Effects of Trenched Holes on Film Cooling of a Contoured Endwall Nozzle Vane

2011 ◽  
Vol 134 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Giovanna Barigozzi ◽  
Giuseppe Franchini ◽  
Antonio Perdichizzi ◽  
Silvia Ravelli

The present paper investigates the effects of the application of trenched holes in the front part of a contoured film cooled endwall. Two trench configurations were tested, changing the trench depth. Tests have been carried out at low speed (M2is=0.2) and low inlet turbulence intensity level, with coolant mass flow rate ratio varied within the 0.5–2.5% range. Pressure probe traverses were performed downstream of the vane trailing edge to show the secondary flow field modifications and to evaluate trench additional losses. Endwall distributions of film cooling effectiveness have been obtained by the thermochromic liquid crystal (TLC) technique. For each injection condition, energy loss coefficient and film cooling effectiveness distributions were analyzed and compared with the ones obtained from rows of cylindrical holes. Laterally and area averaged effectiveness as well as pitch and mass averaged kinetic energy loss coefficients were computed to enlighten any change induced by the introduction of trenched holes. A uniform and high thermal coverage was obtained in the region just downstream of the trench, but it quickly decayed because of enforced mixing of coolant with main flow. Compared with the cylindrical hole configuration, trenches are able to provide a higher global cooling effectiveness, but a larger amount of coolant injection is required. The introduction of both trenches is responsible for a secondary thermodynamic loss increase of about 0.7% at low coolant injection rates. Increasing the blowing rates, the additional loss vanishes.

Author(s):  
Giovanna Barigozzi ◽  
Giuseppe Franchini ◽  
Antonio Perdichizzi ◽  
Silvia Ravelli

The present paper investigates the effects of the application of trenched holes in the front part of a contoured film cooled endwall. Two trench configurations were tested, changing the trench depth. Tests have been carried out at low speed (M2is = 0.2) and low inlet turbulence intensity level, with coolant mass flow rate ratio varied within the 0.5–2.5% range. Pressure probe traverses were performed downstream of the vane trailing edge to show the secondary flow field modifications and to evaluate trench additional losses. Endwall distributions of film cooling effectiveness have been obtained by TLC technique. For each injection condition energy loss coefficient and film cooling effectiveness distributions were analyzed and compared to the ones obtained from rows of cylindrical holes. Laterally and area averaged effectiveness as well as pitch and mass averaged kinetic energy loss coefficient were computed to enlighten any change induced by the introduction of trenched holes. A uniform and high thermal coverage was obtained in the region just downstream of the trench, but it quickly decayed, because of enforced mixing of coolant with main-flow. Compared to the cylindrical hole configuration, trenches are able to provide a higher global cooling effectiveness, but a larger amount of coolant injection is required. The introduction of both trenches is responsible for a secondary thermodynamic loss increase of about 0.7%, at low coolant injection rates. Increasing blowing rates, the additional loss is going to vanish.


Author(s):  
Shiou-Jiuan Li ◽  
Jiyeon Lee ◽  
Je-Chin Han ◽  
Luzeng Zhang ◽  
Hee-Koo Moon

The paper presents the swirl purge flow on platform and a modeled land-based turbine rotor blade suction surface. Pressure sensitive paint (PSP) mass transfer technique provides detailed film cooling effectiveness distribution on platform and phantom cooling effectiveness on blade suction surface. Experiments have completed in a low speed wind tunnel facility with a five blade linear cascade. The inlet Reynolds number based on the chord length is 250,000. Swirl purge flow is simulated by coolant injection through fifty inclined cylindrical holes ahead of the blade leading edge row. Coolant injections from cylindrical holes go through nozzle endwall and a dolphin nose axisymmetric contour before reach platform and blade suction surface. Different “coolant injection angles” and “coolant injection velocity to cascade inlet velocity” results in various swirl ratios to simulate real engine conditions. Simulated swirl purge flow uses coolant injection angles of 30, 45, and 60 degrees to produce swirl ratios of 0.4, 0.6, and 0.8, respectively. Traditional purge flow has coolant injection angle of 90 degree to generate swirl ratio of 1. Coolant to mainstream mass flow rate ratio (MFR) is 0.5%, 1.0% and 1.5% for all swirl ratios. Coolant to mainstream density ratio maintains at 1.5 to match engine conditions. Most of the swirl purge and purge coolant approaches platform, but small amount of the coolant migrates to blade suction surface. Swirl ratio of 0.4 has highest relative motion between rotor and coolant and severely decreases film cooling and phantom cooling effectiveness. Higher MFR of 1% and 1.5% cases suffer from apparent decrement of the effectiveness while increasing relative motion.


1999 ◽  
Vol 122 (2) ◽  
pp. 327-333 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gu¨nter Wilfert ◽  
Stefan Wolff

Film cooling experiments were conducted to investigate the effects of internal flow conditions and plenum geometry on the film cooling effectiveness. The film cooling measurements show a strong influence of the coolant inlet conditions on film cooling performance. The present experiments were carried out on a flat plate with a row of cylindrical holes oriented at 30 deg with respect to a constant-velocity external flow, systematically varying the plenum geometry and blowing rates 0.5⩽M⩽1.25. Adiabatic film cooling measurements using the multiple narrow-banded thermochromic liquid crystal technique (TLC) were carried out, simulating a flow parallel to the mainstream flow with and without crossflow at the coolant hole entry compared with a standard plenum configuration. An impingement in front of the cooling hole entry with and without crossflow was also investigated. For all parallel flow configurations, ribs were installed at the top and bottom coolant channel wall. As the hole length-to-diameter ratio has an influence on the film cooling effectiveness, the wall thickness has also been varied. In order to optimize the benefit of the geometry effects with ribs, a vortex generator was designed and tested. Results from these experiments show in a region 5⩽X/D⩽80 downstream of the coolant injection location differences in adiabatic film cooling effectiveness between +5 percent and +65 percent compared with a standard plenum configuration. [S0889-504X(00)01102-8]


Author(s):  
Diganta P. Narzary ◽  
Zhihong Gao ◽  
Shantanu Mhetras ◽  
Je-Chin Han

The effect of fan-shaped, laid-back compound angled cooling holes placed along the span of a fully-cooled high pressure turbine blade in a 5-blade linear cascade on film cooling effectiveness is studied using the Pressure Sensitive Paint (PSP) technique. Four rows of shaped film cooling holes are provided on the pressure side while two such rows are provided on the suction side of the blade. Three rows of cylindrical holes are drilled at 30° to the surface on the leading edge to capture the effect of showerhead film coolant injection. The coolant is injected at four different average blowing ratios of 0.3, 0.6, 0.9 and 1.2. Presence of wake due to upstream vanes is studied by placing a periodic set of rods upstream of the test blade. The wake is generated using 4.8mm diameter rods. The wake rods can be clocked by changing their stationary positions in front of the test blade to simulate a progressing wake. Effect of wake is recorded at four phase locations with equal intervals. The free stream Reynolds number, based on the axial chord length and the exit velocity, is 750,000 and the inlet and the exit Mach numbers are 0.27 and 0.44, respectively resulting in a blade pressure ratio of 1.14. Turbulence intensity level at the cascade inlet is 6% with an integral length scale of around 5cm. Results show that the fan-shaped, laid-back compound angled holes produce uniform and wide coolant coverage on the suction side except for those regions affected by the passage and tip leakage vortices. The advantage of compound shaped hole design is seen from the higher effectiveness values on the suction side compared to that of the compound cylindrical holes. The presence of a stationary upstream wake can result in lower film cooling effectiveness on the blade surface. Variation of blowing ratio from 0.3 to 1.2 show more or less uniform increment in effectiveness increase on the pressure side, whereas on the suction side, the increment shows signs of saturation beyond M = 0.6.


Author(s):  
T. Elnady ◽  
O. Hassan ◽  
I. Hassan ◽  
L. Kadem ◽  
T. Lucas

An experimental investigation has been performed to measure the film cooling performance of louver scheme over a scaled vane of high-pressure gas turbine using a two-dimensional cascade. Two rows of axially oriented louver scheme are used to cool the suction side and their performance is compared with two similar rows of standard cylindrical holes. The effect of hole location on the cooling performance is investigated for each row individually, then the row interaction is investigated for both rows at four different blowing ratios ranging from 1 to 2 with a 0.9 density ratio. The exit Reynolds number based on the true chord is 1.5E5 and exit Mach number is 0.23. The temperature distribution on the vane is mapped using a transient Thermochromic Liquid Crystal (TLC) technique to obtain the local distributions of the heat transfer coefficient and film cooling effectiveness. The louver scheme shows a superior cooling effectiveness than that of the cylindrical holes at all blowing ratios in terms of protection and lateral coverage. The row location highly affects the cooling performance for both the louver and cylindrical scheme.


2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 15-27
Author(s):  
Ahmed A. Imram ◽  
Humam K. Jalghef ◽  
Falah F. Hatem

     The effect of introducing ramp with a cylindrical slot hole on the film cooling effectiveness has been investigated experimentally and numerically. The film cooling effectiveness measurements are obtained experimentally. A test study was performed at a single mainstream with Reynolds number 76600 at three different coolant to mainstream blowing ratios 1.5, 2, and 3. Numerical simulation is introduced to primarily estimate the best ramp configurations and to predict the behavior of the transport phenomena in the region linked closely to the interaction between the coolant air injection and the hot air mainstram flow. The results showed that using ramps with trench cylindrical holes would enhanced the overall film cooling effectiveness by 83.33% compared with baseline model at blowing ratio of 1.5, also  the best overall flim cooling effectevness was obtained at blowing ratio of 2 while it is reduced at blowing ratio of 3.


Author(s):  
Kevin Liu ◽  
Shang-Feng Yang ◽  
Je-Chin Han

A detailed parametric study of film-cooling effectiveness was carried out on a turbine blade platform. The platform was cooled by purge flow from a simulated stator–rotor seal combined with discrete hole film-cooling. The cylindrical holes and laidback fan-shaped holes were accessed in terms of film-cooling effectiveness. This paper focuses on the effect of coolant-to-mainstream density ratio on platform film-cooling (DR = 1 to 2). Other fundamental parameters were also examined in this study—a fixed purge flow of 0.5%, three discrete-hole film-cooling blowing ratios between 1.0 and 2.0, and two freestream turbulence intensities of 4.2% and 10.5%. Experiments were done in a five-blade linear cascade with inlet and exit Mach number of 0.27 and 0.44, respectively. Reynolds number of the mainstream flow was 750,000 and was based on the exit velocity and chord length of the blade. The measurement technique adopted was the conduction-free pressure sensitive paint (PSP) technique. Results indicated that with the same density ratio, shaped holes present higher film-cooling effectiveness and wider film coverage than the cylindrical holes, particularly at higher blowing ratios. The optimum blowing ratio of 1.5 exists for the cylindrical holes, whereas the effectiveness for the shaped holes increases with an increase of blowing ratio. Results also indicate that the platform film-cooling effectiveness increases with density ratio but decreases with turbulence intensity.


Author(s):  
A. Suryanarayanan ◽  
B. Ozturk ◽  
M. T. Schobeiri ◽  
J. C. Han

Film cooling effectiveness is measured on a rotating turbine blade platform for coolant injection through discrete holes using pressure sensitive paint technique (PSP). Most of the existing literatures provide information only for stationary end-walls. The effects of rotation on the platform film cooling effectiveness are not well documented. Hence, the existing 3-stage turbine research facility at TPFL, Texas A&M University was re-designed and installed to enable coolant gas injection on the 1st stage rotor platform. Two distinct coolant supply loops were incorporated into the rotor to facilitate separate feeds for upstream cooling using stator-rotor gap purge flow and downstream discrete-hole film cooling. As a continuation of the previously published work involving stator-rotor gap purge cooling, this study investigates film cooling effectiveness on the 1st stage rotor platform due to coolant gas injection through nine discrete holes located downstream within the passage region. Film cooling effectiveness is measured for turbine rotor frequencies of 2400rpm, 2550rpm and 3000rpm corresponding to rotation numbers of Ro = 0.18, 0.19 and 0.23 respectively. For each of the turbine rotational frequencies, film cooling effectiveness is determined for average film-hole blowing ratios of Mholes = 0.5, 0.75, 1.0, 1.25, 1.5 and 2.0. To provide a complete picture of hub cooling under rotating conditions, simultaneous injection of coolant gas through upstream stator-rotor purge gap and downstream discrete film-hole is also studied. The combined tests are conducted for gap purge flow corresponding to coolant to mainstream mass flow ratio of MFR = 1% with three downstream film-hole blowing ratios of Mholes = 0.75, 1.0 and 1.25 for each of the three turbine speeds. The results for combined upstream stator-rotor gap purge flow and downstream discrete holes provide information about the optimum purge flow coolant mass, average coolant hole blowing ratios for each rotational speed and coolant injection location along the passage to obtain efficient platform film cooling.


Author(s):  
S. Ravelli ◽  
G. Barigozzi

The performance of a showerhead arrangement of film cooling in the leading edge region of a first stage nozzle guide vane was experimentally and numerically evaluated. A six-vane linear cascade was tested at an isentropic exit Mach number of Ma2s = 0.42, with a high inlet turbulence intensity level of 9%. The showerhead cooling scheme consists of four staggered rows of cylindrical holes evenly distributed around the stagnation line, angled at 45° towards the tip. The blowing ratios tested are BR = 2.0, 3.0 and 4.0. Adiabatic film cooling effectiveness distributions on the vane surface around the leading edge region were measured by means of Thermochromic Liquid Crystals technique. Since the experimental contours of adiabatic effectiveness showed that there is no periodicity across the span, the CFD calculations were conducted by simulating the whole vane. Within the RANS framework, the very widely used Realizable k-ε (Rke) and the Shear Stress Transport k-ω (SST) turbulence models were chosen for simulating the effect of the BR on the surface distribution of adiabatic effectiveness. The turbulence model which provided the most accurate steady prediction, i.e. Rke, was selected for running Detached Eddy Simulation at the intermediate value of BR = 3. Fluctuations of the local temperature were computed by DES, due to the vortex structures within the shear layers between the main flow and the coolant jets. Moreover, mixing was enhanced both in the wall-normal and spanwise direction, compared to RANS modeling. DES roughly halved the prediction error of laterally averaged film cooling effectiveness on the suction side of the leading edge. However, neither DES nor RANS provided the expected decay of effectiveness progressing downstream along the pressure side, with 15% overestimation of ηav at s/C =0.2.


2005 ◽  
Vol 128 (2) ◽  
pp. 192-197 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuzhen Lin ◽  
Bo Song ◽  
Bin Li ◽  
Gaoen Liu

As an advanced cooling scheme to meet increasingly stringent combustor cooling requirements, multihole film cooling has received considerable attention. Experimental data of this cooling scheme are limited in the open literature in terms of different hole patterns and blowing ratios. The heat-mass transfer analogy method was employed to measure adiabatic film cooling effectiveness of three multihole patterns. Three hole patterns differed in streamwise row spacing (S), spanwise hole pitch (P), and hole inclination angle (α), with the first pattern S∕P=2 and α=30°, the second S∕P=1 and α=30°, and the third S∕P=2 and α=150°. Measurements were performed at different blow ratios (M=1-4). Streamwise coolant injection offers high cooling protection for downstream rows. Reverse coolant injection provides superior cooling protection for initial rows. The effect of blowing ratio on cooling effectiveness is small for streamwise injection but significant for reversion injection.


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