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Trapped Vortex Ducted Fan...

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potteryshard

Electrical
Sep 29, 2010
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I previously posted this query on the Aerodynamic forum, but there doesn't appear to be much traffic there, so I'd like to try again...

Please forgive me for bothering people outside my supposed speciality, but the following thought occurred (and yes, before you ask; it was painful) that I would like to present as a question for discussion.

Is it possible, rather than controlling vortex formation from the tips of ducted fan blades via close tolerances and consequently heavy construction, to trap those vortices and use that energy to amplify incoming flow?

As shown on the attached sketch, if the blade tip vortices were trapped in the shape of rotating torus around the periphery of the duct, could that rotating mass of air be used as an airfoil to accelerate and pack air into the duct center?

Intuitively, it would seem that the splitter distance from the blade disc would be on the order of the blade chord at that point, which would suggest that these large clearances could permit use of a fairly lightweight and flexible duct structure without huge leakage losses.

As drawn, the vortex ring is probably much too large in cross-section. If this concept works at all, it would of course require substantial optimization. Again, on an intuitive basis, it would seem that this might work better with low-order blade counts, making it more usable for larger, and less heavily loaded discs, such as recip engine powered ducted fans than for turboshaft applications.

For recip-powered ducted fans however, an insubstantial duct with non-critical clearances might provide some interesting options...
 
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posting a doc file helps (i couldn't open the windows meta file format).

i think the frontal drag of this would kill it stone dead. aero guys fret enough over a standard ducted fan cowling (big, draggy, heavy). and i don't think that having to have a tight control on the radial dimension tolerance is that big of a deal.

and i think it's better to prevent the vortex forming (with a small gap to the cowling) in the first place than to allow it to form and try to recover some energy from it (you'll always lose on the exchange).
 
> It appears that you will have increased the frontal area/weight of the engine/propeller by an order of magnitude; that would seem to be a non starter

> You show the vortices reversing direction a full 360°; where is the energy for that coming from, except via the engine itself?


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