A Converging Slot-Hole Film-Cooling Geometry—Part 2: Transonic Nozzle Guide Vane Heat Transfer and Loss

2002 ◽  
Vol 124 (3) ◽  
pp. 461-471 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. E. Sargison ◽  
S. M. Guo ◽  
M. L. G. Oldfield ◽  
G. D. Lock ◽  
A. J. Rawlinson

This paper presents the first experimental measurements on an engine representative nozzle guide vane, of a new film-cooling hole geometry, a con¯vergings¯lot-hole¯ or console. The patented console geometry is designed to improve the heat transfer and aerodynamic performance of turbine vane and rotor blade cooling systems. These experiments follow the successful validation of the console design in low-speed flat-plate tests described in Part 1 of this paper. Stereolithography was used to manufacture a resin model of a transonic, engine representative nozzle guide vane in which seven rows of previously tested fan-shaped film-cooling holes were replaced by four rows of consoles. This vane was mounted in the annular vane ring of the Oxford cold heat transfer tunnel for testing at engine Reynolds numbers, Mach numbers and coolant to mainstream momentum flux ratios using a heavy gas to simulate the correct coolant to mainstream density ratio. Heat transfer data were measured using wide-band thermochromic liquid crystals and a modified analysis technique. Both surface heat transfer coefficient and the adiabatic cooling effectiveness were derived from computer-video records of hue changes during the transient tunnel run. The cooling performance, quantified by the heat flux at engine temperature levels, of the console vane compares favourably with that of the previously tested vane with fan-shaped holes. The new console film-cooling hole geometry offers advantages to the engine designer due to a superior aerodynamic efficiency over the fan-shaped hole geometry. These efficiency measurements are demonstrated by results from midspan traverses of a four-hole pyramid probe downstream of the nozzle guide vane.

Author(s):  
J. E. Sargison ◽  
S. M. Guo ◽  
M. L. G. Oldfield ◽  
G. D. Lock ◽  
A. J. Rawlinson

This paper presents the first experimental measurements on an engine representative nozzle guide vane, of a new film cooling hole geometry, a Converging Slot-Hole or Console. The patented console geometry is designed to improve the heat transfer and aerodynamic performance of turbine vane and rotor blade cooling systems. These experiments follow the successful validation of the console design in low-speed flat-plate tests described in Part 1 of this paper (Sargison et al [1]). Stereolithography was used to manufacture a resin model of a transonic, engine representative nozzle guide vane in which 7 rows of previously tested fan-shaped film-cooling holes were replaced by 4 rows of consoles. This vane was mounted in the annular vane ring of the Oxford Cold Heat Transfer Tunnel for testing at engine Reynolds numbers, Mach numbers and coolant to mainstream momentum flux ratios using a heavy gas to simulate the correct coolant to mainstream density ratio. Heat transfer data were measured using wide band thermochromic liquid crystals and a modified analysis technique. Both surface heat transfer coefficient and the adiabatic cooling effectiveness were derived from computer-video records of hue changes during the transient tunnel run. The cooling performance, quantified by the heat flux at engine temperature levels, of the console vane compares favourably with that of the previously tested vane with fan-shaped holes. The new console film cooling hole geometry offers advantages to the engine designer due to a superior aerodynamic efficiency over the fan-shaped hole geometry. These efficiency measurements are demonstrated by results from mid span traverses of a four hole pyramid probe downstream of the nozzle guide vane.


Author(s):  
Shuo Mao ◽  
Ridge A. Sibold ◽  
Stephen Lash ◽  
Wing F. Ng ◽  
Hongzhou Xu ◽  
...  

Abstract Nozzle guide vane platforms often employ complex cooling schemes to mitigate ever-increasing thermal loads on endwall. Understanding the impact of advanced cooling schemes amid the highly complex three-dimensional secondary flow is vital to engine efficiency and durability. This study analyzes and describes the effect of coolant to mainstream blowing ratio, momentum ratio and density ratio for a typical axisymmetric converging nozzle guide vane platform with an upstream doublet staggered, steep-injection, cylindrical hole jet purge cooling scheme. Nominal flow conditions were engine representative and as follows: Maexit = 0.85, Reexit/Cax = 1.5 × 106 and an inlet large-scale freestream turbulence intensity of 16%. Two blowing ratios were investigated, each corresponding to upper and lower engine extrema at M = 3.5 and 2.5, respectively. For each blowing ratio, the coolant to mainstream density ratio was varied between DR = 1.2, representing typical experimental neglect of coolant density, and DR = 1.95, representative of typical engine conditions. An optimal coolant momentum ratio between = 6.3 and 10.2 is identified for in-passage film effectiveness and net heat flux reduction, at which the coolant suppresses and overcomes secondary flows but imparts minimal turbulence and remains attached to endwall. Progression beyond this point leads to cooling effectiveness degradation and increased endwall heat flux. Endwall heat transfer does not scale well with one single parameter; increasing with increasing mass flux for the low density case but decreasing with increasing mass flux of high density coolant. From the results gathered, both coolant to mainstream density ratio and blowing ratio should be considered for accurate testing, analysis and prediction of purge jet cooling scheme performance.


1992 ◽  
Vol 114 (4) ◽  
pp. 734-740 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. P. Harasgama ◽  
C. D. Burton

Heat transfer and aerodynamic measurements have been made on the endwalls of an annular cascade of turbine nozzle guide vanes in the presence of film cooling. The results indicate that high levels of cooling effectiveness can be achieved on the endwalls of turbine nozzle guide vanes (NGV). The NGV were operated at the correct engine nondimensional conditions of Reynolds number, Mach number, gas-to-wall temperature ratio, and gas-to-coolant density ratio. The results show that the secondary flow and horseshoe vortex act on the coolant, which is convected toward the suction side of the NG V endwall passage. Consequently the coolant does not quite reach the pressure side/casing trailing edge, leading to diminished cooling in this region. Increasing the blowing rate from 0.52 to 1.1 results in significant reductions in heat transfer to the endwall. Similar trends are evident when the coolant temperature is reduced. Measured heat transfer rates indicate that over most of the endwall region the film cooling reduces the Nusselt number by 50 to 75 percent.


2020 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 327-342
Author(s):  
Arun Kumar Pujari ◽  
B. V. S. S. S Prasad ◽  
Nekkanti Sitaram

AbstractThe effect of conjugate heat transfer is investigated on a first stage nozzle guide vane (NGV) of a high pressure gas turbine which has both impingement and film cooling holes. The study is carried out computationally by considering a linear cascade domain, having two passages formed between the vanes, with a chord length of 228 mm and spacing of 200 mm. The effect of (i) coolant and mainstream Reynolds numbers, (ii) thermal conductivity (iii) temperature difference between the mainstream and coolant at the internal surface of the nozzle guide vane are investigated under conjugate thermal condition. The results show that, with increasing coolant Reynolds number the lower conducting material shows larger percentage decrease in surface temperature as compared to the higher conducting material. However, the internal surface temperature is nearly independent of mainstream Reynolds number variation but shows significant variation for higher conducting material. Further, the temperature gradient within the solid thickness of NGV is higher for the lower conductivity material.


Author(s):  
Hans Reiss ◽  
Albin Bölcs

Film cooling and heat transfer measurements were carried out on a cooled nozzle guide vane in a linear cascade, using a transient liquid crystal technique. Three flow conditions were realized: the nominal operating condition of the vane with an exit Reynolds number of 1.47e6, as well as two lower flow conditions: Re2L = 1.0e6 and 7.5e5. The vane model was equipped with a single row of inclined round film cooling holes with compound angle orientation on the suction side. Blowing ratios ranging form 0.3 to 1.5 were covered, all using foreign gas injection (CO2) yielding an engine-representative density ratio of 1.6. Two distinct states of the incoming boundary layer onto the injection station were compared, an undisturbed laminar boundary layer as it forms naturally on the suction side, and a fully turbulent boundary layer which was triggered with a trip wire upstream of injection. The aerodynamic flow field is characterized in terms of profile Mach number distribution, and the associated heat transfer coefficients around the uncooled airfoil are presented. Both detailed and spanwise averaged results of film cooling effectiveness and heat transfer coefficients are shown on the suction side, which indicate considerable influence of the state of the incoming boundary layer on the performance of a film cooling row. The influence of the mainstream flow condition on the film cooling behavior at constant blowing ratio is discussed for three chosen injection regimes.


Author(s):  
S. P. Harasgama ◽  
C. D. Burton

Heat transfer and aerodynamic measurements have been made on the endwalls of an annular cascade of turbine nozzle guide vanes in the presence of film cooling. The results indicate that high levels of cooling effectiveness can be achieved on the endwalls of turbine nozzle guide vanes (NGV). The NGV were operated at the correct engine non-dimensional conditions of Reynolds number, Mach number, gas-to-wall temperature ratio and gas-to-coolant density ratio. The results show that the secondary flow and horse-shoe vortex act on the coolant which is converted towards the suction side of the NGV endwall passage. Consequently the coolant does not quite reach the pressure side/casing trailing edge, leading to diminished cooling in this region. Increasing the blowing rate from 0.52 to 1.1 results in significant reductions in heat transfer to the endwall. Similar trends are evident when the coolant temperature is reduced. Measured heat transfer rates indicate that over most of the endwall region the film cooling reduces the Nusselt number by 50% to 75%.


1992 ◽  
Vol 114 (4) ◽  
pp. 741-746 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. P. Harasgama ◽  
C. D. Burton

Results have been presented on the heat transfer characteristics of the film cooled endwall (platform) of a turbine nozzle guide vane in an annular cascade at engine representative conditions in a companion paper by Harasgama and Burton (1992). The present paper reports on the analysis of these measurements. The experimental results are well represented by the superposition theory of film cooling. It is shown that high cooling effectiveness can be achieved when the data are corrected for axial pressure gradients. The data are correlated against both the slot-wall jet parameter and the discrete hole injection function for flat-plate, zero pressure gradient cases. The pressure gradient correction brings the present data to within ± 11 percent of the discrete hole correlation. Preliminary predictions of heat transfer reduction have been carried out using the STANCOOL program. These indicate that the code can predict the magnitude of heat transfer reduction correctly, although the absolute values are not in good agreement. This is attributed to the three-dimensional nature of the flow at the endwall.


1990 ◽  
Vol 112 (3) ◽  
pp. 512-520 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Arts ◽  
A. E. Bourguignon

The purpose of this paper is to quantify the influence on external convective heat transfer of a coolant film whose position varies along the pressure side of a high-pressure turbine nozzle guide vane. The measurements were performed in the short-duration Isentropic Light Piston Compression Tube facility of the von Karman Institute. The effects of external and internal flow are considered in terms of Mach number, Reynolds number, free-stream turbulence intensity, blowing rate, and coolant to free-stream temperature ratio. The way to evaluate these results in terms of film cooling efficiency and heat transfer coefficient is finally discussed.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-34
Author(s):  
Shuo Mao ◽  
Ridge A. Sibold ◽  
Wing Ng ◽  
Zhigang LI ◽  
Bo Bai ◽  
...  

Abstract A misalignment between the combustor exit and the nozzle guide vane (NGV) platform commonly exists due to manufacturing tolerances and thermal transience. This study investigated, experimentally and computationally, the effect of the combustor-turbine misalignment on the heat transfer for an axisymmetric converging endwall with a jet purge cooling scheme at transonic conditions. The studies were conducted at engine-representative Maexit = 0.85, inlet turbulence intensity of 16%, Reexit,Cax = 1.5×106. A film cooling blowing ratio of 2.5 (design condition) and 3.5 and an engine-representative density ratio of 1.95 were used in the study. Three various step misalignments, combustor exit being 4.9% span higher than turbine inlet (backward-facing), no step (baseline), and combustor exit being 4.9% span lower than turbine inlet (forward-facing), were tested to demonstrate the misalignment effect on endwall heat transfer. Results indicated that the step misalignment affects the cooling performance by altering the interaction between the coolant and the cavity vortex, horseshoe vortex, and passage vortex. At the design blowing ratio of 2.5, the backward-facing step leads to increased coolant dissipation, causing the coolant to be later dominated by the passage vortex and leading to poor cooling performance. Meanwhile, a forward-facing step induced more coolant lift-off. At the blowing ratio of 3.5, the additional momentum ensures that enough coolant enters the passage to form a stable boundary layer. Therefore, the step misalignment no longer has a first-order effect.


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