Influence of Combustor Swirl on Endwall Heat Transfer and Film Cooling Effectiveness at the Large Scale Turbine Rig

2017 ◽  
Vol 139 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Holger Werschnik ◽  
Jonathan Hilgert ◽  
Manuel Wilhelm ◽  
Martin Bruschewski ◽  
Heinz-Peter Schiffer

At the large scale turbine rig (LSTR) at Technische Universität Darmstadt, Darmstadt, Germany, the aerothermal interaction of combustor exit flow conditions on the subsequent turbine stage is examined. The rig resembles a high pressure turbine and is scaled to low Mach numbers. A baseline configuration with an axial inflow and a swirling inflow representative for a lean combustor is modeled by swirl generators, whose clocking position toward the nozzle guide vane (NGV) leading edge can be varied. A staggered double-row of cylindrical film cooling holes on the endwall is examined. The effect of swirling inflow on heat transfer and film cooling effectiveness is studied, while the coolant mass flux rate is varied. Nusselt numbers are calculated using infrared thermography and the auxiliary wall method. Boundary layer, turbulence, and five-hole probe measurements as well as numerical simulations complement the examination. The results for swirling inflow show a decrease of film cooling effectiveness of up to 35% and an increase of Nusselt numbers of 10–20% in comparison to the baseline case for low coolant mass flux rates. For higher coolant injection, the heat transfer is on a similar level as the baseline. The differences vary depending on the clocking position. The turbulence intensity is increased to 30% for swirling inflow.

Author(s):  
Holger Werschnik ◽  
Jonathan Hilgert ◽  
Martin Bruschewski ◽  
Heinz-Peter Schiffer

The Large Scale Turbine Rig (LSTR) at Technische Universit ät Darmstadt, Germany is used to examine the aerothermal interaction of combustor exit flow conditions on the subsequent turbine stage. The rig resembles a high pressure turbine and is scaled to low Mach number conditions. A baseline configuration with axial, low-turbulent inflow and an aerodynamic inflow condition of a state-of-the-art lean combustor is modeled by the means of swirl generators, whose clocking position towards the nozzle guide vane’s leading edge can be varied. A hub side coolant injection consisting of a double-row of cylindrical holes is implemented to examine the impact on endwall cooling. This paper is directed to study the effect of swirling inflow on heat transfer and film cooling effectiveness on the hub side endwall. Nusselt numbers are calculated using infrared thermography and the auxiliary wall method. This method allows for a high spatial resolution and in addition also yields adiabatic wall temperature data within the same measurement using a superposition approach. Aerodynamic measurements and numerical simulations complement the examination. The results for the baseline case show Nusselt numbers to increase significantly with higher coolant mass flux rates for the whole endwall area. With swirling inflow, in general, a decrease of film cooling effectiveness and an increase of Nusselt numbers is observed for identical mass flux rates in comparison to the baseline case. The difference varies depending on clocking position.


Author(s):  
Onieluan Tamunobere ◽  
Christopher Drewes ◽  
Sumanta Acharya

In this paper, an experimental study of the shroud heat transfer behavior and the effectiveness of shroud cooling under the conditions of rotation is undertaken in a single stage turbine at low rotation speeds. The shroud consists of a periodic distribution of cooling holes that are 1 mm in diameter (D). The holes are angled at 45 degrees in a repeating pattern consisting of 5 unique hole pitches around the shroud circumference. Measurements of the normalized Nusselt number and film cooling effectiveness are done using liquid crystal thermography. These measurements are reported for the no coolant case, nominal blowing ratios of 1.0, 1.5, 2.0, 2.5 and 3.0, and rotation speeds of 300, 400, 500, 600 and 700 RPM. The results with no coolant injection show that the high Nu/Nu0 region migrates upstream toward the shroud leading edge with increasing rotation. The cooling results show that increasing the blowing ratio increases the area-averaged film cooling effectiveness in the shroud hole region for all rotation speeds studied. Furthermore, increasing the blade rotation speed increases the area-averaged Nusselt numbers and decreases the area-averaged film cooling effectiveness in the shroud hole region for all blowing ratios studied. As in the no-coolant case, with increasing rotation speeds, the high Nu/Nu0 region migrates upstream toward the shroud leading edge and disrupts the cooling effectiveness in this region. Finally, the results show that decreasing the shroud coolant hole spacing changes the lateral heat transfer profile from a periodic sinusoidal distribution for a shroud hole spacing of P/D = 10.4 to a more even distribution for a smaller P/D = 4.8.


2004 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 345-354 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Dittmar ◽  
Achmed Schulz ◽  
Sigmar Wittig

The demand of improved thermal efficiency and high power output of modern gas turbine engines leads to extremely high turbine inlet temperature and pressure ratios. Sophisticated cooling schemes including film cooling are widely used to protect the vanes and blades of the first stages from failure and to achieve high component lifetimes. In film cooling applications, injection from discrete holes is commonly used to generate a coolant film on the blade's surface.In the present experimental study, the film cooling performance in terms of the adiabatic film cooling effectiveness and the heat transfer coefficient of two different injection configurations are investigated. Measurements have been made using a single row of fanshaped holes and a double row of cylindrical holes in staggered arrangement. A scaled test model was designed in order to simulate a realistic distribution of Reynolds number and acceleration parameter along the pressure side surface of an actual turbine guide vane. An infrared thermography measurement system is used to determine highly resolved distribution of the models surface temperature. Anin-situcalibration procedure is applied using single embedded thermocouples inside the measuring plate in order to acquire accurate local temperature data.All holes are inclined 35° with respect to the model's surface and are oriented in a streamwise direction with no compound angle applied. During the measurements, the influence of blowing ratio and mainstream turbulence level on the adiabatic film cooling effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient is investigated for both of the injection configurations.


Author(s):  
Bo-lun Zhang ◽  
Li Zhang ◽  
Hui-ren Zhu ◽  
Jian-sheng Wei ◽  
Zhong-yi Fu

Film cooling performance of the double-wave trench was numerically studied to improve the film cooling characteristics. Double-wave trench was formed by changing the leading edge and trailing edge of transverse trench into cosine wave. The film cooling characteristics of transverse trench and double-wave trench were numerically studied using Reynolds Averaged Navier Stokes (RANS) simulations with realizable k-ε turbulence model and enhanced wall treatment. The film cooling effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient of double-wave trench at different trench width (W = 0.8D, 1.4D, 2.1D) conditions are investigated, and the distribution of temperature field and flow field were analyzed. The results show that double-wave trench effectively improves the film cooling effectiveness and the uniformity of jet at the downstream wall of the trench. The span-wise averaged film cooling effectiveness of the double-wave trench model increases 20–63% comparing with that of the transverse trench at high blowing ratio. The anti-counter-rotating vortices which can press the film on near-wall are formed at the downstream wall of the double-wave trench. With the double-wave trench width decreasing, the film cooling effectiveness gradually reduces at the hole center-line region of the downstream trench. With the increase of the blowing ratio, the span-wise averaged heat transfer coefficient increases. The span-wise averaged heat transfer coefficient of the double-wave trench with 0.8D and 2.1D trench width is higher than that of the double-wave trench with 1.4D trench width at the high blowing ratio conditions.


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.


Author(s):  
M. Salcudean ◽  
I. Gartshore ◽  
K. Zhang ◽  
Y. Barnea

Experiments have been conducted on a large model of a turbine blade. Attention has been focussed on the leading edge region, which has a semi-circular shape and four rows of film cooling holes positioned symmetrically about the stagnation line. The cooling holes were oriented in a spanwise direction with an inclination of 30° to the surface, and had streamwise locations of ±15° and ±44° from the stagnation line. Film cooling effectiveness was measured using a heat/mass analogy. Single row cooling from the holes at 15° and 44° showed similar patterns: spanwise averaged effectiveness which rises from zero at zero coolant mass flow to a maximum value η* at some value of mass flow ratio M*, then drops to low values of η at higher M. The trends can be quantitatively explained from simple momentum considerations for either air or CO2 as the coolant gas. Close to the holes, air provides higher η values for small M. At higher M, particularly farther downstream, the CO2 may be superior. The use of an appropriately defined momentum ratio G collapses the data from both holes using either CO2 or air as coolant onto a single curve. For η*, the value of G for all data is about 0.1. Double row cooling with air as coolant shows that the relative stagger of the two rows is an important parameter. Holes in line with each other in successive rows can provide improvements in spanwise averaged film cooling effectiveness of as much as 100% over the common staggered arrangement. This improvement is due to the interaction between coolant from rows one and two, which tends to provide complete coverage of the downstream surface when the rows are placed correctly with respect to each other.


Author(s):  
Rui-dong Wang ◽  
Cun-liang Liu ◽  
Hai-yong Liu ◽  
Hui-ren Zhu ◽  
Qi-ling Guo ◽  
...  

Heat transfer of the counter-inclined cylindrical and laid-back holes with and without impingement on the turbine vane leading edge model are investigated in this paper. To obtain the film cooling effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient, transient temperature measurement technique on complete surface based on double thermochromic liquid crystals is used in this research. A semi-cylinder model is used to model the vane leading edge which is arranged with two rows of holes. Four test models are measured under four blowing ratios including cylindrical film holes with and without impingement tube structure, laid-back film holes with and without impingement tube structure. This is the second part of a two-part paper, the first part paper GT2018-76061 focuses on film cooling effectiveness and this study will focus on heat transfer. Contours of surface heat transfer coefficient and laterally averaged result are presented in this paper. The result shows that the heat transfer coefficient on the surface of the leading edge is enhanced with the increase of blowing ratio for same structure. The shape of the high heat transfer coefficient region gradually inclines to span-wise direction as the blowing ratio increases. Heat transfer coefficient in the region where the jet core flows through is relatively lower, while in the jet edge region the heat transfer coefficient is relatively higher. Compared with cylindrical hole, laid-back holes give higher heat transfer coefficient. Meanwhile, the introduction of impingement also makes heat transfer coefficient higher compared with cross flow air intake. It is found that the heat transfer of the combination of laid-back hole and impingement tube can be very high under large blowing ratio which should get attention in the design process.


Author(s):  
R. F. Martinez-Botas ◽  
C. H. N. Yuen

An efficient steady-state wide band liquid crystal technique is used to study the film cooling performance of a variety of geometries in a flat plate: a single row of holes, a double row of holes (both in-line and staggered), and a single cooling hole. This method allows temperature information to be captured in one image, without the difficulty involved in a transient experiment. The streamwise inclinations tested are 30°, 60°, and 90°. The freestream is maintained at 13m/s, and at ambient temperature. The range of blowing ratios varied from 0.33 to 2.0. Both heat transfer coefficient and adiabatic cooling effectiveness are measured for all the cases. Air is used to produce a density ratio near unity. From the range of blowing ratios tested, the most effective film cooling is achieved at a value close to 0.5, for near unity density ratio. It has been revealed that film cooling effectiveness is improved when the jet remains attached to the surface, however, this is generally coupled with an augmentation in heat transfer owing to the disturbance the attached jet causes to the boundary layer. The 30° inclined holes show to be the most effective. Results demonstrate the full coverage capability of liquid crystal thermography.


2012 ◽  
Vol 135 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Reinaldo A. Gomes ◽  
Reinhard Niehuis

Film cooling experiments were run at the high speed cascade wind tunnel of the University of the Federal Armed Forces Munich. The investigations were carried out with a linear cascade of highly loaded turbine blades. The main objectives of the tests were to assess the film cooling effectiveness and the heat transfer in zones with main flow separation. Therefore, the blades were designed to force the flow to detach on the pressure side shortly downstream of the leading edge and reattach at about half of the axial chord. In this zone, film cooling rows are placed among others for a reduction of the size of the separation bubble. The analyzed region on the blade is critical due to the high heat transfer present at the leading edge and at the reattachment line after the main flow separation. Film cooling can contribute to a reduction of the size of the separation bubble reducing aerodynamic losses, however, in general, it increases heat transfer due to turbulent mixing. The reduction of the size of the separation bubble might also be twofold, since it acts like a thermal insulator on the blade and reducing the size of the bubble might lead to a stronger heating of the blade. Film cooling should, therefore, take both into account: first, a proper protection of the surface and second, reducing aerodynamic losses, diminishing the extension of the main flow separation. While experimental results of the adiabatic film cooling effectiveness were shown in previous publications, the local heat transfer is analyzed in this paper. Emphasis is also placed upon analyzing, in detail, the flow separation process. Furthermore, the tests comprise the analysis of the effect of different outlet Mach and Reynolds numbers and film cooling. In part two of this paper, the overall film cooling effectiveness is addressed. Local heat transfer is still difficult to predict with modern numerical tools and this is especially true for complex flows with flow separation. Some numerical results with the Reynolds averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) and large eddy simulation (LES) show the capability of a commercial solver in predicting the heat transfer.


2012 ◽  
Vol 135 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Reinaldo A. Gomes ◽  
Reinhard Niehuis

Film cooling experiments were run at the high speed cascade wind tunnel of the University of the Federal Armed Forces Munich. The investigations were carried out with a linear cascade of highly loaded turbine blades. The main targets of the tests were to assess the film cooling effectiveness and the heat transfer in zones with main flow separation. Therefore the blades were designed to force the flow to detach on the pressure side shortly downstream of the leading edge and it reattaches at about half of the axial chord. In this zone, film cooling rows are placed among others for reduction of the size of the separation bubble. The analyzed region on the blade is critical due to the high heat transfer present at the leading edge and at the reattachment line after main flow separation. Film cooling can contribute to a reduction of the size of the separation bubble reducing aerodynamic losses but increases in general heat transfer due to turbulent mixing. The reduction of the size of the separation bubble might also be two-fold since it acts like a thermal insulator on the blade and reducing the size of the bubble might lead to stronger heating of the blade. Film cooling should therefore take into account both: firstly, a proper protection of the surface, and secondly, reduce aerodynamic losses diminishing the extension of the main flow separation. The overall effectiveness of film cooling for a real engine has to combine heat transfer with film cooling effect. In this paper, the overall effectiveness of film cooling, combining results from measurements of the adiabatic film cooling effectiveness and the local heat transfer coefficient are shown. The tests comprise the analysis of the effect of different outlet Mach and Reynolds numbers at engine relevant values and film cooling ratio. A new parameter is introduced which allows for the evaluation of the effect of film cooling accounting at the same time for the change of local heat transfer coefficient. To the authors’ opinion this parameter allows a better, physically based assessment than the strategy using the so-called heat flux ratio. A parameter study is carried out in order to benchmark the effect of changes of the blade design.


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