Rib Turbulator Effects on Crossflow-Fed Shaped Film Cooling Holes

2019 ◽  
Vol 141 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dale W. Fox ◽  
Fraser B. Jones ◽  
John W. McClintic ◽  
David G. Bogard ◽  
Thomas E. Dyson ◽  
...  

Most studies of turbine airfoil film cooling in laboratory test facilities have used relatively large plenums to feed flow into the coolant holes. However, a more realistic inlet condition for the film cooling holes is a relatively small channel. Previous studies have shown that the film cooling performance is significantly degraded when fed by perpendicular internal crossflow in a smooth channel. In this study, angled rib turbulators were installed in two geometric configurations inside the internal crossflow channel, at 45 deg and 135 deg, to assess the impact on film cooling effectiveness. Film cooling hole inlets were positioned in both prerib and postrib locations to test the effect of hole inlet position on film cooling performance. A test was performed independently varying channel velocity ratio and jet to mainstream velocity ratio. These results were compared to the film cooling performance of previously measured shaped holes fed by a smooth internal channel. The film cooling hole discharge coefficients and channel friction factors were also measured for both rib configurations with varying channel and inlet velocity ratios. Spatially averaged film cooling effectiveness is largely similar to the holes fed by the smooth internal crossflow channel, but hole-to-hole variation due to inlet position was observed.

Author(s):  
Dale W. Fox ◽  
Fraser B. Jones ◽  
John W. McClintic ◽  
David G. Bogard ◽  
Thomas E. Dyson ◽  
...  

Most studies of turbine airfoil film cooling in laboratory test facilities have used relatively large plenums to feed flow into the coolant holes. However, a more realistic inlet condition for the film cooling holes is a relatively small channel. Previous studies have shown that the film cooling performance is significantly degraded when fed by perpendicular internal crossflow in a smooth channel. In this study, angled rib turbulators were installed in two geometric configurations inside the internal crossflow channel, at 45° and 135°, to assess the impact on film cooling effectiveness. Film cooling hole inlets were positioned in both pre-rib and post-rib locations to test the effect of hole inlet position on film cooling performance. A test was performed independently varying channel velocity ratio and jet to mainstream velocity ratio. These results were compared to the film cooling performance of previously measured shaped holes fed by a smooth internal channel. The film cooling hole discharge coefficients and channel friction factors were also measured for both rib configurations with varying channel and inlet velocity ratios. Spatially-averaged film cooling effectiveness is largely similar to the holes fed by the smooth internal crossflow channel, but hole-to-hole variation due to inlet position was observed.


Author(s):  
Sanga Lee ◽  
Dong-Ho Rhee ◽  
Kwanjung Yee

In spite of a myriad of researches on the optimal shape of film cooling holes, only a few attempts have been made to optimize the hole arrangement for film cooling so far. Moreover, although the general scale of film cooling hole is so small that manufacturing tolerance has substantial effects on the cooling performance of turbine, the researches on this issue are even scarcer. If it is possible to obtain optimal hole arrangement which not only improve the film cooling performance but also is robust to the manufacturing tolerance, then overall cooling performance of a turbine would become more reliable and useful from the practical point of view. To this end, the present study proposed a robust design optimization procedure which takes the manufacturing uncertainties into account. The procedure was subsequently applied to the film cooling holes on high pressure turbine nozzle pressure side to obtain the robust array shape under the uncertainty of the manufacturing tolerance. First, the array of the holes was parameterized by 5 design variables using the newly suggested shape functions, and 2 representative factors were considered for the manufacturing tolerance of the film cooling hole. Probabilistic process that consists of Kriging surrogate model and Monte Carlo Simulation with descriptive sampling method was coupled with the design optimization process using Genetic Algorithm. Through this, film cooling hole array which shows the high performance, yet robust to the manufacturing tolerance was obtained, and the effects of the manufacturing tolerance on the cooling performance was carefully investigated. As a result, the region where the film cooling effectiveness is noticeable, as well as the maximum width of the variation of the film cooling effectiveness were reduced through optimization, and it is also confirmed that the tolerance of the holes near the leading edge is more influential to the cooling performance because the film cooling effectiveness is more sensitive to the manufacturing tolerance of the leading edge than that of the trailing edge.


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

In gas turbine engines, film cooling holes are commonly fed with an internal crossflow, the magnitude of which has been shown to have a notable effect on film cooling effectiveness. In Part I of this study, as well as in a few previous studies, the magnitude of internal crossflow velocity was shown to have a substantial effect on film cooling effectiveness of axial shaped holes. There is, however, almost no data available in the literature that shows how internal crossflow affects compound angle shaped film cooling holes. In Part II, film cooling effectiveness, heat transfer coefficient augmentation, and discharge coefficients were measured for a single row of compound angle shaped film cooling holes fed by internal crossflow flowing both in-line and counter to the span-wise direction of coolant injection. The crossflow-to-mainstream velocity ratio was varied from 0.2–0.6 and the injection velocity ratio was varied from 0.2–1.7. It was found that increasing the magnitude of the crossflow velocity generally caused degradation of the film cooling effectiveness, especially for in-line crossflow. An analysis of jet characteristic parameters demonstrated the importance of crossflow effects relative to the effect of varying the film cooling injection rate. Heat transfer coefficient augmentation was found to be primarily dependent on injection rate, although for in-line crossflow, increasing crossflow velocity significantly increased augmentation for certain conditions.


Author(s):  
Rui Zhu ◽  
Gongnan Xie ◽  
Terrence W. Simon

Secondary holes to a main film cooling hole are used to improve film cooling performance by creating anti-kidney vortices. The effects of injection angle of the secondary holes on both film cooling effectiveness and surrounding thermal and flow fields are investigated in this numerical study. Two kinds of primary hole shapes are adopted. One is a cylindrical hole, the other is a horn-shaped hole which is designed from a cylindrical hole by expanding the hole in the transverse direction to double the hole size at the exit. Two smaller cylindrical holes, the secondary holes, are located symmetrically about the centerline and downstream of the primary hole. Three compound injection angles (α = 30°, 45° and 60°, β = 30°) of the secondary holes are analyzed while the injection angle of the primary hole is kept at 45°. Cases with various blowing ratios are computed. It is shown from the simulation that cooling effectiveness of secondary holes with a horn-shaped primary hole is better than that with a cylindrical primary hole, especially at high blowing ratios. With a cylindrical primary hole, increasing inclination angle of the secondary holes provides better cooling effectiveness because the anti-kidney vortices created by shallow secondary holes cannot counteract the kidney vortex pairs adequately, enhancing mixing of main flow and coolant. For secondary holes with a horn-shaped primary hole, large secondary hole inclination angles provide better cooling performance at low blowing ratios; but, at high blowing ratios, secondary holes with small inclination angles are more effective, as the film coverage becomes wider in the downstream area.


2019 ◽  
Vol 141 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc Fraas ◽  
Tobias Glasenapp ◽  
Achmed Schulz ◽  
Hans-Jörg Bauer

Internal coolant passages of gas turbine vanes and blades have various orientations relative to the external hot gas flow. As a consequence, the inflow of film cooling holes varies as well. To further identify the influencing parameters of film cooling under varying inflow conditions, the present paper provides detailed experimental data. The generic study is performed in a novel test rig, which enables compliance with all relevant similarity parameters including density ratio. Film cooling effectiveness as well as heat transfer of a 10–10–10 deg laidback fan-shaped cooling hole is discussed. Data are processed and presented over 50 hole diameters downstream of the cooling hole exit. First, the parallel coolant flow setup is discussed. Subsequently, it is compared to a perpendicular coolant flow setup at a moderate coolant channel Reynolds number. For the perpendicular coolant flow, asymmetric flow separation in the diffuser occurs and leads to a reduction of film cooling effectiveness. For a higher coolant channel Reynolds number and perpendicular coolant flow, asymmetry increases and cooling effectiveness is further decreased. An increase in blowing ratio does not lead to a significant increase in cooling effectiveness. For all cases investigated, heat transfer augmentation due to film cooling is observed. Heat transfer is highest in the near-hole region and decreases further downstream. Results prove that coolant flow orientation has a severe impact on both parameters.


Author(s):  
Lucas Giller ◽  
Heinz-Peter Schiffer

The interaction between the strongly swirling combustor outflow and the high pressure turbine nozzle guide vanes were investigated at the cascade test rig at Technische Universität Darmstadt. The test section of the rig consists of six swirl generators and five cascade vanes. The three middle vanes are equipped with film cooling holes at the leading edges. The swirler nozzles are aligned with the center of the cascade passages. The operating settings are defined by the swirl number, the distance between the swirler nozzles and the vanes, the blowing ratio and the radial angle of the film cooling holes. Flow field measurements using PIV downstream of the swirlers and five hole probe measurements at the inlet and outlet plane of the cascade were accomplished. Measurements using the ammonia diazo technique to determine the adiabatic film cooling effectiveness on the surface of the center cascade vane were also carried out. It is shown that a swirling inflow leads to a strong alteration of the flow field and the losses in the passages in comparison to an axial inflow. Furthermore, the impact of the swirl on the formation of the cooling film and it’s adiabatic film cooling effectiveness is presented.


1999 ◽  
Vol 122 (3) ◽  
pp. 553-557 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. A. Hale ◽  
M. W. Plesniak ◽  
S. Ramadhyani

The adiabatic, steady-state liquid crystal technique was used to measure surface adiabatic film cooling effectiveness values in the near-hole region X/D<10. A parametric study was conducted for a single row of short holes L/D⩽3 fed by a narrow plenum H/D=1. Film cooling effectiveness values are presented and compared for various L/D ratios (0.66 to 3.0), three different blowing ratios (0.5, 1.0, and 1.5), two different plenum feed configurations (co-flow and counterflow), and two different injection angles (35 and 90 deg). Injection hole geometry and plenum feed direction were found to affect short hole film cooling performance significantly. Under certain conditions, similar or improved coverage was achieved with 90 deg holes compared with 35 deg holes. This result has important implications for manufacturing of thin-walled film-cooled blades or vanes. [S0889-504X(00)00603-6]


Author(s):  
K. Vighneswara Rao ◽  
Jong S. Liu ◽  
Daniel C. Crites ◽  
Luis A. Tapia ◽  
Malak F. Malak ◽  
...  

In this study, cylindrical and fan shaped film cooling holes are evaluated on the blade surface numerically, using the Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) tool ANSYS-CFX, with the objective of improving cooling effectiveness by understanding the flow pattern at the cooling hole exit. The coolant flow rates are adjusted for blowing ratios of 0.5, 1.0 & 1.5 (momentum flux ratios of 0.125, 0.5 & 1.125 respectively). The density ratio is maintained at 2.0. New shaped holes viz. straight, concave and convex trench holes are introduced and are evaluated under similar operating conditions. Results are presented in terms of surface temperatures and adiabatic effectiveness at three different blowing ratios for the different film cooling hole shapes analyzed. Comparison is made with reference to the fan shaped film cooling hole to bring out relative merits of different shapes. The new trench holes improved the film cooling effectiveness by allowing more residence time for coolant to spread laterally while directing smoothly onto the airfoil surface. While convex trench improved the centre-line effectiveness, straight trench improved the laterally-averaged and overall effectiveness at all blowing ratios. Concave trench improved the effectiveness at blowing ratios 0.5 and 1.0.


2009 ◽  
Vol 131 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhihong Gao ◽  
Diganta Narzary ◽  
Je-Chin Han

This paper is focused on the effect of film-hole configurations on platform film cooling. The platform is cooled by purge flow from a simulated stator-rotor seal combined with discrete-hole film cooling within the blade passage. The cylindrical holes and laidback fan-shaped holes are assessed in terms of film-cooling effectiveness and total pressure loss. Lined up with the freestream streamwise direction, the film holes are arranged on the platform with two different layouts. In one layout, the film-cooling holes are divided into two rows and more concentrated on the pressure side of the passage. In the other layout, the film-cooling holes are divided into four rows and loosely distributed on the platform. Four film-cooling hole configurations are investigated totally. Testing was done in a five-blade cascade with medium high Mach number condition (0.27 and 0.44 at the inlet and the exit, respectively). The detailed film-cooling effectiveness distributions on the platform were obtained using pressure sensitive paint technique. Results show that the combined cooling scheme (slot purge flow cooling combined with discrete-hole film cooling) is able to provide full film coverage on the platform. The shaped holes present higher film-cooling effectiveness and wider film coverage than the cylindrical holes, particularly at higher blowing ratios. The hole layout affects the local film-cooling effectiveness. The shaped holes also show the advantage over the cylindrical holes with lower total pressure loss.


Author(s):  
Sebastian Schulz ◽  
Simon Maier ◽  
Jeffrey P. Bons

In an attempt to abate the detrimental jet vorticity and lift-off effects at high blowing ratios, the objective of the present study is to investigate the impact of an anti-vortex film cooling hole design on the film cooling effectiveness and the secondary flow field. Furthermore, the influence of low and high turbulence levels is studied with Tu ≈ .0.7% and ≈ 10%, respectively. For the experiments infrared thermography and particle image velocimetry (PIV) are employed. The experiments are conducted in a subsonic wind tunnel at a Reynolds number of 11000 based on the film cooling hole diameter. A flat plate model with an array of three cylindrical primary holes with secondary offshoots to each side represents the anti-vortex geometry. The cylindrical hole arrangement with a diameter of 17.5 mm is inclined at 30° in streamwise direction, with the anti-vortex holes branching off from the primary hole base in a 21° angle. Information from a flat plate with six cylindrical holes of 17.5 mm in diameter inclined at 30 in streamwise direction is used as baseline for comparison. The primary hole spacing was 4.75 and 3 hole diameters, respectively. Results are presented for blowing ratios of 1 and 2 with a constant density ratio of 1.1. The PIV measurements are taken in two planes perpendicular to the flow direction to record the secondary flow structures. The results of the infrared thermography show a strong decrease in film cooling effectiveness as high turbulence levels occur, especially for low blowing ratios. For higher blowing ratios low and high turbulence levels have similar effects on film cooling effectiveness. A significant improvement in film cooling performance is displayed by the anti-vortex design over the standard circular hole arrangement for every blowing ratio. The effectiveness results reveal an improved lateral spreading of the coolant with coolant jets staying attached throughout the series of experiments. By remaining inside the boundary layer, the effects of a high turbulent freestream on film cooling performance is less. The PIV results unveil information of a new vortex pair on either side of the primary hole kidney vortex. Especially at high blowing ratios the results indicate, that the anti-vortex hole design promotes the interaction between the vortical structures, explaining the increased lateral film effectiveness results. The factor which lends to the superior performance and credibility of the studied anti-vortex design is that the results are obtained for 35% less mass flow than the baseline.


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