scholarly journals Pressure Drop Distribution in a Rotating Rectangular Channel With One Ribbed Surface

Author(s):  
S. V. Prabhu ◽  
R. P. Vedula

A modified geometry for the internal cooling passages of a gas turbine rotor blade is suggested here. In this modified geometry, the Coriolis force induced enhanced heat transfer coefficients are experienced by both the coolant channel walls adjacent to the blade pressure and blade suction surfaces. This is made possible by permitting the flow to have a radially outward and a radially inward direction at different locations along the blade thickness at a given chordwise location. However, the flow geometry is complex and the corresponding pressure losses are also likely to be larger. The present investigation is a preliminary study of the pressure drop characteristics for the modified channel suggested above and the simplest case of a straight channel with ribs on only one surface is reported here. The pressure drop in a rectangular cross-sectioned duct with an aspect ratio of 2.0 rotating about an axis normal to the free-stream direction in the presence of rib turbulators glued on one of the surfaces of the test section with ribs normal to the flow direction is measured. The study has been conducted for Reynolds number varying from 10000–17000 and the rotation number varying from 0–0.21. Experiments were carried out for various pitch-to-rib height ratios (P/e) of 3, 5, 7.5 & 10 with a constant rib height-to-hydraulic diameter ratio (e/D) of 0.15. A significant increase of the friction factor is observed when the ribbed surface is the coolant channel trailing (pressure) surface in the presence of rotation. The highest friction factor is observed in a channel with a P/e ratio of 5 which would imply that there could be a significant increase in the heat transfer coefficient for this configuration. A pitch-to-height ratio of about 10, which is the most preferred choice for a stationary configuration, no longer appears to be the optimum in the presence of rotation.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Izzet Sahin ◽  
I-Lun Chen ◽  
Lesley M. Wright ◽  
Je-Chin Han ◽  
Hongzhou Xu ◽  
...  

Abstract A wide variety of pin-fins have been used to enhance heat transfer in internal cooling channels. However, due to their large blockage in the flow direction, they result in an undesirable high pressure drop. This experimental study aims to reduce pressure drop while increasing the heat transfer surface area by utilizing strip-fins in converging internal cooling channels. The channel is designed with a trapezoidal cross-section, converges in both transverse and longitudinal directions, and is also skewed β = 120° with respect to the direction of rotation in order to model a trailing edge cooling channel. Only the leading and trailing surfaces of the channel are instrumented, and each surface is divided into eighteen isolated copper plates to measure the regionally averaged heat transfer coefficient. Utilizing pressure taps at the inlet and outlet of the channel, the pressure drop is obtained. Three staggered arrays of strip-fins are investigated: one full height configuration and two partial fin height arrangements (Sz = 2mm and 1mm). In all cases, the strip fins are 2mm wide (W) and 10mm long (Lf) in the flow direction. The fins are spaced such that Sy/Lf = 1 in the streamwise direction. However, due to the convergence the spanwise spacing Sx/W, was varied from 8 to 6.2 along the channel. The rotation number of the channel varied up to 0.21 by ranging the inlet Reynolds number from 10,000 to 40,000 and rotation speed from 0 to 300rpm. It is found that the full height strip-fin channel results in a more non-uniform spanwise heat transfer distribution than the partial height strip-fin channel. Both trailing and leading surface heat transfer coefficients are enhanced under rotation conditions. The 2mm height partial strip-fin channel provided the best thermal performance, and it is comparable to the performance of the converging channels with partial length circular pins. The strip-fin channel can be a design option when the pressure drop penalty is a major concern.


Author(s):  
Sam Ghazi-Hesami ◽  
Dylan Wise ◽  
Keith Taylor ◽  
Peter Ireland ◽  
Étienne Robert

Abstract Turbulators are a promising avenue to enhance heat transfer in a wide variety of applications. An experimental and numerical investigation of heat transfer and pressure drop of a broken V (chevron) turbulator is presented at Reynolds numbers ranging from approximately 300,000 to 900,000 in a rectangular channel with an aspect ratio (width/height) of 1.29. The rib height is 3% of the channel hydraulic diameter while the rib spacing to rib height ratio is fixed at 10. Heat transfer measurements are performed on the flat surface between ribs using transient liquid crystal thermography. The experimental results reveal a significant increase of the heat transfer and friction factor of the ribbed surface compared to a smooth channel. Both parameters increase with Reynolds number, with a heat transfer enhancement ratio of up to 2.15 (relative to a smooth channel) and a friction factor ratio of up to 6.32 over the investigated Reynolds number range. Complementary CFD RANS (Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes) simulations are performed with the κ-ω SST turbulence model in ANSYS Fluent® 17.1, and the numerical estimates are compared against the experimental data. The results reveal that the discrepancy between the experimentally measured area averaged Nusselt number and the numerical estimates increases from approximately 3% to 13% with increasing Reynolds number from 339,000 to 917,000. The numerical estimates indicate turbulators enhance heat transfer by interrupting the boundary layer as well as increasing near surface turbulent kinetic energy and mixing.


Author(s):  
Andrew F Chen ◽  
Chao-Cheng Shiau ◽  
Je-Chin Han ◽  
Robert Krewinkel

Varying aspect ratio (AR) channels are found in modern gas turbine airfoils for internal cooling purposes. Corresponding experimental data are needed in understanding and assisting the design of advanced cooling systems. The present study features a two-pass rectangular channel with an AR = 4:1 in the first pass with the radial outward flow and an AR = 2:1 in the second pass with the radial inward flow after a 180 deg tip turn. Effects of rib coverage near the tip region are investigated using profiled 45 deg ribs (P/e = 10, e/Dh ≈ 0.11, parallel and in-line) with three different configurations: less coverage, medium coverage, and full coverage. The Reynolds number (Re) ranges from 10,000 to 70,000 in the first passage. The highest rotation number achieved was Ro = 0.39 in the first passage and 0.16 in the second passage. Heat transfer coefficients on the internal surfaces were obtained by the regionally averaged copper plate method. The results showed that the rotation effects on both heat transfer and pressure loss coefficient are reduced with an increased rib coverage in the tip turn region. Different rib coverage upstream of the tip turn significantly changes the heat transfer in the turn portion. Heat transfer reduction (up to −27%) on the tip wall was seen at lower Ro. Dependence on the Reynolds number can be seen for this particular design. The combined geometric, rib coverage, and rotation effects should be taken into consideration in the internal cooling design.


2019 ◽  
Vol 141 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew F Chen ◽  
Chao-Cheng Shiau ◽  
Je-Chin Han ◽  
Robert Krewinkel

The present study features a two-pass rectangular channel with an aspect ratio (AR) = 4:1 in the first pass and an AR = 2:1 in the second pass after a 180-deg tip turn. In addition to the smooth-wall case, ribs with a profiled cross section are placed at 60 deg to the flow direction on both the leading and trailing surfaces in both passages (P/e = 10, e/Dh ∼ 0.11, parallel and in-line). Regionally averaged heat transfer measurement method was used to obtain the heat transfer coefficients on all internal surfaces. The Reynolds number (Re) ranges from 10,000 to 70,000 in the first passage, and the rotational speed ranges from 0 to 400 rpm. Under pressurized condition (570 kPa), the highest rotation number achieved was Ro = 0.39 in the first passage and 0.16 in the second passage. The results showed that the turn-induced secondary flows are reduced in an accelerating flow. The effects of rotation on heat transfer are generally weakened in the ribbed case than the smooth case. Significant heat transfer reduction (∼30%) on the tip wall was seen in both the smooth and ribbed cases under rotating condition. Overall pressure penalty was reduced for the ribbed case under rotation. Reynolds number effect was found noticeable in the current study. The heat transfer and pressure drop characteristics are sensitive to the geometrical design of the channel and should be taken into account in the design process.


Author(s):  
Eric D. Truong ◽  
Erfan Rasouli ◽  
Vinod Narayanan

A combined experimental and computational fluid dynamics study of single-phase liquid nitrogen flow through a microscale pin-fin heat sink is presented. Such cryogenic heat sinks find use in applications such as high performance computing and spacecraft thermal management. A circular pin fin heat sink in diameter 5 cm and 250 micrometers in depth was studied herein. Unique features of the heat sink included its variable cross sectional area in the flow direction, variable pin diameters, as well as a circumferential distribution of fluid into the pin fin region. The stainless steel heat sink was fabricated using chemical etching and diffusion bonding. Experimental results indicate that the heat transfer coefficients were relatively unchanged around 2600 W/m2-K for flow rates ranging from 2–4 g/s while the pressure drop increased monotonically with the flow rate. None of the existing correlations in literature on cross flow over a tube bank or micro pin fin heat sinks were able to predict the experimental pressure drop and heat transfer characteristics. However, three dimensional simulations performed using ANSYS Fluent showed reasonable (∼7 percent difference) agreement in the average heat transfer coefficients between experiments and CFD simulations.


Author(s):  
Metapun Nuntakulamarat ◽  
Chao-Cheng Shiau ◽  
Je-Chin Han

Abstract This paper focuses on the measurements of heat transfer enhancement and pressure drop of different pin or fin configurations in a high aspect ratio (AR = 9.57/1.2) channel. Two different pin-fin shapes including circular pins and strip fins were studied. Different pin-fin spacings for circular pins (S/D = 2, 4) and strip fins (S/W = 8, 16) were investigated, respectively. In addition, the thickness effect of the strip fin was included in this study. The regionally averaged heat transfer measurement method was used to acquire the heat transfer coefficients on two opposite featured surfaces within the test channel. For each configuration, the tested Reynolds number was ranging from 20,000 to 80,000. The results indicate that the channel with circular pins has better heat transfer enhancement and higher pressure loss than their strip fins counterparts. However, the strip fins are considered better designs in terms of thermal performance. For the gas turbine designers aim at developing an improved internal cooling feature, this work demonstrates the great potential of the strip fins as a novel and effective cooling design compared with the conventional circular pins.


Author(s):  
Christophe Diette ◽  
Tony Arts ◽  
Olivier Sgarzi ◽  
Emmanuel Laroche

The flow behavior and heat transfer were measured in a large scale, high aspect ratio, turbine blade rib-roughened internal cooling channel. The ribs, installed on one wall, were inclined at 90 deg with respect to the main flow direction and generated a blockage of 20%. The rib corners were rounded to take into account manufacturing aspects. The bulk flow Reynolds number was 20,000. Pressure drop and velocity measurements were first conducted. Liquid crystal thermography was applied to quantify the heat transfer, not only along the ribbed and the smooth opposite walls but also on the rib itself. Numerical simulations were conducted with two flow solvers, IGG/FINE (Numeca) and MSD (ONERA) and compared with measurements. They also supported the analysis of the flow behavior. The influence of round-corner versus sharp edge ribs was numerically evaluated with IGG/FINE.


Author(s):  
M. Eifel ◽  
V. Caspary ◽  
H. Ho¨nen ◽  
P. Jeschke

This paper presents the effects of major geometrical modifications to the interior of a convection cooled gas turbine rotor blade. The analysis of the flow is performed experimentally with flow visualization via paint injection into water whereas the flow and the heat transfer are investigated numerically with Ansys CFX utilizing the SST turbulence model. Two sets of calculations are carried out, one under the same conditions as the experiments and another according to realistic hot gas conditions with conjugate heat transfer. The aim is to identify flow phenomena altering the heat transfer in the blade and to manipulate them in order to reduce the thermal load of the material. The operating point of the geometric base configuration is set to Re = 50,000 at the inlet while for the modified geometries the pressure ratio is held constant compared to the base. Flow structures and heat transfer conditions are evaluated and are linked to specific geometric features. Among several investigated configurations one could be identified that leads to a cooling effectiveness 15% larger compared to the base.


2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Srinath V. Ekkad ◽  
Hasan Nasir

Abstract Detailed heat transfer measurements are presented for a rectangular channel with dimples on one wall. Dimpled surfaces provide high heat transfer enhancement comparable to ribbed surfaces with reduced overall pressure drop. The heat transfer coefficients were measured using a transient liquid crystal technique. The effect of channel flow Reynolds number was investigated for a wide range from 10000 to 65000. The channel is a 25.4 mm × 101.6 mm (1” × 4”) rectangular cross-section with the dimples on one of the 101.6 mm wall. Heat transfer enhancement around three times that of a smooth channel were achieved for all flow conditions. The overall pressure drop through the dimpled section of the passage was also measured. The resulting thermal performance of the dimples surfaces is significantly higher compared to channels with protruding ribs.


2010 ◽  
Vol 133 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Eifel ◽  
V. Caspary ◽  
H. Hönen ◽  
P. Jeschke

This paper presents the effects of major geometrical modifications to the interior of a convection cooled gas turbine rotor blade. The analysis of the flow is performed experimentally with flow visualization via paint injection into water, whereas the flow and the heat transfer are investigated numerically with ANSYS CFX, utilizing the SST turbulence model. Two sets of calculations are carried out: one under the same conditions as the experiments and another according to realistic hot gas conditions with conjugate heat transfer. The aim is to identify flow phenomena altering the heat transfer in the blade and to manipulate them in order to reduce the thermal load of the material. The operating point of the geometric base configuration is set to Re=50,000 at the inlet while for the modified geometries, the pressure ratio is held constant compared with the base. Flow structures and heat transfer conditions are evaluated and are linked to specific geometric features. Among several investigated configurations one could be identified that leads to a cooling effectiveness 15% larger compared with the base.


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