Paper
27 June 2002 Development of an integral damping treatment for NASA's next-generation hollow fan blades
John B. Kosmatka, Oral Mehmed
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
A NASA research program is underway to develop fan blades that have significantly greater propulsive efficiency, lower acoustic noise, and lower weight. These blades have a large internal manifold and open trailing edge that is used to blow air in the downwash. The blades are composed of a titanium root and composite internal manifold with an outer graphite/epoxy shell. Due to the complex internal structure and open-cell design, these blades have low natural frequencies and bending-torsion coupled mode shapes that could potentially lead to aeroelastic instabilities. Increasing the damping levels in these blades will improve the fatigue life and reduce aeroelastic instability concerns. The vibratory modes of interest include the first and second bending modes as well as first torsion mode. Due to the geometric constraints of the outer blade shape and large internal manifold very little room is available for damping treatment placement. Results from the analysis study reveal that (1) significantly more damping can be obtained by embedding the material in the outer shells than within the manifold vanes, (2) carefully designing a patch that fills approximately 29% of the surface area and is only 0.005' thick will produce a loss factor of at least 0.01 for the first three structural modes, and (3) a patch that fills approximately 45% of the surface area will produce a loss factor of at least 0.02 for the first three structural modes.
© (2002) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
John B. Kosmatka and Oral Mehmed "Development of an integral damping treatment for NASA's next-generation hollow fan blades", Proc. SPIE 4697, Smart Structures and Materials 2002: Damping and Isolation, (27 June 2002); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.472662
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KEYWORDS
Composites

Titanium

Fluctuations and noise

Skin

Solids

Ear

Structural design

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