Abstract
This paper explores two different blisk dynamic models for resonant vibration prediction of a rotating blisk test piece, i.e., the Model-BDTID and geometrically mistuned models (GMM). The former represents a mistuned blisk model with blade mistuning pattern experimentally retrieved by a recently proposed blade mistuning identification method based on blade detuning tests (BDTID). It falls into the scope of the frequency-mistuning modeling approach. The latter refers to a geometrically mistuned model constructed upon high-precision blisk geometry data by leveraging the advanced optical geometry measurement technology. A specifically developed “Sector Mode Assembling Reduction Technique” is exploited for efficient dynamic analyses of the large-sized GMM. Forced response tests are performed in a spinning rig under well-controlled laboratory condition. The blade tip-timing (BTT) technique is employed to give all-blade vibration measurements of the rotating blisk. Correlation results between the forced response predictions to BTT measurements demonstrate that both the Model-BDTID constructed upon the identified blade mistuning of the blisk at rest and the GMM, can predict the resonant vibration of the rotating blisk with satisfactory accuracy.