US3557830A - Device for forced mixing of parallel fluid flows - Google Patents

Device for forced mixing of parallel fluid flows Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3557830A
US3557830A US3557830DA US3557830A US 3557830 A US3557830 A US 3557830A US 3557830D A US3557830D A US 3557830DA US 3557830 A US3557830 A US 3557830A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
flow
flows
partition
discs
triangular
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
Inventor
John A Raw
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
SVENSKA FIYGMOTOR AB
Original Assignee
SVENSKA FIYGMOTOR AB
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by SVENSKA FIYGMOTOR AB filed Critical SVENSKA FIYGMOTOR AB
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3557830A publication Critical patent/US3557830A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02KJET-PROPULSION PLANTS
    • F02K1/00Plants characterised by the form or arrangement of the jet pipe or nozzle; Jet pipes or nozzles peculiar thereto
    • F02K1/38Introducing air inside the jet
    • F02K1/386Introducing air inside the jet mixing devices in the jet pipe, e.g. for mixing primary and secondary flow
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T137/00Fluid handling
    • Y10T137/8593Systems
    • Y10T137/87571Multiple inlet with single outlet
    • Y10T137/87652With means to promote mixing or combining of plural fluids

Definitions

  • Nilson Att0rneySommers & Young ABSTRACT A device for forced mixing of parallel fluid flows by means of guide vanes such as for mixing hot and cold gaseous flows in turbine-jet engines, said guide vanes consisting of a plurality of triangular discs turned with a corner opposite the direction of flow and having the base as trailing edge and located with said corner spaced from a partition between said flows, at the end edge of which partition said discs are mounted at such angle of attack to the direction of flow that they are approaching the border area between said flows as seen from said corner towards said trailing edge, the side edges of said triangular discs being located each in a side plane disc disposed in the direction of flow and by means of which said triangular disc is supported from said partition.
  • the present invention concerns a device for forced mixing of parallel fluid flows by means of guide vanes, such as for mixing hot and cold gaseous flows in turbine-jet engines.
  • the general rule is that two flows of gas or liquid separated by a partition but then in parallel relationship entering into a common passage, have approximately the same static pressure but may have different temperatures, velocity and density. Said flows are intermixed in the border area therebetween substantially due to viscous effects.
  • the contact area between the two flows must be increased.
  • Said deflection can be achieved by substantially two ways. One of them is by extend ing the partition between the inlet channels of the gas flows, as is known in prior art, eg to the peripheral wall of the intermixing length and is provided with apertures or nozzles for inlet of one of the flowing fluids into the other with a velocity component at right angles to the direction of flow of the latter.
  • This kind of deflecting device can provide a rapid mixing but then at the expense of high pressure loss.
  • the arrangement is heavy, which is a substantial drawback in aeronautical applications.
  • the second way is to fold said flows at the end of the partition by local deflection and thus increase the mixing area therebetween.
  • Said deflection can be provided by folding the final portion of the partition or by guide vanes immediately downstream the same,
  • the change of the direction of flow or the angle the flow is deflected is the parameter best distinguishing how difficult this process actually is.
  • the possibility of achieving an effective deflection of the flows and thus a good mixing is limited in this last-mentioned kind of deflection device by the circumstance that already at a relatively small deflection angle of about the boundary layer increase on the downstream side of the guide vane, i.e. the side turned opposite the direction of flow, results in a flow separation. Said flow separation involves pressure losses and reduced deflection.
  • the main object of the present invention is to eliminate the above-mentioned difficulties and the invention is based on the aerodynamic discovery now well known in the aeronautical field, viz that 'a plane triangular disclike body with a corner or peak directed opposite the direction of flow and having the base at trailing edge gives raise to a vortex flow if said body is mounted at an angle of incidence relative to said direction of flow.
  • Said vortex flow is formed on the downstream side of said disc and consists of two counterrotating vortexes. Due to their high speed of rotation, said vortexes create a high flow velocity adjacent the downstream surface or the suction surface.
  • said vortex flow involves a pressure loss per se but the latter can be limited to its extent in a surprisingly simple way by ar-' ranging side plane discs in the direction of flow along the side edges of the triangle.
  • the reason for said limiting effect of said side discs is that they prevent an overflow from the pressure side of said guide vane to the suction side thereof, and thereby the vortex intensity is limited.
  • the invention is substantially distinguished in that the guide vanes consist of a plurality of triangular discs, preferably with two equal sides and mounted equally spaced along the end edge of a partition between said flows, said triangular discs being tumed with the corner or peak opposite the direction of flow and the base as trailing edge and located with said peak or corner spaced from that partition, said discs furthermore being mounted at an angle to the direction of flow so that they, as seen from the comer towards the trailing edge, are approaching the border area between said flows, said two equal edges of the triangular disc being situated each in a side plane disc, which is located in the direction of flow and by means of which said triangular disc is supported from said partition between the flows.
  • the angle of deflection of the flow can be increased without any risks for flow separation of the flowing fluid from the downstream surface of the guide vane.
  • this involves that the very mixing process occurs within a substantially shorter length.
  • the suggested shape of the guide vane also involves that the mixing device is simple and light and inexpensive in manufacture, particularly due to the fact that each guide vane can be produced in one single piece of sheet material.
  • a favorable secondary effect of the two vortexes created on the downstream surface of the disc also is that they vigorously contribute to the very mixing and in its turn this involves that less numerous guide vane units in principle must be used for achieving the same desired mixing effect as hitherto for a certain given passage length.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates an embodiment, partially in section, through a turbine-jet engine in the portion thereof, where a cold fan flow is mixed with the hot gas flow from the turbine in parallel relationship and where said two flows are to be mixed as fast and completely as possible;
  • FIG. 2 illustrates the arrangement of a plurality of guide vanes according to the invention along the end edge of a partition between the gas flows;
  • FIG. 3 is a plane view in detail of a guide vane according to the invention.
  • each type of guide vane is the ability thereof to change the direction of flow of the fluid, and therefore comparisons if made must concern said deflection angle.
  • a guide vane of previously known type with an extension in the direction of flow comparable with the guide vane according to the present invention can give a maximum deflection angle of about 15 in the exemplifying embodiment mentioned in the following.
  • the partition 3 at the rear edge of the partition 3 now are arranged along the channel periphery suitably spaced guide vanes consisting of triangular discs 6, preferably having two equal sides and the base as trailing edge. Owing to said shape and for previously mentioned reasons said discs cause an exceptionally great deflection of the direction of flow.
  • the two side edges of the discs 6 are located each in a side plane disc 7, disposed in the direction of flow and by means of which the triangular disc 6 is supported from the partition 3.
  • said side plane discs 7 at the same time provide an obstacle for preventing the overflow from the pressure side of the guide vane to the suction side thereof and thus limit the extent of the unavoidable pressure losses.
  • it is suitable to make them together with the side plane discs in one single piece of any suitable sheet material. It is also suitable to form attaching flanges 8 at the front portion of the free edges of the side plane discs 7 in the direction of flow for securing the guide vanes to the rear edge of the partition 3.
  • a device for forced mixing of parallel fluid flows by means of guide vanes such as for mixing hot and cold gas flows in turbine-jet engines, characterized in that said guide vanes consist of a plurality of triangular discs spaced along the end edge of a partition between said flows and having two equal sides turned with a comer or peak opposite the direction of flow and the base as trailing edge and disposed with said corner or peak spaced from said partition, said discs being arranged at an angle of attack to the direction of flow so that they are, as seen from the corner or peak towards the base, approaching or getting closer to the border area between said flows, the two side. edges of the triangular disc each are located in a side plane disc which is disposed in the direction of flow and by means of which said triangular disc is supported from the partition between the flows.
  • a device characterized in that said triangular disc and said side plane discs are made integrally of sheet metal and that at the front portion of the free edge of the side plane discs extending in the direction of flow is formed an attachment flange for the securing of the guide vane to the partition.

Abstract

A device for forced mixing of parallel fluid flows by means of guide vanes such as for mixing hot and cold gaseous flows in turbine-jet engines, said guide vanes consisting of a plurality of triangular discs turned with a corner opposite the direction of flow and having the base as trailing edge and located with said corner spaced from a partition between said flows, at the end edge of which partition said discs are mounted at such angle of attach to the direction of flow that they are approaching the border area between said flows as seen from said corner towards said trailing edge, the side edges of said triangular discs being located each in a side plane disc disposed in the direction of flow and by means of which said triangular disc is supported from said partition.

Description

United States Patent [72] inventor [22} Filed June 17, 1969 [45] Patented Jan. 26, 1971 [73] Assignee Svenska Flygmotor Aktiebolag Trollhattan, Sweden a joint stock company of Sweden [32] Priority June 17, 1968 [3 3 Sweden [3 1 8191/68 [54] DEVICE FOR FORCED MIXING OF PARALLEL FLUID FLOWS 2 Claims, 3 Drawing Figs.
[52] U.S.Cl 137/604, 60/262, 259/4 [5 1] Int. Cl F02k 3/02 [50] Field of Search 137/604;
[56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,999,672 9/ l 961 l-larshman l37/604X 3,196,608 7/1965 Tindale 60/262 3,377,804 4/1968 Wright et al. 60/262 Primary Examiner-Robert G. Nilson Att0rneySommers & Young ABSTRACT: A device for forced mixing of parallel fluid flows by means of guide vanes such as for mixing hot and cold gaseous flows in turbine-jet engines, said guide vanes consisting of a plurality of triangular discs turned with a corner opposite the direction of flow and having the base as trailing edge and located with said corner spaced from a partition between said flows, at the end edge of which partition said discs are mounted at such angle of attack to the direction of flow that they are approaching the border area between said flows as seen from said corner towards said trailing edge, the side edges of said triangular discs being located each in a side plane disc disposed in the direction of flow and by means of which said triangular disc is supported from said partition.
PATENTEUJANZBIQYI 3557,2330
sum 1 BF 2 A F/G.7
DEVICE FOR FORCED MIXING OF PARALLEL FLUID FLOWS The present invention concerns a device for forced mixing of parallel fluid flows by means of guide vanes, such as for mixing hot and cold gaseous flows in turbine-jet engines.
When mixing flowing fluids the general rule is that two flows of gas or liquid separated by a partition but then in parallel relationship entering into a common passage, have approximately the same static pressure but may have different temperatures, velocity and density. Said flows are intermixed in the border area therebetween substantially due to viscous effects.
If it is desired to speed up the mixing operation the contact area between the two flows must be increased. This is obtained by means of various kinds of deflecting devices which force parts of each flow into the other. Said deflection can be achieved by substantially two ways. One of them is by extend ing the partition between the inlet channels of the gas flows, as is known in prior art, eg to the peripheral wall of the intermixing length and is provided with apertures or nozzles for inlet of one of the flowing fluids into the other with a velocity component at right angles to the direction of flow of the latter. This kind of deflecting device can provide a rapid mixing but then at the expense of high pressure loss. Furthermore the arrangement is heavy, which is a substantial drawback in aeronautical applications.
The second way is to fold said flows at the end of the partition by local deflection and thus increase the mixing area therebetween. Said deflection can be provided by folding the final portion of the partition or by guide vanes immediately downstream the same,
The change of the direction of flow or the angle the flow is deflected is the parameter best distinguishing how difficult this process actually is. The possibility of achieving an effective deflection of the flows and thus a good mixing is limited in this last-mentioned kind of deflection device by the circumstance that already at a relatively small deflection angle of about the boundary layer increase on the downstream side of the guide vane, i.e. the side turned opposite the direction of flow, results in a flow separation. Said flow separation involves pressure losses and reduced deflection.
The only measures hitherto known for achieving a greater deflection has been either to utilize long vanes with small curvature or grids of shorter vanes. However, such guide vane devices are complicated and thus expensive to manufacture.
Therefore, the main object of the present invention is to eliminate the above-mentioned difficulties and the invention is based on the aerodynamic discovery now well known in the aeronautical field, viz that 'a plane triangular disclike body with a corner or peak directed opposite the direction of flow and having the base at trailing edge gives raise to a vortex flow if said body is mounted at an angle of incidence relative to said direction of flow. Said vortex flow is formed on the downstream side of said disc and consists of two counterrotating vortexes. Due to their high speed of rotation, said vortexes create a high flow velocity adjacent the downstream surface or the suction surface.
If said discovery is converted into practice according to the invention and a guide vane is made as a triangle, preferably with two equal sides and the base as trailing edge, it turns out that much greater deflection can be achieved than with prior guide vanes and thereby many advantages can be obtained, Said high flow velocity adjacent the downstream surface or suction surface namely eliminates the risk for flow separation even at great angles of attack resulting in such deflection angle which would have caused flow separation in guide vanes hitherto known. With a device according to the invention there can thus be achieved a deflection up to an angle which is more than twice as great as the maximum angle achievable with previously known single guide vanes. In fact, however, said vortex flow involves a pressure loss per se but the latter can be limited to its extent in a surprisingly simple way by ar-' ranging side plane discs in the direction of flow along the side edges of the triangle. The reason for said limiting effect of said side discs is that they prevent an overflow from the pressure side of said guide vane to the suction side thereof, and thereby the vortex intensity is limited.
Therefore, the invention is substantially distinguished in that the guide vanes consist of a plurality of triangular discs, preferably with two equal sides and mounted equally spaced along the end edge of a partition between said flows, said triangular discs being tumed with the corner or peak opposite the direction of flow and the base as trailing edge and located with said peak or corner spaced from that partition, said discs furthermore being mounted at an angle to the direction of flow so that they, as seen from the comer towards the trailing edge, are approaching the border area between said flows, said two equal edges of the triangular disc being situated each in a side plane disc, which is located in the direction of flow and by means of which said triangular disc is supported from said partition between the flows.
With the device according to the invention a plurality of advantages is achieved, i.a. that the angle of deflection of the flow can be increased without any risks for flow separation of the flowing fluid from the downstream surface of the guide vane. In its turn this involves that the very mixing process occurs within a substantially shorter length. The suggested shape of the guide vane also involves that the mixing device is simple and light and inexpensive in manufacture, particularly due to the fact that each guide vane can be produced in one single piece of sheet material. A favorable secondary effect of the two vortexes created on the downstream surface of the disc also is that they vigorously contribute to the very mixing and in its turn this involves that less numerous guide vane units in principle must be used for achieving the same desired mixing effect as hitherto for a certain given passage length.
The invention will be described by way of example in the following while referring to the accompanying drawings, in which: FIG. 1 illustrates an embodiment, partially in section, through a turbine-jet engine in the portion thereof, where a cold fan flow is mixed with the hot gas flow from the turbine in parallel relationship and where said two flows are to be mixed as fast and completely as possible; FIG. 2 illustrates the arrangement of a plurality of guide vanes according to the invention along the end edge of a partition between the gas flows; and FIG. 3 is a plane view in detail of a guide vane according to the invention.
Already in this connection it is to be pointed out that the exemplifying embodiment now choosen wherein the invention is applied in the outlet portion of a turbine-jet engine of bypass type in no way restricts the invention but only is meant as a good illustration thereof. Of course the invention also can be applied in other cases. Nor is the invention restricted only to the use of air and other gaseous fluids but ought also to be used with advantages for liquids.
It can also be mentioned that in principle the angle of attack between the direction of flow and the leading edge of a conventional guide vane of course is no measure of the ability of the guide vane to deflect the flow. invariably, said angle of attack is much smaller than the angle between the original direction of the flow and the direction thereof after deflection. When it comes to the type of guide vane now suggested the angle of attack and the angle of deflection are approximately equal. It is appreciated that it is impossible to compare the angle of attack of conventional guide vanes and of this new type of guide vanes.
The essential character of each type of guide vane is the ability thereof to change the direction of flow of the fluid, and therefore comparisons if made must concern said deflection angle. A guide vane of previously known type with an extension in the direction of flow comparable with the guide vane according to the present invention can give a maximum deflection angle of about 15 in the exemplifying embodiment mentioned in the following.
On the contrary, with a guide vane according to the present invention a deflection angle twice as great can be obtained.
However. it is impossible to state a maximum possible deflection angle since said angle varies with the sweep angle of the triangular disc sides. The slimmer the triangle. the greater the angle of attack which can be used without any flow separation occurring and thus the greater the deflection angle will be. Structural reasons. however, make extremely slim guide vanes less suitable, but no limits for the choose of sweep angle can be stated for various application alternatives.
in the drawings there is illustrated a portion of the rear part of a turbine-jet engine of bypass type. In an internal channel 1 surrounding a central outlet cone 2 hot combustion gases are discharged from the turbine portion of the jet engine. In the actual portion of the engine said gases are'to be mixed with a cold fan air flow passing in an external and concentrically surrounding channel 5 defined by a partition 3 and an external wall 4. It is obvious that it is of greatest importance particularly in a turbine-jet engine of the present kind for airplane propulsion that said mixing can be carried out with as simple, light and inexpensive measures and as short a length as possible, which induces substantial economical and structural advantages.
According to the invention, at the rear edge of the partition 3 now are arranged along the channel periphery suitably spaced guide vanes consisting of triangular discs 6, preferably having two equal sides and the base as trailing edge. Owing to said shape and for previously mentioned reasons said discs cause an exceptionally great deflection of the direction of flow.
Suitably, the two side edges of the discs 6 are located each in a side plane disc 7, disposed in the direction of flow and by means of which the triangular disc 6 is supported from the partition 3. As already mentioned said side plane discs 7 at the same time provide an obstacle for preventing the overflow from the pressure side of the guide vane to the suction side thereof and thus limit the extent of the unavoidable pressure losses. For facilitating the manufacture of the guide vanes it is suitable to make them together with the side plane discs in one single piece of any suitable sheet material. It is also suitable to form attaching flanges 8 at the front portion of the free edges of the side plane discs 7 in the direction of flow for securing the guide vanes to the rear edge of the partition 3.
I claim:
1. A device for forced mixing of parallel fluid flows by means of guide vanes such as for mixing hot and cold gas flows in turbine-jet engines, characterized in that said guide vanes consist of a plurality of triangular discs spaced along the end edge of a partition between said flows and having two equal sides turned with a comer or peak opposite the direction of flow and the base as trailing edge and disposed with said corner or peak spaced from said partition, said discs being arranged at an angle of attack to the direction of flow so that they are, as seen from the corner or peak towards the base, approaching or getting closer to the border area between said flows, the two side. edges of the triangular disc each are located in a side plane disc which is disposed in the direction of flow and by means of which said triangular disc is supported from the partition between the flows.
2. A device according to claim 1, characterized in that said triangular disc and said side plane discs are made integrally of sheet metal and that at the front portion of the free edge of the side plane discs extending in the direction of flow is formed an attachment flange for the securing of the guide vane to the partition.

Claims (2)

1. A device for forced mixing of parallel fluid flows by means of guide vanes such as for mixing hot and cold gas flows in turbine-jet engines, characterized in that said guide vanes consist of a plurality of triangular discs spaced along the end edge of a partition between said flows and having two equal sides turned with a corner or peak opposite the direction of flow and the base as trailing edge and disposed with said corner or peak spaced from said partition, said discs being arranged at an angle of attack to the direction of flow so that they are, as seen from the corner or peak towards the base, approaching or getting closer to the border area between said flows, the two side edges of the triangular disc each are located in a side plane disc which is disposed in the direction of flow and by means of which said triangular disc is supported from the partition between the flows.
2. A device according to claim 1, characterized in that said triangular disc and said side plane discs are made integrally of sheet metal and that at the front portion of the free edge of the side plane discs extending in the direction of flow is formed an attachment flange for the securing of the guide vane to the partition.
US3557830D 1968-06-17 1969-06-17 Device for forced mixing of parallel fluid flows Expired - Lifetime US3557830A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
SE819168A SE320225B (en) 1968-06-17 1968-06-17

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3557830A true US3557830A (en) 1971-01-26

Family

ID=20273385

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US3557830D Expired - Lifetime US3557830A (en) 1968-06-17 1969-06-17 Device for forced mixing of parallel fluid flows

Country Status (3)

Country Link
US (1) US3557830A (en)
GB (1) GB1269562A (en)
SE (1) SE320225B (en)

Cited By (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4164375A (en) * 1976-05-21 1979-08-14 E. T. Oakes Limited In-line mixer
US4577836A (en) * 1983-06-14 1986-03-25 Valeo Flap for a heater or air conditioner installation for a motor vehicle cabin
US4930308A (en) * 1986-08-11 1990-06-05 The Dee Howard Co. Double-flow turboshaft engine with variable confluent nozzle
US5422443A (en) * 1991-10-18 1995-06-06 Hughes Missile Systems Company Rocket exhaust disrupter shapes
US5803602A (en) * 1995-12-01 1998-09-08 Abb Research Ltd. Fluid mixing device with vortex generators
US6135629A (en) * 1998-05-11 2000-10-24 Deutsche Babcock Anlagen Gmbh Device for stirring up gas flowing through a duct having a structural insert positioned at an acute angle to a main gas stream
US20040037162A1 (en) * 2002-07-20 2004-02-26 Peter Flohr Vortex generator with controlled wake flow
US6779786B2 (en) * 2000-06-19 2004-08-24 Balcke-Durr Gmbh Mixer for mixing at least two flows of gas or other newtonian liquids
US20070186988A1 (en) * 2003-09-05 2007-08-16 Zhaoyan Liu Three-dimensionally intersecting diverter as an inner member for a pipe, barrel or tower
US20090320486A1 (en) * 2008-06-26 2009-12-31 Ephraim Jeff Gutmark Duplex tab exhaust nozzle
US20100180573A1 (en) * 2009-01-21 2010-07-22 Rolls-Royce Plc A gas turbine engine
US20100180574A1 (en) * 2009-01-21 2010-07-22 Rolls-Royce Plc Gas turbine engine
US20120047873A1 (en) * 2010-08-31 2012-03-01 General Electric Company Duplex tab obstacles for enhancement of deflagration-to-detonation transition
US8461704B2 (en) 2008-05-23 2013-06-11 Rolls-Royce Plc Gas turbine engine apparatus
US9115602B2 (en) 2011-10-19 2015-08-25 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Exhaust diffuser including flow mixing ramp for a gas turbine engine
US10760451B2 (en) * 2015-05-22 2020-09-01 General Electric Company Manufacture and installation of diffuser flow mixing lobes

Families Citing this family (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE3043239C2 (en) * 1980-11-15 1985-11-28 Balcke-Dürr AG, 4030 Ratingen Method and device for mixing at least two fluid partial flows
SE454245B (en) * 1984-12-18 1988-04-18 Flaekt Ab DEVICE FOR IN A CONTACT REACTOR AND WITH THE HELP OF ONE OR MULTIPLE VERTILIZATIONS, MIXING A MIXING OF A FIRST MEDIUM WITH ANOTHER MEDIUM

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2999672A (en) * 1958-04-09 1961-09-12 Curtiss Wright Corp Fluid mixing apparatus
US3196608A (en) * 1959-06-23 1965-07-27 Rolls Royce Apparatus to admix by-pass air with exhaust gases in a by-pass gas-turbine engine
US3377804A (en) * 1966-06-13 1968-04-16 Gen Electric Flow mixers particularly for gas turbine engines

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2999672A (en) * 1958-04-09 1961-09-12 Curtiss Wright Corp Fluid mixing apparatus
US3196608A (en) * 1959-06-23 1965-07-27 Rolls Royce Apparatus to admix by-pass air with exhaust gases in a by-pass gas-turbine engine
US3377804A (en) * 1966-06-13 1968-04-16 Gen Electric Flow mixers particularly for gas turbine engines

Cited By (23)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4164375A (en) * 1976-05-21 1979-08-14 E. T. Oakes Limited In-line mixer
US4577836A (en) * 1983-06-14 1986-03-25 Valeo Flap for a heater or air conditioner installation for a motor vehicle cabin
US4930308A (en) * 1986-08-11 1990-06-05 The Dee Howard Co. Double-flow turboshaft engine with variable confluent nozzle
US5422443A (en) * 1991-10-18 1995-06-06 Hughes Missile Systems Company Rocket exhaust disrupter shapes
US5803602A (en) * 1995-12-01 1998-09-08 Abb Research Ltd. Fluid mixing device with vortex generators
US6135629A (en) * 1998-05-11 2000-10-24 Deutsche Babcock Anlagen Gmbh Device for stirring up gas flowing through a duct having a structural insert positioned at an acute angle to a main gas stream
US6779786B2 (en) * 2000-06-19 2004-08-24 Balcke-Durr Gmbh Mixer for mixing at least two flows of gas or other newtonian liquids
US20040037162A1 (en) * 2002-07-20 2004-02-26 Peter Flohr Vortex generator with controlled wake flow
US7753080B2 (en) 2003-09-05 2010-07-13 Zhaoyan Liu Three-dimensionally intersecting diverter as an inner member for a pipe, barrel or tower
US20070186988A1 (en) * 2003-09-05 2007-08-16 Zhaoyan Liu Three-dimensionally intersecting diverter as an inner member for a pipe, barrel or tower
US8461704B2 (en) 2008-05-23 2013-06-11 Rolls-Royce Plc Gas turbine engine apparatus
WO2010011381A1 (en) * 2008-06-26 2010-01-28 General Electric Company Duplex tab exhaust nozzle
GB2474377A (en) * 2008-06-26 2011-04-13 Gen Electric Duplex tab exhaust nozzle
US8087250B2 (en) 2008-06-26 2012-01-03 General Electric Company Duplex tab exhaust nozzle
GB2474377B (en) * 2008-06-26 2012-02-29 Gen Electric Duplex tab exhaust nozzle
US20090320486A1 (en) * 2008-06-26 2009-12-31 Ephraim Jeff Gutmark Duplex tab exhaust nozzle
US20100180573A1 (en) * 2009-01-21 2010-07-22 Rolls-Royce Plc A gas turbine engine
US20100180574A1 (en) * 2009-01-21 2010-07-22 Rolls-Royce Plc Gas turbine engine
US8578700B2 (en) * 2009-01-21 2013-11-12 Rolls-Royce Plc Gas turbine engine with fluid mixing arrangement
US20120047873A1 (en) * 2010-08-31 2012-03-01 General Electric Company Duplex tab obstacles for enhancement of deflagration-to-detonation transition
US8881500B2 (en) * 2010-08-31 2014-11-11 General Electric Company Duplex tab obstacles for enhancement of deflagration-to-detonation transition
US9115602B2 (en) 2011-10-19 2015-08-25 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Exhaust diffuser including flow mixing ramp for a gas turbine engine
US10760451B2 (en) * 2015-05-22 2020-09-01 General Electric Company Manufacture and installation of diffuser flow mixing lobes

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
SE320225B (en) 1970-02-02
GB1269562A (en) 1972-04-06

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3557830A (en) Device for forced mixing of parallel fluid flows
US4448354A (en) Axisymmetric thrust augmenting ejector with discrete primary air slot nozzles
US3185181A (en) Diffuser swirl eliminator
US7195456B2 (en) Turbine engine guide vane and arrays thereof
Patterson Modern diffuser design: The efficient transformation of kinetic energy to pressure
US3517821A (en) Deflecting element for centrifugal separators
JP2855430B2 (en) Fluid dynamic pump
JP3688806B2 (en) Static mixer
US8578700B2 (en) Gas turbine engine with fluid mixing arrangement
US20020146320A1 (en) Diffuser for a centrifugal compressor
KR840008036A (en) Vortex Pump
US2702986A (en) Device for deflecting a fluid from its normal direction of flow
JPH07151108A (en) Piffuser
SE515524C2 (en) Centrifugal fan inlet clock
US2996120A (en) Fluid flow transducer
US2812980A (en) Jet deflecting device
GB1114823A (en) Improvements in or relating to combustion chambers
Baghdadi et al. Performance of three vaned radial diffusers with swirling transonic flow
US1787656A (en) Induction flow inlet fan
JPS61501463A (en) Fluid impeller diffuser and how to operate it
GB1401018A (en) Flow control system
US3261162A (en) Lifting apparatus
US3785405A (en) Aerodynamic nozzles in rectangular duct
SU1247054A1 (en) Vortex generator
Reeves Design and performance of selected pipe-type diffusers