%0 Journal Article %T Computational Fluid Dynamic Analysis of a Vibrating Turbine Blade %A Osama N. Alshroof %A Gareth L. Forbes %A Nader Sawalhi %A Robert B. Randall %A Guan H. Yeoh %J International Journal of Rotating Machinery %D 2012 %I Hindawi Publishing Corporation %R 10.1155/2012/246031 %X This study presents the numerical fluid-structure interaction (FSI) modelling of a vibrating turbine blade using the commercial software ANSYS-12.1. The study has two major aims: (i) discussion of the current state of the art of modelling FSI in gas turbine engines and (ii) development of a ¡°tuned¡± one-way FSI model of a vibrating turbine blade to investigate the correlation between the pressure at the turbine casing surface and the vibrating blade motion. Firstly, the feasibility of the complete FSI coupled two-way, three-dimensional modelling of a turbine blade undergoing vibration using current commercial software is discussed. Various modelling simplifications, which reduce the full coupling between the fluid and structural domains, are then presented. The one-way FSI model of the vibrating turbine blade is introduced, which has the computational efficiency of a moving boundary CFD model. This one-way FSI model includes the corrected motion of the vibrating turbine blade under given engine flow conditions. This one-way FSI model is used to interrogate the pressure around a vibrating gas turbine blade. The results obtained show that the pressure distribution at the casing surface does not differ significantly, in its general form, from the pressure at the vibrating rotor blade tip. 1. Introduction Blade vibration is an inherent characteristic in the operation of gas turbines, due to the passing of the rotor blades through the trailing wakes from the upstream stator blade stage. This unavoidable blade vibration needs to be taken into account in the design of these engines and as such the measurement of blade vibration is needed. Due to the high operating temperatures, pressures and the rotating environment within a turbine engine, the need for noncontact measuring techniques is apparent. A recent research program has revealed that the gas turbine internal casing pressure, and resulting casing vibration, can be used to determine some characteristics of the internal blade vibration [1, 2]. This work, however, relied on the assumptions that the pressure at the casing surface was not significantly different from that at the blade tip and that the pressure profile developed around the rotor blades followed the blade oscillatory motion. Investigation of the pressure at the casing surface and at the tip of a vibrating rotor blade is undertaken within this paper through a ¡°tuned¡± three-dimensional one-way fluid-structure interaction (FSI) model of a vibrating turbine blade stage using the commercial numerical code ANSYS (ANSYS Mechanical and ANSYS CFX). This %U http://www.hindawi.com/journals/ijrm/2012/246031/