Modeling Behaviour of Damaged Turbine Blades for Engine Health Diagnostics and Prognostics

The reliability of modern gas turbine engines is largely due to careful damage tolerant design a method of structural design based on the assumption that flaws (cracks) exist in any structure and will continue to grow with usage. With proper monitoring, largely in the form of periodic inspections at...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Van Dyke, Jason
Language:en
Published: 2011
Subjects:
TBC
FEA
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20312
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OOU.#10393-20312
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OOU.#10393-203122013-10-04T04:23:02ZModeling Behaviour of Damaged Turbine Blades for Engine Health Diagnostics and PrognosticsVan Dyke, JasonNumerical methodTBCthermal barrier coatingturbine bladedamage turbine bladesdamageFEAdiagnostic systemprognostic systemstructural health monitoringdamage modelingdamage indicatorsfinite element methodABAQUSvibrationdeflectionelongationThe reliability of modern gas turbine engines is largely due to careful damage tolerant design a method of structural design based on the assumption that flaws (cracks) exist in any structure and will continue to grow with usage. With proper monitoring, largely in the form of periodic inspections at conservative intervals reliability and safety is maintained. These methods while reliable can lead to the early retirement of some components and unforeseen failure if design assumptions fail to reflect reality. With improvements to sensor and computing technology there is a growing interest in a system that could continuously monitor the health of structural aircraft as well as forecast future damage accumulation in real-time. Through the use of two-dimensional and three-dimensional numerical modeling the initial goals and findings for this continued work include: (a) establishing measurable parameters directly linked to the health of the blade and (b) the feasibility of detecting accumulated damage to the structural material and thermal barrier coating as well as the onset of damage causing structural failure.2011-10-12T21:01:35Z2011-10-12T21:01:35Z20112011-10-12Thèse / Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10393/20312en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Numerical method
TBC
thermal barrier coating
turbine blade
damage turbine blades
damage
FEA
diagnostic system
prognostic system
structural health monitoring
damage modeling
damage indicators
finite element method
ABAQUS
vibration
deflection
elongation
spellingShingle Numerical method
TBC
thermal barrier coating
turbine blade
damage turbine blades
damage
FEA
diagnostic system
prognostic system
structural health monitoring
damage modeling
damage indicators
finite element method
ABAQUS
vibration
deflection
elongation
Van Dyke, Jason
Modeling Behaviour of Damaged Turbine Blades for Engine Health Diagnostics and Prognostics
description The reliability of modern gas turbine engines is largely due to careful damage tolerant design a method of structural design based on the assumption that flaws (cracks) exist in any structure and will continue to grow with usage. With proper monitoring, largely in the form of periodic inspections at conservative intervals reliability and safety is maintained. These methods while reliable can lead to the early retirement of some components and unforeseen failure if design assumptions fail to reflect reality. With improvements to sensor and computing technology there is a growing interest in a system that could continuously monitor the health of structural aircraft as well as forecast future damage accumulation in real-time. Through the use of two-dimensional and three-dimensional numerical modeling the initial goals and findings for this continued work include: (a) establishing measurable parameters directly linked to the health of the blade and (b) the feasibility of detecting accumulated damage to the structural material and thermal barrier coating as well as the onset of damage causing structural failure.
author Van Dyke, Jason
author_facet Van Dyke, Jason
author_sort Van Dyke, Jason
title Modeling Behaviour of Damaged Turbine Blades for Engine Health Diagnostics and Prognostics
title_short Modeling Behaviour of Damaged Turbine Blades for Engine Health Diagnostics and Prognostics
title_full Modeling Behaviour of Damaged Turbine Blades for Engine Health Diagnostics and Prognostics
title_fullStr Modeling Behaviour of Damaged Turbine Blades for Engine Health Diagnostics and Prognostics
title_full_unstemmed Modeling Behaviour of Damaged Turbine Blades for Engine Health Diagnostics and Prognostics
title_sort modeling behaviour of damaged turbine blades for engine health diagnostics and prognostics
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20312
work_keys_str_mv AT vandykejason modelingbehaviourofdamagedturbinebladesforenginehealthdiagnosticsandprognostics
_version_ 1716603552613269504