An investigation for the turbine blade film cooling performance on the suction side tip region under rotating condition

2019 ◽  
Vol 150 ◽  
pp. 864-874 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haichao Wang ◽  
Zhi Tao ◽  
Zhiyu Zhou ◽  
Guoqin Zhao ◽  
Feng Han ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacob D. Moore ◽  
Christopher Yoon ◽  
David G. Bogard

Abstract Surface curvature has been shown to have significant effects on the film cooling performance of round holes, but the literature include few studies of its effects on shaped holes despite their prevalence in gas turbines. Experiments were performed using two rows of holes placed on the suction side of a scaled-up turbine blade in a low Mach number linear cascade wind tunnel with low freestream turbulence. The rows were placed in regions of high and low convex surface curvature. Geometries and flow conditions for the rows were matched to those from previous flat plate studies. Comparison of the adiabatic effectiveness results from the high curvature and flat plate rows revealed the same trends as those in the literature using round holes, with increased performance for the high curvature row at lower blowing ratios and the opposite at higher ones. The low curvature row had similar performance to the flat plate row at lower blowing ratios, suggesting the mild convex curvature had little beneficial effect. At higher blowing ratios, the low curvature row had inferior performance, which was attributed to the local freestream adverse pressure gradient that generated additional turbulence, promoting jet-to-mainstream mixing and decreasing performance.


Author(s):  
Haichao Wang ◽  
Zhi Tao ◽  
Zhiyu Zhou ◽  
Huimin Zhou ◽  
Yiwen Ma ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Yoji Okita ◽  
Chiyuki Nakamata ◽  
Masaya Kumada ◽  
Masahiro Ikeda

The primary contribution of this research is to clarify the feasibility of a novel lightweight turbine blade with internal and external cooling, which is invented aiming at drastic reduction of weight. With a considerably thinner airfoil, an extensive separation bubble is formed on the pressure side and film cooling performance in such a flow field has to be investigated. Experimental results with a curved duct setup, which simulates the flow field around the proposed airfoil, show that a film cooling is still an effective measure of cooling even in the vastly separated region and it behaves quite similarly to the conventional correlation except for lower blowing ratios where the thermal field is strongly affected by the intense recirculation flow. Comparisons between the experimental and numerical results verify that an affordable RANS simulation is useful to investigate the detailed physics of this flow field. With the numerical modeling, a cooling performance of the proposed blade under a typical engine operating condition is simulated and the metal temperatures of the blade are also predicted with a fluid-solid conjugate calculation. The resultant thermal distribution in the airfoil suggests that the trailing edge portion is inevitably most critical in the temperature and also a considerable thermal gradient across the blade is induced. Thermal profile, however, is partly recovered with some of the film coolant being bypassed from the pressure side to the suction side.


Author(s):  
Zhiyu Zhou ◽  
Haiwang Li ◽  
Gang Xie ◽  
Ruquan You

Abstract Numerical simulations were carried out to study the film cooling effectiveness distributions of different hole arrangements on the suction side of a high pressure turbine blade under rotating condition. The chord length and the height of the blade are 60mm and 80mm, respectively. Totally 12 models with different hole arrangements and different injection angles were studied. Each blade model has three rows of round holes with diameter of 0.9mm on the suction surface. The first row and the third row are fixed at streamwise location of 12.4% and 34% respectively. Three injection angles, 30°, 45°, and 60°, were investigated. Simulations were conducted under three rotational speeds, 600rpm, 800rpm, 1000rpm, with blowing ratio varying from 0.5 to 2.0. The Mainstream Reynolds numbers corresponding to the rotational speeds are 40560, 54080, and 67600 respectively. The temperature of the mainstream and the coolant is set at 463K and 303K so as to control the density ratio at 1.47. Simulations were performed by using SST turbulence model and were solved by using the three-dimensional Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes equations. Results showed that on the rotating turbine blade suction surface, film trajectories are drawn toward the midspan. The film trajectory arrangement may be different from the hole arrangement. Inline film trajectory arrangement can achieve higher film cooling effectiveness with slightly larger injection angle. Staggered film trajectory arrangement is better for uniform film cooling effectiveness distribution in spanwise and can achieve higher film cooling effectiveness with smaller injection angle. A smaller distance between the first row and the second row can achieve better film cooling performance at the downstream. With the increase of rotational speed, the mainstream Reynolds number increases, which improves the film cooling performance with smaller blowing ratio.


Author(s):  
Jacob D. Moore ◽  
Christopher Yoon ◽  
David G. Bogard

Abstract Surface curvature has been shown to have significant effects on the film cooling performance of round holes, but the literature includes few studies of its effects on shaped holes despite their prevalence in gas turbines. Experiments were performed using two rows of holes placed on the suction side of a scaled-up turbine blade in a low-Mach-number linear cascade wind tunnel with low freestream turbulence. The rows were placed in regions of high and low convex surface curvature, respectively. Geometries and flow conditions for the rows were matched to those from previous flat plate studies. Comparison of the adiabatic effectiveness results from the high curvature and flat plate rows revealed the same trends as those in the literature using round holes — with increased performance for the high curvature row at lower blowing ratios and the opposite at higher ones. The low curvature row had similar performance to the flat plate row at lower blowing ratios, suggesting the mild convex curvature had little beneficial effect. At higher blowing ratios, the low curvature row had inferior performance, which was attributed to the local freestream adverse pressure gradient that generated additional turbulence, promoting jet-to-mainstream mixing and decreasing performance.


2010 ◽  
Vol 132 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoji Okita ◽  
Chiyuki Nakamata ◽  
Masaya Kumada ◽  
Masahiro Ikeda

The primary contribution of this research is to clarify the feasibility of a novel lightweight turbine blade with internal and external cooling, which is invented, aiming at drastic reduction in weight. With a considerably thinner airfoil, an extensive separation bubble is formed on the pressure side, and film cooling performance in such a flow field has to be investigated. Experimental results with a curved duct setup, which simulates the flow field around the proposed airfoil, show that a film cooling is still an effective measure of cooling even in the vastly separated region, and it behaves quite similarly to the conventional correlation, except for lower blowing ratios, where the thermal field is strongly affected by the intense recirculation flow. Comparisons between the experimental and numerical results verify that an affordable Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes simulation is useful to investigate the detailed physics of this flow field. With the numerical modeling, a cooling performance of the proposed blade under a typical engine operating condition is simulated, and the metal temperatures of the blade are also predicted with a fluid-solid conjugate calculation. The resultant thermal distribution in the airfoil suggests that the trailing edge portion is inevitably most critical in the temperature, and also a considerable thermal gradient across the blade is induced. Thermal profile, however, is partly recovered with some of the film coolant being bypassed from the pressure side to the suction side.


Author(s):  
Ross Johnson ◽  
Jonathan Maikell ◽  
David Bogard ◽  
Justin Piggush ◽  
Atul Kohli ◽  
...  

When a turbine blade passes through wakes from upstream vanes it is subjected to an oscillation of the direction of the approach flow resulting in the oscillation of the position of the stagnation line on the leading edge of the blade. In this study an experimental facility was developed that induced a similar oscillation of the stagnation line position on a simulated turbine blade leading edge. The overall effectiveness was evaluated at various blowing ratios and stagnation line oscillation frequencies. The location of the stagnation line on the leading edge was oscillated to simulate a change in angle of attack between α = ± 5° at a range of frequencies from 2 to 20 Hz. These frequencies were chosen based on matching a range of Strouhal numbers typically seen in an engine due to oscillations caused by passing wakes. The blowing ratio was varied between M = 1, M = 2, and M = 3. These experiments were carried out at a density ratio of DR = 1.5 and mainstream turbulence levels of Tu ≈ 6%. The leading edge model was made of high conductivity epoxy in order to match the Biot number of an actual engine airfoil. Results of these tests showed that the film cooling performance with an oscillating stagnation line was degraded by as much as 25% compared to the performance of a steady flow with the stagnation line aligned with the row of holes at the leading edge.


Author(s):  
Andrew F. Chen ◽  
Chao-Cheng Shiau ◽  
Je-Chin Han

The combined effects of inlet purge flow and the slashface leakage flow on the film cooling effectiveness of a turbine blade platform were studied using the pressure sensitive paint (PSP) technique. Detailed film cooling effectiveness distributions on the endwall were obtained and analyzed. The inlet purge flow was generated by a row of equally-spaced cylindrical injection holes inside a single-tooth generic stator-rotor seal. In addition to the traditional 90 degree (radial outward) injection for the inlet purge flow, injection at a 45 degree angle was adopted to create a circumferential/azimuthal velocity component toward the suction side of the blades, which created a swirl ratio (SR) of 0.6. Discrete cylindrical film cooling holes were arranged to achieve an improved coverage on the endwall. Backward injection was attempted by placing backward injection holes near the pressure side leading edge portion. Slashface leakage flow was simulated by equally-spaced cylindrical injection holes inside a slot. Experiments were done in a five-blade linear cascade with an average turbulence intensity of 10.5%. The inlet and exit Mach numbers were 0.26 and 0.43, respectively. The inlet and exit mainstream Reynolds numbers based on the axial chord length of the blade were 475,000 and 720,000, respectively. The coolant-to-mainstream mass flow ratios (MFR) were varied from 0.5%, 0.75%, to 1% for the inlet purge flow. For the endwall film cooling holes and slashface leakage flow, blowing ratios (M) of 0.5, 1.0, and 1.5 were examined. Coolant-to-mainstream density ratios (DR) that range from 1.0 (close to low temperature experiments) to 1.5 (intermediate DR) and 2.0 (close to engine conditions) were also examined. The results provide the gas turbine engine designers a better insight into improved film cooling hole configurations as well as various parametric effects on endwall film cooling when the inlet (swirl) purge flow and slashface leakage flow were incorporated.


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