficiency and a 0.5% enhancement in compressor efficiency. These improvements drive a maximum 0.51% increase in high-pressure rotor speed, augment core mass flow, reduce engine bypass ratio, and ultimately elevate minimum takeoff thrust by 2.4%. Further analysis demonstrates that either extending warm-up duration or increasing warm-up rotational speed can enhance takeoff thrust. However, when the warm-up speed remains below 0.75, increasing rotational speed fails to effectively reduce high-pressure turbine tip clearance. Finally, leveraging sequential quadratic programming optimization, a warm-up parameter optimization model constrained by thrust requirements is established to achieve optimal combinations of minimum warm-up time and rotational speed across various operational conditions.

Key words: turbofan engine, warm-up, tip clearance, fluid-thermal-solid coupling, transient state

CLC Number: