The Application of Thin Film Gauges on Flexible Plastic Substrates to the Gas Turbine Situation

Author(s):  
S. M. Guo ◽  
M. C. Spencer ◽  
G. D. Lock ◽  
T. V. Jones ◽  
N. W. Harvey

Thin film heat transfer gauges have been instrumented onto flexible plastic substrates which can be adhesively bonded to plastic or metal models. These new gauges employ standard analysis techniques to yield the heat flux to the model surface and have significant advantages over gauges fired onto machinable glass or those used with metal models coated with enamel. The main advantage is that the construction of the gauges is predictable and uniform, and thus calibration for thickness and geometric properties is not required. The new gauges have been used to measure the heat transfer to an annular turbine nozzle guide vane in the Oxford University Cold Heat Transfer Tunnel. Engine-representative Mach and Reynolds numbers were employed and the free-stream turbulence intensity at NGV inlet was 13%. The vanes were either precooled or preheated to create a range of different thermal boundary conditions. The gauges were mounted on both perspex and aluminium NGVs and the heat transfer coefficient was obtained from the surface temperature history using either a single layer analysis (for perspex) or double layer (for aluminium) analysis. The surface temperature and heat transfer levels were also measured using rough and polished liquid crystals under similar conditions. The measurements have been compared with computational predictions.

1992 ◽  
Vol 114 (1) ◽  
pp. 147-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Arts ◽  
M. Lambert de Rouvroit

This contribution deals with an experimental aero-thermal investigation around a highly loaded transonic turbine nozzle guide vane mounted in a linear cascade arrangement. The measurements were performed in the von Karman Institute short duration Isentropic Light Piston Compression Tube facility allowing a correct simulation of Mach and Reynolds numbers as well as of the gas to wall temperature ratio compared to the values currently observed in modern aero engines. The experimental program consisted of flow periodicity checks by means of wall static pressure measurements and Schlieren flow visualizations, blade velocity distribution measurements by means of static pressure tappings, blade convective heat transfer measurements by means of platinum thin films, downstream loss coefficient and exit flow angle determinations by using a new fast traversing mechanism, and free-stream turbulence intensity and spectrum measurements. These different measurements were performed for several combinations of the free-stream flow parameters looking at the relative effects on the aerodynamic blade performance and blade convective heat transfer of Mach number, Reynolds number, and free-stream turbulence intensity.


Author(s):  
Arun Kumar Pujari ◽  
Bhamidi Prasad ◽  
Nekkanti Sitaram

Experimental and computational heat transfer investigations are reported in the interior side of a nozzle guide vane (NGV) subjected to combined impingement and film cooling. The domain of study is a two dimensional five-vane cascade having four passages. Each vane has a chord length of 228 mm and the pitch distance between the vanes is 200 mm. The vane internal surface is cooled by dry air supplied through the two impingement inserts: the front and the aft. The mass flow through the impingement chamber is varied, for a fixed spacing (H) to jet diameter (d) ratio of 1.2. The surface temperature distributions, at certain locations of the vane interior, are measured by pasting strips of liquid crystal sheets. The vane interior surface temperature distribution is also obtained by computations carried out by using Shear stress transport (SST) k-ω turbulence model in the ANSY FLUENT-14 flow solver. The computational data are in good agreement with the measured values of temperature. The internal heat transfer coefficients are thence determined along the leading edge and the mid span region from the computational data.


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):  
Arun Kumar Pujari ◽  
B. V. S. S. S. Prasad ◽  
Nekkanti Sitaram

Experimental and computational heat transfer investigations are reported on the interior side of a nozzle guide vane (NGV) subjected to combined impingement and film cooling. The domain of study is a two-dimensional five-vane cascade having a space chord ratio of 0.88. The vane internal surface is cooled by dry air, supplied through the two impingement inserts: the front and the aft. The blowing ratio (ρcVc/ρmVm) is varied systematically by varying the coolant mass flow through the impingement chamber and also by changing the mainstream Reynolds number, but by keeping a fixed spacing (H) to jet diameter (d) ratio of 1.2. The surface temperature distributions, at certain locations of the vane interior surface, are measured by pasting strips of liquid crystal sheets. The vane interior surface temperature distribution is also obtained by the computations carried out by using shear stress transport (SST) k–ω turbulence model in the flow solver ansys fluent-14. The computational data are in good agreement with the measured values of temperature. The internal heat transfer coefficients are thence determined from the computational data. The results show that, when the blowing ratio is increased by increasing the coolant flow rate, the average internal surface temperature decreases. However, when the blowing ratio is varied by increasing the mainstream Reynolds number, the internal surface temperature increases. Further, the temperature variations are different all along the internal surface from the leading edge to the trailing edge and are largely dependent on the coolant flow distributions on the internal as well as the external sides.


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.


Author(s):  
Arun Kumar Pujari ◽  
Prasad B. V. S. S. Subrahmanyaa ◽  
Sitaram Nekkanti

Experimental and computational heat transfer investigations are reported in the interior mid span of the pressure surface of a Nozzle Guide Vane (NGV) subjected to combined impingement and film cooling. The study is carried out by considering a two dimensional cascade domain having four passages formed between the five vane each has a chord length of 228 mm and spacing (between the blades) of 200 mm. The vane internal surface is cooled by two impingement inserts namely front and aft impingement tubes. The front impingement tube is used to cool the internal side of the leading edge of the NGV whereas the aft impingement tube is used to cool mainly the mid span of the internal surface. The mass flow through the impingement chamber is varied for a fixed target plate distance to jet diameter ratio of 1.12. The surface temperature at the mid chord region was measured by liquid crystal technique. The surface temperature obtained from both experiments and computations are compared and the computationally obtained average heat transfer coefficient distribution along chord reported. The flow structure variation along the chord and its effect on Nusselt number distribution is presented. The computation is carried out by using Shear stress transport (SST) k-ω turbulence model in the ANSY FLUENT-14 flow solver.


2018 ◽  
Vol 140 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhigang Li ◽  
Luxuan Liu ◽  
Jun Li ◽  
Ridge A. Sibold ◽  
Wing F. Ng ◽  
...  

This paper presents a detailed experimental and numerical study on the effects of upstream step geometry on the endwall secondary flow and heat transfer in a transonic linear turbine vane passage with axisymmetric converging endwalls. The upstream step geometry represents the misalignment between the combustor exit and the nozzle guide vane endwall. The experimental measurements were performed in a blowdown wind tunnel with an exit Mach number of 0.85 and an exit Re of 1.5×106. A high freestream turbulence level of 16% was set at the inlet, which represents the typical turbulence conditions in a gas turbine engine. Two upstream step geometries were tested for the same vane profile: a baseline configuration with a gap located 0.88Cx (43.8 mm) upstream of the vane leading edge (upstream step height = 0 mm) and a misaligned configuration with a backward-facing step located just before the gap at 0.88Cx (43.8 mm) upstream of the vane leading edge (step height = 4.45% span). The endwall temperature history was measured using transient infrared thermography, from which the endwall thermal load distribution, namely, Nusselt number, was derived. This paper also presents a comparison with computational fluid dynamics (CFD) predictions performed by solving the steady-state Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes with Reynolds stress model using the commercial CFD solver ansysfluent v.15. The CFD simulations were conducted at a range of different upstream step geometries: three forward-facing (upstream step geometries with step heights from −5.25% to 0% span), and five backward-facing, upstream step geometries (step heights from 0% to 6.56% span). These CFD results were used to highlight the link between heat transfer patterns and the secondary flow structures and explain the effects of upstream step geometry. Experimental and numerical results indicate that the backward-facing upstream step geometry will significantly enlarge the high thermal load region and result in an obvious increase (up to 140%) in the heat transfer coefficient (HTC) level, especially for arched regions around the vane leading edge. However, the forward-facing upstream geometry will modestly shrink the high thermal load region and reduce the HTC (by ∼10% to 40% decrease), especially for the suction side regions near the vane leading edge. The aerodynamic loss appears to have a slight increase (0.3–1.3%) because of the forward-facing upstream step geometry but is slightly reduced (by 0.1–0.3%) by the presence of the backward upstream step geometry.


Author(s):  
Neil W. Harvey ◽  
Martin G. Rose ◽  
John Coupland ◽  
Terry Jones

A 3-D steady viscous finite volume pressure correction method for the solution of the Reynolds averaged Navier-Stokes equations has been used to calculate the heat transfer rates on the end walls of a modern High Pressure Turbine first stage stator. Surface heat transfer rates have been calculated at three conditions and compared with measurements made on a model of the vane tested in annular cascade in the Isentropic Light Piston Facility at DERA, Pyestock. The NGV Mach numbers, Reynolds numbers and geometry are fully representative of engine conditions. Design condition data has previously been presented by Harvey and Jones (1990). Off-design data is presented here for the first time. In the areas of highest heat transfer the calculated heat transfer rates are shown to be within 20% of the measured values at all three conditions. Particular emphasis is placed on the use of wall functions in the calculations with which relatively coarse grids (of around 140,000 nodes) can be used to keep computational run times sufficiently low for engine design purposes.


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.


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