BladeX (Python Blade Morphing) is a Python package for geometrical parametrization and bottom-up construction of propeller blades. It allows to generate and deform a blade based on the radial distribution of its parameters.
- Description
- Dependencies and installation
- Documentation
- Testing
- Examples
- How to cite
- Authors and contributors
- Support
- How to contribute
- License
BladeX is a Python package for geometrical parametrization and bottom-up construction of propeller blades. It allows to generate and deform a blade based on the radial distribution of its parameters such as pitch
, rake
, skew
, and the sectional foils' parameters such as chord
and camber
. The package is ideally suited for parametric simulations on large number of blade deformations. It provides an automated procedure for the CAD generation, hence reducing the time and effort required for modelling. The main scope of BladeX is to deal with propeller blades, however it can be flexible to be applied on further applications with analogous geometrical structures such as aircraft wings, turbomachinery, or wind turbine blades.
See the Examples section below and the Tutorials to have an idea of the potential of this package.
BladeX requires numpy
, scipy
, matplotlib
, sphinx
(for the documentation), and nose
(for the local test). They can be easily installed using pip
.
BladeX is compatible with Python 2.7 and Python 3.6. Moreover, some of the modules require OCC
to be installed for the .iges
or .stl
CAD generation. Please see the table below for instructions on how to satisfy the OCC
requirements. You can also refer to pythonocc.org
or github.com/tpaviot/pythonocc-core
for further instructions.
Package | Version | How to install (precompiled binaries via conda) |
---|---|---|
OCC | ==0.18.1 | Python2.7 conda install -c conda-forge -c dlr-sc -c pythonocc -c oce pythonocc-core==0.18.1 smesh=6.7.5 python=2.7 |
OCC | ==0.18.1 | Python3.6 conda install -c conda-forge -c dlr-sc -c pythonocc -c oce pythonocc-core==0.18.1 smesh=6.7.5 python=3.6 |
The official distribution is on GitHub, and you can clone the repository using
> git clone https://github.com/mathLab/BladeX
To install the latest version of the package just type:
> pip install git+https://github.com/mathLab/BladeX.git
Otherwise to install your own local branch you can use the setup.py
file
> python setup.py install
To uninstall the package just use pip again:
> pip uninstall bladex
BladeX uses Sphinx for code documentation. You can view the documentation online here. To build the html version of the docs locally simply:
> cd docs
> make html
The generated html can be found in docs/build/html
. Open up the index.html
you find there to browse.
We are using Travis CI for continuous intergration testing. You can check out the current status here.
To run tests locally:
> python test.py
You can find useful tutorials on how to use the package in the tutorials folder.
Here we show a bottom-up parametrized construction of the Potsdam Propeller Test Case (PPTC) provided the sectional profiles as well as the radial distribution of the pitch
, rake
, skew
. The blade is generated and exported to .iges and .stl formats.
PPTC blade generation according to the radial distribution of the pitch, rake, skew. The generated blade is then exported to .iges and .stl formats.
Two possible deformed geometry configurations, to show the capabilities of the package, are presented here:
Undeformed reference blade on the left, and a couple of deformed configurations obtained by moving some control points defining the skew and chord length radial distributions.
If you use this package in your publications please cite the package as follows:
Gadalla et al., (2019). BladeX: Python Blade Morphing. Journal of Open Source Software, 4(34), 1203, https://doi.org/10.21105/joss.01203
Or if you use LaTeX:
@article{gadalla19bladex,
Author = {Gadalla, Mahmoud and Tezzele, Marco and Mola, Andrea and Rozza, Gianluigi},
Title = {{BladeX: Python Blade Morphing}},
Journal = {The Journal of Open Source Software},
Volume = {4},
Number = {34},
Pages = {1203},
Year = {2019},
Doi = {https://doi.org/10.21105/joss.01203}
}
Here there is a list of the scientific works involving BladeX you can consult and/or cite. If you want to add one, please open a PR.
-
Mola, Tezzele, Gadalla, Valdenazzi, Grassi, Padovan, Rozza. Efficient reduction in shape parameter space dimension for ship propeller blade design. In Proceedings of MARINE 2019: VIII International Conference on Computational Methods in Marine Engineering, pages 201–212, 2019. [DOI] [arXiv].
-
Tezzele, Demo, Mola, Rozza. An integrated data-driven computational pipeline with model order reduction for industrial and applied mathematics. Submitted, 2018. [arXiv].
BladeX is currently developed and mantained at SISSA mathLab by
under the supervision of Dr. Andrea Mola and Prof. Gianluigi Rozza in the framework of the project PRELICA: Advanced Methodologies for Hydro-acoustic Design of Naval Propulsion.
Contact us by email for further information or questions about BladeX. Feel free to suggest pull requests or to open GitHub issues. Contributions improving either the code or the documentation are welcome!
We'd love to accept your patches and contributions to this project. There are just a few small guidelines you need to follow.
-
It's generally best to start by opening a new issue describing the bug or feature you're intending to fix. Even if you think it's relatively minor, it's helpful to know what people are working on. Mention in the initial issue that you are planning to work on that bug or feature so that it can be assigned to you.
-
Follow the normal process of forking the project, and setup a new branch to work in. It's important that each group of changes be done in separate branches in order to ensure that a pull request only includes the commits related to that bug or feature.
-
To ensure properly formatted code, please make sure to use 4 spaces to indent the code. The easy way is to run on your bash the provided script: ./code_formatter.sh. You should also run pylint over your code. It's not strictly necessary that your code be completely "lint-free", but this will help you find common style issues.
-
Any significant changes should almost always be accompanied by tests. The project already has good test coverage, so look at some of the existing tests if you're unsure how to go about it. We're using coveralls that is an invaluable tools for seeing which parts of your code aren't being exercised by your tests.
-
Do your best to have well-formed commit messages for each change. This provides consistency throughout the project, and ensures that commit messages are able to be formatted properly by various git tools.
-
Finally, push the commits to your fork and submit a pull request. Please, remember to rebase properly in order to maintain a clean, linear git history.
See the LICENSE file for license rights and limitations (MIT).