Experimental Investigations on Cooling Air Ejection at a Straight Turbine Cascade Using PIV and QLS

Author(s):  
Oliver Freund ◽  
Hans-Juergen Rehder ◽  
Philipp Schaefer ◽  
Ingo Roehle

Due to the high turbine inlet temperatures in modern aircraft engines the adoption of several cooling techniques in the first turbine blade rows is state of the art. For this reason the influence of cooling air ejection on the main flow is in the interest of scientists. In this paper experimental and numerical investigations on the trailing edge cooling air ejection at a stator profile are presented. All measurements are performed at the Straight Cascade Wind tunnel Go¨ttingen. To verify the influence of the cooling air flow on the flow field, the velocity field is measured by Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV). The development of the cooling air concentration is analyzed by utilizing the Quantitative Light Sheet (QLS) technique. For validation purposes the QLS results are compared to CO2 concentration measurements. Both measurement techniques are in good agreement with each other. One of the most important advantages of PIV and QLS is the possibility of combining them at the same test bed due to the identical experimental setup. The experimental investigations are supported by numerical simulations based on the numerical code TRACE. Both the numerical results as well as the experimental results prove the reduction of the trailing edge shock by increasing the coolant mass flow ratio.

Author(s):  
Vladimir Vassiliev ◽  
Andrey Granovskiy ◽  
Nikolai Lomakin

Modern gas turbines operate at high temperature, which exceed the endurance limit of material, and therefore the turbines components have to be cooled by the air taken from the compressor. The cooling providing positive impact on lifetime of GT has negative impact on its performance. Firstly because the cooling air bypasses combustor and its capacity is not fully utilized. This effect is usually accounted in thermodynamic calculations of gas turbine. Secondly the injection of cooling air in the turbine disturbs the main flow, and may lead to increased losses. In addition cooling requirements lead to limitation on the blade shape (e.g. limiting the minimal size of trailing edge) and thereby negatively affect the losses. These effects were already discussed in the literature, but further investigations for better understanding of flow physics and design improvement are still useful. There is also additional impact of cooling - impact of heat transfer on near wall boundary layer and coolant properties. This effect was not sufficiently discussed in the open literature, where quite often the walls are considered as adiabatic. The paper consists of two main parts. In the first part the results of experimental investigations of several linear cascades with and without trailing edge injection are presented and discussed. In the second part the results of detailed numerical investigations of one of these cascades are presented. One set of calculations were done at the test rig conditions for comparison with measured data. These calculations were used for validation of CFD model. The next sets of calculations were done for engine typical conditions, including the simulation of blade material temperature. The calculations were performed for adiabatic wall and for surface with heat transfer, including the impact of heat transfer on coolant injection. This analysis provides split of losses caused by different factors, and offers the opportunities for efficiency and lifetime improvements of real engine designs/upgrades.


2016 ◽  
Vol 120 (1234) ◽  
pp. 1917-1931 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Bakunowicz ◽  
R. Meyer

ABSTRACTFlight testing is both vital for collecting data for aeronautic research and at the same time fascinating for its contributors. Taking a glider as a versatile test bed example, this paper presents a transnational measurement campaign within the framework of a collaborative project funded by the European Commission. This project Advanced In-Flight Measurement Techniques 2 (AIM²) is a follow-up of Advanced In-Flight Measurement Techniques (AIM) and dedicated to developing and enhancing promising optical metrology for various flight test applications up to an industrial level.The Image Pattern Correlation Technique (IPCT) and infrared thermography (IRT) are two of these modern non-intrusive measurement methods that were further developed and applied to the glider test bed within the scope of AIM². Focusing on optical deformation measurements with IPCT the experimental setup, the flight testing and results are summarily discussed. Gliders are not commonly used flight test platforms, which is why this contribution concludes with some lessons learned in general and especially related to the presented application. The experience to be shared with the flight testing community addresses equipment preparation, data collection and processing as well as how to meet official requirements and perform test flight operations in a dense controlled airspace.


Author(s):  
Stefan Schmid ◽  
Rudi Kulenovic ◽  
Eckart Laurien

For the validation of empirical models to calculate leakage flow rates in through-wall cracks of piping, reliable experimental data are essential. In this context, the Leakage Flow (LF) test rig was built up at the IKE for measurements of leakage flow rates with reduced pressure (maximum 1 MPA) and temperature (maximum 170 °C) compared to real plant conditions. The design of the test rig enables experimental investigations of through-wall cracks with different geometries and orientations by means of circular blank sheets with integrated cracks which are installed in the tubular test section of the test rig. In the paper, the experimental LF set-up and used measurement techniques are explained in detail. Furthermore, first leakage flow measurement results for one through-wall crack geometry and different imposed fluid pressures at ambient temperature conditions are presented and discussed. As an additional aspect the experimental data are used for the determination of the flow resistance of the investigated leak channel. Finally, the experimental results are compared with numerical results of WinLeck calculations to prove specifically in WinLeck implemented numerical models.


Author(s):  
L. W. Soma ◽  
F. E. Ames ◽  
S. Acharya

The trailing edge of a vane is one of the most difficult areas to cool due to a narrowing flow path, high external heat transfer rates, and deteriorating external film cooling protection. Converging pedestal arrays are often used as a means to provide internal cooling in this region. The thermally induced stresses in the trailing edge region of these converging arrays have been known to cause failure in the pedestals of conventional solidity arrays. The present paper documents the heat transfer and pressure drop through two high solidity converging rounded diamond pedestal arrays. These arrays have a 45 percent pedestal solidity. One array which was tested has nine rows of pedestals with an exit area in the last row consistent with the convergence. The other array has eight rows with an expanded exit in the last row to enable a higher cooling air flow rate. The expanded exit of the eight row array allows a 30% increase in the coolant flow rate compared with the nine row array for the same pressure drop. Heat transfer levels correlate well based on local Reynolds numbers but fall slightly below non converging arrays. The pressure drop across the array naturally increases toward the trailing edge with the convergence of the flow passage. A portion of the cooling air pressure drop can be attributed to acceleration while a portion can be attributed to flow path losses. Detailed array static pressure measurements provide a means to develop a correlation for the prediction of pressure drop across the cooling channel. Measurements have been acquired over Reynolds numbers based on exit flow conditions and the characteristic pedestal length scale ranging from 5000 to over 70,000.


Author(s):  
Daniel Burdett ◽  
Chris Hambidge ◽  
Thomas Povey

Accurate assessment of nozzle guide vane (NGV) capacity is essential for understanding engine performance data, and to achieve accurate turbine stage matching. In accelerated engine development programmes in particular, accurate and early assessment of NGV capacity is a significant advantage. Whilst the capabilities of computational methods have improved rapidly in recent years, the accuracy of absolute capacity prediction capability is lower than experimental techniques by some margin. Thus, experimental measurement of NGV capacity is still regarded as an essential part of many engine programmes. The semi-transient capacity measurement technique, developed and refined at the University of Oxford over the last 10 years, allows rapid and accurate measurement of engine component (typically fully cooled NGVs) capacity at engine-representative conditions of Mach and Reynolds numbers and coolant-to-mainstream pressure ratio. The technique has been demonstrated to offer considerable advantages over traditional (industrial steady-state) techniques in terms of accuracy, time and operating cost. Since the original facility was constructed, the facility has been modularised to allow for rapid interchange of test vane modules, and the instrumentation has been optimised to drive down the uncertainty in NGV capacity. In this paper, these improvements are described in detail, and a detailed uncertainty analysis is presented of the original facility, the current facility, and a proposed future facility in which the uncertainty of the measurement has been driven down to a practical limit. The bias errors of the three facilities are determined to be ±0.535%, ± 0.495% and ±0.301%, respectively (to 95% confidence). The corresponding precision uncertainties are ±0.028%, ±0.025% and ±0.025%, respectively. The extremely low precision uncertainty in particular allows very small changes in capacity to be resolved. This, combined with rapid interchangeability of test modules, allows studies of the sensitivity of capacity to secondary influences with much greater flexibility than was previously possible. Consideration is also given to the definition of vane capacity in systems with several streams at different conditions of inlet total pressure and temperature. A typical high pressure (HP) NGV has three distinct streams: a mainstream flow; coolant flow ejected from film cooling holes (distributed over the vane surface); and trailing edge coolant ejection. Whilst it is helpful for the coolant mass flow rates and inlet temperatures to be included in the definition, only a relatively small difference arises from the way in which this is achieved. Several definitions appear to share similar usefulness in terms of their robustness to changing inlet conditions of individual streams, but the favoured definition offers the possibility of isolating sensitivities to key effects such as trailing edge coolant ejection. This is achieved by explicitly expressing vane capacity as a function of two controlling pressure ratios. The overall purpose of this paper is to review and analyse in detail the current state-of-the-art in gas turbine flow capacity measurement.


2019 ◽  
Vol 623 ◽  
pp. A167 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.-A. Martin-Drumel ◽  
K. L. K. Lee ◽  
A. Belloche ◽  
O. Zingsheim ◽  
S. Thorwirth ◽  
...  

Context. New laboratory investigations of the rotational spectrum of postulated astronomical species are essential to support the assignment and analysis of current astronomical surveys. In particular, considerable interest surrounds sulfur analogs of oxygen-containing interstellar molecules and their isomers. Aims. To enable reliable interstellar searches of vinyl mercaptan, the sulfur-containing analog to the astronomical species vinyl alcohol, we investigated its pure rotational spectrum at millimeter wavelengths. Methods. We extended the pure rotational investigation of the two isomers syn and anti vinyl mercaptan to the millimeter domain using a frequency-multiplication spectrometer. The species were produced by a radiofrequency discharge in 1,2-ethanedithiol. Additional transitions were remeasured in the centimeter band using Fourier-transform microwave spectroscopy to better determine rest frequencies of transitions with low-J and low-Ka values. Experimental investigations were supported by quantum chemical calculations on the energetics of both the [C2,H4,S] and [C2,H4,O] isomeric families. Interstellar searches for both syn and anti vinyl mercaptan as well as vinyl alcohol were performed in the EMoCA spectral line survey carried out toward Sgr B2(N2) with ALMA. Results. Highly accurate experimental frequencies (to better than 100 kHz accuracy) for both syn and anti isomers of vinyl mercaptan are measured up to 250 GHz; these deviate considerably from predictions based on extrapolation of previous microwave measurements. Reliable frequency predictions of the astronomically most interesting millimeter-wave lines for these two species can now be derived from the best-fit spectroscopic constants. From the energetic investigations, the four lowest singlet isomers of the [C2,H4,S] family are calculated to be nearly isoenergetic, which makes this family a fairly unique test bed for assessing possible reaction pathways. Upper limits for the column density of syn and anti vinyl mercaptan are derived toward the extremely molecule-rich star-forming region Sgr B2(N2) enabling comparison with selected complex organic molecules.


Lubricants ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maximilian Prölß ◽  
Hubert Schwarze ◽  
Thomas Hagemann ◽  
Philipp Zemella ◽  
Philipp Winking

This paper focuses on the operating behavior of journal bearings for industrial machinery application during run-ups. For this purpose, a numerical simulation code that is based on a two-dimensional extended and generalized Reynolds equation and a full three-dimensional energy equation, was advanced by a theoretical model considering the effects of mixed friction and warming of journal components during start-up. The mixed friction routine contained the elastic half-spaces model proposed by Boussinesq, which considers the influence of rough surfaces by implementing flow factors and calculates additional stiffness and dissipation in areas with solid interactions. Furthermore, a transient term was added in the energy equation to consider the thermal inertia of journal, and bearing to ensure a realistic heating during run-ups. Results of the prediction were compared to experimental data taken from a special test rig built up for validation procedures. Besides the conventional sensors for temperature, oil flow, and relative motion between shaft and stator, a contact voltage measurement was installed to determine the intensity of mixed friction. The evaluation of experimental data by Stribeck curves, based on a shaft torsion measurement, indicated a significant influence of run-up time on frictional moment. The friction coefficient of the rotor bearing system was strongly influenced by the run-up time. A short run-up time reduced the frictional coefficient in the mixed lubrication regime while the opposite behavior was observed in the hydrodynamic lubrication regime. The numerical code predicted these tendencies in good agreement with experimental data, however, only if the transient energy model was applied.


2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Giovanna Barigozzi ◽  
Antonio Perdichizzi ◽  
Silvia Ravelli

Tests on a specifically designed linear nozzle guide vane cascade with trailing edge coolant ejection were carried out to investigate the influence of trailing edge bleeding on both aerodynamic and thermal performance. The cascade is composed of six vanes with a profile typical of a high pressure turbine stage. The trailing edge cooling features a pressure side cutback with film cooling slots, stiffened by evenly spaced ribs in an inline configuration. Cooling air is ejected not only through the slots but also through two rows of cooling holes placed on the pressure side, upstream of the cutback. The cascade was tested for different isentropic exit Mach numbers, ranging from M2is = 0.2 to M2is = 0.6, while varying the coolant to mainstream mass flow ratio MFR up to 2.8%. The momentum boundary layer behavior at a location close to the trailing edge, on the pressure side, was assessed by means of laser Doppler measurements. Cases with and without coolant ejection allowed us to identify the contribution of the coolant to the off the wall velocity profile. Thermochromic liquid crystals (TLC) were used to map the adiabatic film cooling effectiveness on the pressure side cooled region. As expected, the cutback effect on cooling effectiveness, compared to the other cooling rows, was dominant.


Author(s):  
Weilong Wu ◽  
Huazhao Xu ◽  
Jianhua Wang ◽  
Xiangyu Wu ◽  
Lei Wang

Abstract This paper numerically investigated the influences of pin-fin size and layout on the flow characteristics of cooling air in the trailing edge of a real low pressure turbine blade. The discussion was given first for the baseline model without pin fins (denoted as M0) under a turbine design condition and two off design conditions. Then a comparison of the flow fields in the turbine blade especially in the trailing edge region was performed with three more trailing edge models, with the purpose of discovering the benefits of using pin fin configurations in a real low pressure turbine blade. The other three models (denoted as M1, M2, M3) have pin fins in different diameters and arrangements. The M1 model has a row of 13 pin fins with a diameter of 2mm, and the M2 and M3 models have two rows of pin fins arranged in a staggered pattern with a diameter of 1.2mm. Compared to the baseline model M0, it is shown that an addition of pin fin configurations helps greatly to improve cooling flow distributions and to mitigate the blockage of coolant in trailing slots. Meanwhile, the adoption of pin fins has not only affected significantly the flow field in the trailing passage but also has moderately affected flow fields in the middle and forward cooling passages. Increasing pressure ratio can increase total mass flow rate with no significant change in flow patterns. The baseline blade Model M0 shows a high value of 6 for a friction loss related performance function at the turbine design condition. However, only a moderate increase in the value of the performance function is discovered for all the three blades with pin fins.


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