Heat Transfer Around a Cylindrical Protuberance Mounted in a Plane Turbulent Boundary Layer

2005 ◽  
Vol 128 (2) ◽  
pp. 153-161 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takayuki Tsutsui ◽  
Masafumi Kawahara

Heat transfer characteristics around a low aspect ratio cylindrical protuberance placed in a turbulent boundary layer were investigated. The diameters of the protuberance, D, were 40 and 80mm, and the height to diameter aspect ratio H∕D ranged from 0.125 to 1.0. The Reynolds numbers based on D ranged from 1.1×104 to 1.1×105 and the thickness of the turbulent boundary layer at the protuberance location, δ, ranged from 26 to 120mm for these experiments. In this paper we detail the effects of the boundary layer thickness and the protuberance aspect ratio on heat transfer. The results revealed that the overall heat transfer for the cylindrical protuberance reaches a maximum value when H∕δ=0.24.

2011 ◽  
Vol 134 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Lorenz ◽  
A. Schulz ◽  
H.-J. Bauer

The present experimental study is part of a comprehensive analysis accounting for heat transfer and aerodynamic losses on a highly loaded low pressure turbine blade with varying surface roughness. Whereas Part I focuses on heat transfer measurements at airfoil midspan with different deterministic surface roughnesses, Part II investigates surface roughness effects on aerodynamic losses of the same airfoil. A set of different arrays of deterministic roughness (the same as used in Part I) is investigated in these experiments. The height and eccentricity of the roughness elements are varied, showing the combined influence of roughness height and anisotropy on the losses produced in the boundary layers. It is shown that the boundary layer loss is dominated by the suction side. Therefore, the investigations focus on measurements of the suction side boundary layer thickness at midspan directly upstream of the trailing edge. The experiments are conducted at several freestream turbulence levels (Tu1=1.4–10.1%) and different Reynolds numbers. The measurements reveal that suction side boundary layer thickness is increased by up to 190% if surface roughness shifts the transition onset upstream. However, in some cases, at low Reynolds numbers and freestream turbulence, surface roughness suppresses boundary layer separation and decreases the trailing edge boundary layer thickness by up to 30%.


1978 ◽  
Vol 100 (4) ◽  
pp. 690-696 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. D. Anderson ◽  
T. J. Dahm

Solutions of the two-dimensional, unsteady integral momentum equation are obtained via the method of characteristics for two limiting modes of light gas launcher operation, the “constant base pressure gun” and the “simple wave gun”. Example predictions of boundary layer thickness and heat transfer are presented for a particular 1 in. hydrogen gun operated in each of these modes. Results for the constant base pressure gun are also presented in an approximate, more general form.


Author(s):  
Joshua B. Anderson ◽  
John W. McClintic ◽  
David G. Bogard ◽  
Thomas E. Dyson ◽  
Zachary Webster

The use of compound-angled shaped film cooling holes in gas turbines provides a method for cooling regions of extreme curvature on turbine blades or vanes. These configurations have received surprisingly little attention in the film cooling literature. In this study, a row of laid-back fanshaped holes based on an open-literature design, were oriented at a 45-degree compound angle to the approaching freestream flow. In this study, the influence of the approach flow boundary layer thickness and character were experimentally investigated. A trip wire and turbulence generator were used to vary the boundary layer thickness and freestream conditions from a thin laminar boundary layer flow to a fully turbulent boundary layer and freestream at the hole breakout location. Steady-state adiabatic effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient augmentation were measured using high-resolution IR thermography, which allowed the use of an elevated density ratio of DR = 1.20. The results show adiabatic effectiveness was generally lower than for axially-oriented holes of the same geometry, and that boundary layer thickness was an important parameter in predicting effectiveness of the holes. Heat transfer coefficient augmentation was highly dependent on the freestream turbulence levels as well as boundary layer thickness, and significant spatial variations were observed.


1984 ◽  
Vol 27 (232) ◽  
pp. 2142-2151 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takao KAWAMURA ◽  
Munehiko HIWADA ◽  
Toshiharu HIBINO ◽  
Ikuo MABUCHI ◽  
Masaya KUMADA

2018 ◽  
Vol 17 (4-5) ◽  
pp. 438-466 ◽  
Author(s):  
Baofeng Cheng ◽  
Yiqiang Han ◽  
Kenneth S Brentner ◽  
Jose Palacios ◽  
Philip J Morris ◽  
...  

The change of helicopter rotor broadband noise due to different surface roughness during ice accretion is investigated. Comprehensive rotor broadband noise measurements are carried out on rotor blades with different roughness sizes and rotation speeds in two facilities: the Adverse Environment Rotor Test Stand facility at The Pennsylvania State University, and the University of Maryland Acoustic Chamber. In both facilities, the measured high-frequency broadband noise increases significantly with increasing surface roughness height. Rotor broadband noise source identification is conducted and the broadband noise related to ice accretion is thought to be turbulent boundary layer-trailing edge noise. Theory suggests turbulent boundary layer-trailing edge noise scales with Mach number to the fifth power, which is also observed in the experimental data confirming that the dominant broadband noise mechanism during ice accretion is trailing edge noise. A correlation between the ice-induced surface roughness and the broadband noise level is developed. The correlation is strong, which can be used as an ice accretion early detection tool for helicopters, as well as to quantify the ice-induced roughness at the early stage of rotor ice accretion. The trailing edge noise theories developed by Ffowcs Williams and Hall, and Howe both identify two important parameters: boundary layer thickness and turbulence intensity. Numerical studies of two-dimensional airfoils with different ice-induced surface roughness heights are conducted to investigate the extent that surface roughness impacts the boundary layer thickness and turbulence intensity (and ultimately the turbulent boundary layer-trailing edge noise). The results show that boundary layer thickness and turbulence intensity at the trailing edge increase with the increased roughness height. Using Howe’s trailing edge noise model, the increased sound pressure level of the trailing edge noise due to the increased displacement thickness and normalized integrated turbulence intensity are 6.2 and 1.6 dB for large and small accreted ice roughness heights, respectively. The estimated increased sound pressure level values agree reasonably well with the experimental results, which are 5.8 and 2.6 dB for large and small roughness height, respectively.


Author(s):  
Michael Sampson ◽  
Avery Fairbanks ◽  
Jacob Moseley ◽  
Phillip M. Ligrani ◽  
Hongzhou Xu ◽  
...  

Abstract Currently, there is a deficit of experimental data for surface heat transfer characteristics and thermal transport processes associated with tip gap flows, and a lack of understanding of performance and behavior of film cooling as applied to blade tip surfaces. As a result, many avenues of opportunity exist for development of creative tip configurations with innovative external cooling arrangements. Overall goals of the present investigations are to reduce cooling air requirements, and reduce thermal loading, with equivalent improvements of thermal protection and structural integrity. Described is the development of experimental facilities, including a Supersonic/Transonic Wind Tunnel and linear cascade, for investigations of surface heat transfer characteristics of transonic turbine blade tips with unique squealer geometries and innovative film cooling arrangements. Note that data from past investigations are used to illustrate some of the experimental procedures and approaches which will be employed within the investigation. Of interest is development of a two-dimensional linear cascade with appropriate cascade airfoil flow periodicity. Included are boundary layer flow bleed devices, downstream tailboards, and augmented cascade inlet turbulence intensity. The present linear cascade approach allows experimental configuration parameters to be readily varied. Tip gap magnitudes are scaled so that ratios of tip gap to inlet boundary layer thickness, ratios of tip gap to blade axial chord length, and ratios of tip gap magnitudes to blade true chord length match engine hardware configurations. Ratios of inlet boundary layer thickness to tip gap range from 3 to 5. Innovative film cooling configurations are utilized for one blade tip configuration, and scaled engine components are modelled and tested with complete external cooling arrangements. Blade tip and geometry characteristics are also considered, including squealer depth and squealer tip wall thickness. With these experimental components, results will be obtained with engine representative transonic Mach numbers, Reynolds numbers, and film cooling parameters, including density ratios, which are achieved using foreign gas injection with carbon dioxide. Transient, infrared thermography approaches will be employed to measure spatially-resolved distributions of surface heat transfer coefficients, adiabatic surface temperature, and adiabatic film cooling effectiveness.


2005 ◽  
Vol 127 (1) ◽  
pp. 200-208 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Stripf ◽  
A. Schulz ◽  
S. Wittig

External heat transfer measurements on a highly loaded turbine vane with varying surface roughness are presented. The investigation comprises nine different roughness configurations and a smooth reference surface. The rough surfaces consist of evenly spaced truncated cones with varying height, diameter, and distance, thus covering the full range of roughness Reynolds numbers in the transitionally and fully rough regimes. Measurements for each type of roughness are conducted at several freestream turbulence levels (Tu1=4% to 8.8%) and Reynolds numbers, hereby quantifying their combined effect on heat transfer and laminar-turbulent transition. In complementary studies a trip wire is used on the suction side in order to fix the transition location close to the stagnation point, thereby allowing a deeper insight into the effect of roughness on the turbulent boundary layer. The results presented show a strong influence of roughness on the onset of transition even for the smallest roughness Reynolds numbers. Heat transfer coefficients in the turbulent boundary layer are increased by up to 50% when compared to the smooth reference surface.


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