scholarly journals Measurement of Internal Heat Transfer Distribution of Highly-Loaded Gas Turbine Blade by Combined Experimental/Numerical Method

2020 ◽  
Vol 197 ◽  
pp. 10007
Author(s):  
Asif Ali ◽  
Lorenzo Cocchi ◽  
Alessio Picchi ◽  
Bruno Facchini

To ensure a passable life span of gas turbine hot gas path components the measurement of metal surface temperature is paramount. Experimental analyses on internally cooled devices are often performed on simplified or scaled up geometries, which reduces the applicability of the results to the actual real hardware. A more reliable estimation of cooling performance could be obtained if the real engine component is directly studied. To achieve this goal, an experimental campaign is performed to investigate the internal heat transfer distribution of an industrial blade, cooled by means of an internal U-shaped channel. During the experiment the blade is heated to a known temperature, then a coolant is introduced through the internal channel to induce a thermal transient, during which the external surface temperature is measured with the help of an infrared camera. Then a transient thermal finite element simulation is performed with the same boundary and inlet conditions of the experiment. Based on the output of the simulation, the internal heat transfer distribution is updated until convergence between simulation output external temperature and the experimental temperature is achieved. In order to start the iterative procedure, a first attempt estimation of the internal heat transfer distribution is obtained with a lumped thermal capacitance model approach. Different experiments were performed with different mass flow rates and the results are compared with available literature data. The obtained results allow to observe detailed heat transfer phenomena, strongly bound to the relevant features of the actual real cooling system.

Author(s):  
Asif Ali ◽  
Lorenzo Cocchi ◽  
Alessio Picchi ◽  
Bruno Facchini ◽  
Simone Cubeda

Abstract The aim of this work is to present the development and application of a measurement technique that allows to record internal heat transfer features of real components. In order to apply this method, based on similar approaches proposed in previous literature works, the component is initially heated up to a steady temperature, then a thermal transient is induced by injecting cool air in the internal cooling system. During this process, the external temperature evolution is recorded by means of an IR camera. Experimental data are then exploited to run a numerical procedure, based on a series of transient finite-element analyses of the component. In particular, the test duration is divided into an appropriate number of steps and, for each of them, the heat flux on internal surfaces is iteratively updated as to target the measured external temperature distribution. Heat flux and internal temperature data for all the time steps are eventually employed in order to evaluate the convective heat transfer coefficient via linear regression. This technique has been successfully tested on a cooled high-pressure vane of a Baker Hughes heavy-duty gas turbine, which was realised thanks to the development of a dedicated test rig at the University of Florence, Italy. The obtained results provide sufficiently detailed heat transfer distributions in addition to allowing to appreciate the effect of different coolant mass flow rates. The methodology is also capable of identifying defects, which is demonstrated by inducing controlled faults in the component.


Author(s):  
Asif Ali ◽  
Lorenzo Cocchi ◽  
Alessio Picchi ◽  
Bruno Facchini ◽  
Simone Cubeda

Abstract The aim of this work is to present the development and application of a measurement technique that allows to record internal heat transfer features of real components. In order to apply this method, based on similar approaches proposed in previous literature works, the component is initially heated up to a steady temperature, then a thermal transient is induced by injecting cool air in the internal cooling system. During this process, the external temperature evolution is recorded by means of an IR camera. Experimental data are then exploited to run a numerical procedure, based on a series of transient finite-element analyses of the component. In particular, the test duration is divided into an appropriate number of steps and, for each of them, the heat flux on internal surfaces is iteratively updated as to target the measured external temperature distribution. Heat flux and internal temperature data for all the time steps are eventually employed in order to evaluate the convective heat transfer coefficient via linear regression. This technique has been successfully tested on a cooled high-pressure vane of a Baker Hughes heavy-duty gas turbine, which was realised thanks to the development of a dedicated test rig at the University of Florence, Italy. The obtained results provide sufficiently detailed heat transfer distributions in addition to allowing to appreciate the effect of different coolant mass flow rates. The methodology is also capable of identifying defects, which is demonstrated by inducing controlled faults in the component.


Author(s):  
Jun Su Park ◽  
Namgeon Yun ◽  
Hokyu Moon ◽  
Kyung Min Kim ◽  
Sin-Ho Kang ◽  
...  

This paper presents thermal analyses of the cooling system of a transition piece, which is one of the primary hot components in a gas turbine engine. The thermal analyses include heat transfer distributions induced by heat and fluid flow, temperature, and thermal stresses. The purpose of this study is to provide basic thermal and structural information on transition piece, to facilitate their maintenance and repair. The study is carried out primarily by numerical methods, using the commercial software, Fluent and ANSYS. First, the combustion field in a combustion liner with nine fuel nozzles is analyzed to determine the inlet conditions of a transition piece. Using the results of this analysis, pressure distributions inside a transition piece are calculated. The outside of the transition piece in a dump diffuser system is also analyzed. Information on the pressure differences is then used to obtain data on cooling channel flow (one of the methods for cooling a transition piece). The cooling channels have exit holes that function as film-cooling holes. Thermal and flow analyses are carried out on the inside of a film-cooled transition piece. The results are used to investigate the adjacent temperatures and wall heat transfer coefficients inside the transition piece. Overall temperature and thermal stress distributions of the transition piece are obtained. These results will provide a direction to improve thermal design of transition piece.


Author(s):  
J. Kruekels ◽  
S. Naik ◽  
A. Lerch ◽  
A. Sedlov

The trailing edge sections of gas turbine vanes and blades are generally subjected to extremely high heat loads due to the combined effects of high external accelerating Mach numbers and gas temperatures. In order to maintain the metal temperatures of these trailing edges to a level, which fulfills the mechanical integrity of the parts, highly efficient cooling of the trailing edges is required without increasing the coolant consumption, as the latter has a detrimental effect on the overall gas turbine performance. In this paper the characteristics of the heat transfer and pressure drop of two novel integrated pin bank configurations were investigated. These include a pin bank with conical pins and a pin bank consisting of cylindrical pins and intersecting broken turbulators. As baseline case, a pin bank with cylindrical pins was studied as well. All investigations were done in a converging channel in order to be consistent with the real part. The heat transfer and pressure drop of all the pin banks were investigated initially with the use of numerical predictions and subsequently in a scaled experimental wind tunnel. The experimental study was conducted for a range of operational Reynolds numbers. The TLC (thermochromic liquid crystal) method was used to measure the detailed heat transfer coefficients in scaled Perspex models representing the various pin bank configurations. Pressure taps were located at several positions within the test sections. Both local and average heat transfer coefficients and pressure loss coefficients were determined. The measured and predicted results showed that the local internal heat transfer coefficient increases in the flow direction. This was due to the flow acceleration in the converging channel. Furthermore, both the broken ribs and the conical pin banks resulted in higher heat transfer coefficients compared with the baseline cylindrical pins. The conical pins produced the highest average internal heat transfer coefficients in contrast to the pins with the broken ribs, though this was also associated with a higher pressure drop.


Author(s):  
Arun Kumar Pujari ◽  
B. V. S. S. S. Prasad ◽  
Nekkanti Sitaram

Experimental and computational heat transfer investigations are reported on the interior side of a nozzle guide vane (NGV) subjected to combined impingement and film cooling. The domain of study is a two-dimensional five-vane cascade having a space chord ratio of 0.88. The vane internal surface is cooled by dry air, supplied through the two impingement inserts: the front and the aft. The blowing ratio (ρcVc/ρmVm) is varied systematically by varying the coolant mass flow through the impingement chamber and also by changing the mainstream Reynolds number, but by keeping a fixed spacing (H) to jet diameter (d) ratio of 1.2. The surface temperature distributions, at certain locations of the vane interior surface, are measured by pasting strips of liquid crystal sheets. The vane interior surface temperature distribution is also obtained by the computations carried out by using shear stress transport (SST) k–ω turbulence model in the flow solver ansys fluent-14. The computational data are in good agreement with the measured values of temperature. The internal heat transfer coefficients are thence determined from the computational data. The results show that, when the blowing ratio is increased by increasing the coolant flow rate, the average internal surface temperature decreases. However, when the blowing ratio is varied by increasing the mainstream Reynolds number, the internal surface temperature increases. Further, the temperature variations are different all along the internal surface from the leading edge to the trailing edge and are largely dependent on the coolant flow distributions on the internal as well as the external sides.


Author(s):  
Karsten Kusterer ◽  
Gang Lin ◽  
Dieter Bohn ◽  
Takao Sugimoto ◽  
Ryozo Tanaka ◽  
...  

Improvement of the gas turbine thermal efficiency can be achieved by reducing the cooling fluid amount in internal cooling channels with enhanced convective cooling. Nowadays the state of the art internal cooling technology for thermally high-loaded gas turbine blades consists of multiple serpentine-shaped cooling channels with angled ribs. Besides, huge effort is put on the development of more advanced internal cooling configurations with further internal heat transfer enhancements. Swirl chamber flow configurations, in which air is flowing through a pipe with a swirling motion generated by tangential jet inlet, have a potential for application as such advanced technology. This paper presents the validation of numerical results for a standard swirl chamber, which has been investigated experimentally in a reference publication. The numerical results obtained with application of the SST k-ω model show the best agreement with the experiment data in compare with other turbulence models. It has been found at the inlet region that the augmentation of the heat transfer is nearly seven times larger than the fully developed non-swirl flow. Within the further numerical study, another cooling configuration named Double Swirl Chambers (DSC) has been obtained and investigated. The numerical results are compared to the reference case. With the same boundary conditions and Reynolds number, the heat transfer coefficients are higher for the DSC configuration than for the reference configuration. In particular at the inlet region, the DSC configuration has even higher circumferentially averaged heat transfer enhancement in one section by approximately 41%. The globally-averaged heat transfer enhancement in DSC configuration is 34.5% higher than the value in the reference SC configuration. This paper presents the configuration of the DSC as an alternative internal cooling technology and explains its major physical phenomena, which are the reasons for the improvement of internal heat transfer.


2003 ◽  
Vol 125 (1) ◽  
pp. 83-89 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nirm V. Nirmalan ◽  
Ronald S. Bunker ◽  
Carl R. Hedlund

A new method has been developed and demonstrated for the non-destructive, quantitative assessment of internal heat transfer coefficient distributions of cooled metallic turbine airfoils. The technique employs the acquisition of full-surface external surface temperature data in response to a thermal transient induced by internal heating/cooling, in conjunction with knowledge of the part wall thickness and geometry, material properties, and internal fluid temperatures. An imaging Infrared camera system is used to record the complete time history of the external surface temperature response during a transient initiated by the introduction of a convecting fluid through the cooling circuit of the part. The transient data obtained is combined with the cooling fluid network model to provide the boundary conditions for a finite element model representing the complete part geometry. A simple 1-D lumped thermal capacitance model for each local wall position is used to provide a first estimate of the internal surface heat transfer coefficient distribution. A 3-D inverse transient conduction model of the part is then executed with updated internal heat transfer coefficients until convergence is reached with the experimentally measured external wall temperatures as a function of time. This new technique makes possible the accurate quantification of full-surface internal heat transfer coefficient distributions for prototype and production metallic airfoils in a totally nondestructive and non-intrusive manner. The technique is equally applicable to other material types and other cooled/heated components.


2013 ◽  
Vol 136 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Luque ◽  
J. Batstone ◽  
D. R. H. Gillespie ◽  
T. Povey ◽  
E. Romero

A full thermal experimental assessment of a novel dendritic cooling scheme for high-pressure turbine vanes has been conducted and is presented in this paper, including a comparison to the current state-of-the-art cooling arrangement for these components. The dendritic cooling system consists of cooling holes with multiple internal branches that enhance internal heat transfer and reduce the blowing ratio at hole exit. Three sets of measurements are presented, which describe, first, the local internal heat transfer coefficient of these structures and, secondly, the cooling flow capacity requirements and overall cooling effectiveness of a highly engine-representative dendritic geometry. Full-coverage surface maps of overall cooling effectiveness were acquired for both dendritic and baseline vanes in the Annular Sector Heat Transfer Facility, where scaled near-engine conditions of Mach number, Reynolds number, inlet turbulence intensity, and coolant-to-mainstream pressure ratio (or momentum flux ratio) are achieved. Engine hardware was used, with laser-sintered metal counterparts for the novel cooling geometry (their detailed configuration, design, and manufacture are discussed). The dendritic system will be shown to offer improved overall cooling effectiveness at a reduced cooling mass flow rate due to a more uniform film cooling effectiveness, a decreased tendency for films to lift off in regions of low external cross flow, improved through-wall heat transfer and internal cooling efficiency, increased internal wetted surface area of the cooling holes, and the enhanced turbulence induced in them.


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