An Experimental Study of Mist Film Cooling With Fan-Shaped Holes on an Extended Flat Plate: Part 1 — Heat Transfer

Author(s):  
Reda Ragab ◽  
Ting Wang

Motivated by the need to further improve film cooling in terms of both cooling effectiveness and coolant coverage area, the mist/air film cooling scheme is investigated through experiments using fan-shaped holes over an extended downstream length in this study. Both an existing wind tunnel and test facility, used in previous work, have been retrofitted. The first modification was extending the length of the flat plate test section to cover longer distances downstream of the injection holes, up to X/D = 100, in order to investigate whether mist cooling can be harnessed farther downstream where single-phase film cooling is not effective. The second modification was to incorporate a fan-shaped diffusion hole geometry in order to investigate whether mist can further enhance the film cooling performance of the already highly effective fan-shaped holes. A Phase Doppler Particle Analyzer (PDPA) system is employed to measure droplet size, velocity, and turbulence information. An infrared camera and thermocouples are both used for temperature measurements. Part 1 is focused on the heat transfer result on the wall, and Part 2 is focused on the two-phase droplet multiphase flow behavior. Three blowing ratios are investigated. The results show that, at low blowing ratios when the film is attached to the surface, the enhancement of the mist film cooling effectiveness, compared to the air-only case, on the centerline of the hole ranges from 40% in the near hole region to over 170% at X/D = 100. Due to the diffusive nature of the fan-shaped hole, the laterally-averaged enhancement is on par with that on the centerline. The significant enhancement over the extended downstream distance from X/D = 40–100 is attributed to the evaporation time needed to evaporate all of the droplets. Each droplet acts as a cooling sink and flies over a distance before it completely vaporizes. This “distributed cooling” characteristic allows controlled cooling by manipulating the size distribution of the water droplets to extend the cooling effects of the droplets farther downstream from the injection location. At higher blowing ratios, when the cooling film is lifted off from the surface, the cooling enhancement drops below 40%. Although the enhancement in the near hole region X/D < 40 is about 20% lower than that achieved by using the cylindrical holes, the magnitudes of the mist adiabatic film cooling effectiveness using fan-shaped holes are still much higher than those of the cylindrical holes.

2017 ◽  
Vol 140 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Reda Ragab ◽  
Ting Wang

Motivated by the need to further improve film cooling in terms of both cooling effectiveness and coolant coverage area, the mist/air film cooling scheme is investigated through experiments using fan-shaped holes over an extended downstream length in this study. Both an existing wind tunnel and test facility, used in previous work, have been retrofitted. The first modification was extending the length of the flat plate test section to cover longer distances downstream of the injection holes, up to X/D = 100, in order to investigate whether mist cooling can be harnessed farther downstream where single-phase film cooling is not effective. X represents the axial distance downstream of the cooling hole of diameter D. The second modification was to incorporate fan-shaped (diffusion) holes which are proven to have a higher film cooling efficiency, than cylindrical holes. The objective is to investigate whether mist can further enhance the film cooling performance of the already highly effective fan-shaped holes. A phase Doppler particle analyzer (PDPA) system is employed to measure the droplet size, velocity, and turbulence information. An infrared camera and thermocouples are both used for temperature measurements. Part I is focused on the heat transfer result on the wall. The results show that, at low blowing ratios when the film is attached to the surface, the enhancement of the mist film cooling effectiveness, compared to the air-only case, on the centerline of the hole ranges from 40% in the near hole region to over 170% at X/D = 100. Due to the diffusive nature of the fan-shaped hole, the laterally averaged enhancement is on par with that on the centerline. The significant enhancement over the extended downstream distance from X/D = 40–100 is attributed to the evaporation time needed to evaporate all of the droplets. Each droplet acts as a cooling sink and flies over a distance before it completely vaporizes. This “distributed cooling” characteristic allows the water droplets to extend the cooling effects farther downstream from the injection location. At higher blowing ratios, when the cooling film is lifted off from the surface, the cooling enhancement drops below 40%. Although the enhancement in the near hole region X/D < 40 is about 20% lower than that achieved by using the cylindrical holes, the magnitudes of the mist adiabatic film cooling effectiveness using fan-shaped holes are still much higher than those of the cylindrical holes. Part II of this study is focused on analyzing the two-phase droplet multiphase flow behavior to explain the fundamental physics involved in the mist film cooling.


2019 ◽  
Vol 141 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiaxu Yao ◽  
Jin Xu ◽  
Ke Zhang ◽  
Jiang Lei ◽  
Lesley M. Wright

The film cooling effectiveness distribution and its uniformity downstream of a row of film cooling holes on a flat plate are investigated by pressure sensitive paint (PSP) under different density ratios. Several hole geometries are studied, including streamwise cylindrical holes, compound-angled cylindrical holes, streamwise fan-shape holes, compound-angled fan-shape holes, and double-jet film-cooling (DJFC) holes. All of them have an inclination angle (θ) of 35 deg. The compound angle (β) is 45 deg. The fan-shape holes have a 10 deg expansion in the spanwise direction. For a fair comparison, the pitch is kept as 4d for the cylindrical and the fan-shape holes, and 8d for the DJFC holes. The uniformity of effectiveness distribution is described by a new parameter (Lateral-Uniformity, LU) defined in this paper. The effects of density ratios (DR = 1.0, 1.5 and 2.5) on the film-cooling effectiveness and its uniformity are focused. Differences among geometries and effects of blowing ratios (M = 0.5, 1.0, 1.5, and 2.0) are also considered. The results show that at higher density ratios, the lateral spread of the discrete-hole geometries (i.e., the cylindrical and the fan-shape holes) is enhanced, while the DJFC holes is more advantageous in film-cooling effectiveness. Mostly, a higher lateral-uniformity is obtained at DR = 2.5 due to better coolant coverage and enhanced lateral spread, but the effects of the density ratio on the lateral-uniformity are not monotonic in some cases. Utilizing the compound angle configuration leads to an increased lateral-uniformity due to a stronger spanwise motion of the jet. Generally, with a higher blowing ratio, the lateral-uniformity of the discrete-hole geometries decreases due to narrower traces, while that of the DJFC holes increases due to a stronger spanwise movement.


Author(s):  
D. H. Zhang ◽  
L. Sun ◽  
Q. Y. Chen ◽  
M. Lin ◽  
M. Zeng ◽  
...  

Embedding a row of typical cylindrical holes in a transverse slot can improve the cooling performance. Rectangular slots can increase the cooling effectiveness but is at the cost of decreasing of discharge coefficients. An experiment is conducted to examine the effects of an overlying transverse inclined trench on the film cooling performance of axial holes. Four different trench configurations are tested including the baseline inclined cylindrical holes. The influence of the geometry of the upstream lip of the exit trench and the geometry of the inlet trench on cooling performance is examined. Detailed film cooling effectiveness and heat transfer coefficients are obtained separately using the steady state IR thermography technique. The discharge coefficients are also acquired to evaluate the aerodynamic performance of different hole configurations. The results show that the film cooling holes with both ends embedded in slots can provide higher film cooling effectiveness and lower heat transfer coefficients; it also can provide higher discharge coefficients whilst retaining the mechanical strength of a row of discrete holes. The cooling performance and the aerodynamic performance of the holes with both ends embedded in inclined slots are superior to the holes with only exit trenched. To a certain extent, the configuration of the upstream lip of the exit trench affects the cooling performance of the downstream of the trench. The filleting for the film hole inlet avail the improvement of the cooling effect, but not for the film hole outlet. Comparing film cooling with embedded holes to unembedded holes, the overall heat flux ratio shows that the film holes with both ends embedded in slots and filleting for the film hole inlet can produce the highest heat flux reduction.


2019 ◽  
Vol 141 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nian Wang ◽  
Mingjie Zhang ◽  
Chao-Cheng Shiau ◽  
Je-Chin Han

This study investigates the effects of blowing ratio, density ratio, and spanwise pitch on the flat plate film cooling from two rows of compound angled cylindrical holes. Two arrangements of two-row compound angled cylindrical holes are tested: (a) the first row and the second row are oriented in staggered and same compound angled direction (β = +45 deg for the first row and +45 deg for the second row); (b) the first row and the second row are oriented in inline and opposite direction (β = +45 deg for the first row and −45 deg for the second row). The cooling hole is 4 mm in diameter with an inclined angle of 30 deg. The streamwise row-to-row spacing is fixed at 3d, and the spanwise hole-to-hole (p) is varying from 4d, 6d to 8d for both designs. The film cooling effectiveness measurements were performed in a low-speed wind tunnel in which the turbulence intensity is kept at 6%. There are 36 cases for each design including four blowing ratios (M = 0.5, 1.0, 1.5, and 2.0), three density ratios (DR = 1.0, 1.5, and 2.0), and three hole-to-hole spacing (p/d = 4, 6, and 8). The detailed film cooling effectiveness distributions were obtained by using the steady-state pressure-sensitive paint (PSP) technique. The spanwise-averaged cooling effectiveness are compared over the range of flow parameters. Some interesting observations are discovered including blowing ratio effect strongly depending on geometric design; staggered arrangement of the hole with same orientation does not yield better effectiveness at higher blowing ratio. Currently, film cooling effectiveness correlation of two-row compound angled cylindrical holes is not available, so this study developed the correlations for the inline arrangement of holes with opposing angles and the staggered arrangement of holes with same angles. The results and correlations are expected to provide useful information for the two-row flat plate film cooling analysis.


Author(s):  
G. E. Andrews ◽  
M. L. Gupta ◽  
M. C. Mkpadi

The development of a test facility for investigating full coverage discrete hole wall cooling for gas turbine combustion chamber wall cooling is described. A low temperature test condition of 750K mainstream temperature and 300K coolant temperature was used to investigate the influence of coolant flow rate at a constant cross flow Mach number. Practical combustion conditions of 2100K combustor temperature and 700K coolant temperature are investigated to establish the validity of applying the low temperature results to practical conditions. For both situations a heat balance programme, taking into account the heat transfer within the wall was used to compute the film heat transfer coefficients. The mixing of the coolant air with the mainstream gases was studied through boundary layer temperature and CO2 profiles. It was shown that entrainment of hot flame gases between the injection holes resulted in a very low ‘adiabatic’ film cooling effectiveness.


Author(s):  
Lin Ye ◽  
Cun-liang Liu ◽  
Hui-ren Zhu ◽  
Jian-xia Luo ◽  
Ying-ni Zhai

This paper presents an experimental and numerical investigation on the film cooling with different coolant feeding channel structures. Two ribbed cross-flow channels with rib-orientation of 135° and 45° respectively and the plenum coolant channel have been studied and compared to find out the effect of rib orientation on the film cooling performances of cylindrical holes. The film cooling effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient were measured by the transient heat transfer measurement technique with narrow-band thermochromic liquid crystal. Numerical simulations with realizable k-ε turbulence model were also performed to analyze the flow mechanism. The results show that the coolant channel structure has a notable effect on the flow structure of film jet which is the most significant mechanism affecting the film cooling performance. Generally, film cooling cases fed with ribbed cross-flow channels have asymmetric counter-rotating vortex structures and related asymmetric temperature distributions, which make the film cooling effectiveness and the heat transfer coefficient distributions asymmetric to the hole centerline. The discharge coefficient of the 45° rib case is the lowest among the three cases under all the blowing ratios. And the plenum case has higher discharge coefficient than the 135° rib case under low blowing ratio. With the increase of blowing ratio, the discharge coefficient of the 135° rib case gets larger than the plenum case gradually, because the vortex in the upper half region of the coolant channel rotates in the same direction with the film hole inclination direction and makes the jet easy to flow into the film hole in the 135° rib case.


Author(s):  
Dong Ho Rhee ◽  
Youn Seok Lee ◽  
Hyung Hee Cho

An experimental study has been conducted to measure the local film-cooling effectiveness and the heat transfer coefficient for a single row of rectangular-shaped holes. The holes have a 35° inclination angle with 3 hole diameter spacing of rectangular cross-sections. Four different cooling hole shapes such as a straight rectangular hole, a rectangular hole with laterally expanded exit, a circular hole and a two-dimensional slot are tested. The rectangular cross-section has the aspect ratio of 2 at the hole inlet with the hydraulic diameter of 10 mm. The area ratio of the exit to the hole inlet is 1.8 for the rectangular hole with expanded exit, which is similar to a two-dimensional slot. A thermochromic liquid crystals technique is applied to determine adiabatic film cooling effectiveness values and heat transfer coefficients on the test surface. Both film cooling effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient are measured for various blowing rates and compared with the results of the cylindrical holes and the two-dimensional slot. The flow patterns inside and downstream of holes are calculated numerically by a commercial package. The results show that the rectangular holes provide better performance than the cylindrical holes. For the rectangular holes with laterally expanded exit, the penetration of jet is reduced significantly, and the higher and more uniform cooling performance is obtained even at relatively high blowing rates. The reason is that the rectangular hole with expanded exit reduces momentum of coolant and promotes the lateral spreading like a two-dimensional slot.


Author(s):  
U. Drost ◽  
A. Bölcs ◽  
A. Hoffs

The transient liquid crystal technique has been used to measure film cooling effectiveness and heat transfer on a flat plate in a free jet, and a turbine airfoil in a linear cascade. A multiple-test regression method has been developed for the data reduction, considering a transient coolant temperature evolution. Flat plate film cooling was investigated for a single row of 35° inclined holes at Mach numbers of 0.3 and 0.5, and two turbulence intensities. Downstream of injection heat transfer was increased in-between the holes due to enhanced turbulence caused by the shearing of the coolant and the mainstream. At higher turbulence intensity the range of blowing ratios was broader as lift-off was delayed. Rim cooling measurements on the airfoil were conducted at engine-representative flow conditions. A maximum effectiveness of 0.3 behind injection was observed on the suction side, with slightly higher values for a double row in comparison to a single row configuration. Due to a high coolant momentum, the effectiveness on the pressure side was very low at about 0.05 for a single row configuration.


Author(s):  
Alok Dhungel ◽  
Yiping Lu ◽  
Wynn Phillips ◽  
Srinath V. Ekkad ◽  
James Heidmann

The primary focus of this paper is to study the film cooling performance for a row of cylindrical holes each supplemented with two symmetrical anti vortex holes which branch out from the main holes. The anti-vortex design was originally developed at NASA-Glenn Research Center by Dr. James Heidmann, co-author of this paper. This “anti-vortex” design is unique in that it requires only easily machinable round holes, unlike shaped film cooling holes and other advanced concepts. The hole design is intended to counteract the detrimental vorticity associated with standard circular cross-section film cooling holes. The geometry and orientation of the anti vortex holes greatly affect the cooling performance downstream, which is thoroughly investigated. By performing experiments at a single mainstream Reynolds number of 9683 based on the free stream velocity and film hole diameter at four different coolant-to-mainstream blowing ratio of 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2 and using the transient IR thermography technique, detailed film cooling effectiveness and heat transfer coefficients are obtained simultaneously from a single test. When the anti vortex holes are nearer to the primary film cooling holes and are developing from the base of the primary holes, better film cooling is accomplished as compared to other anti vortex hole orientations. When the anti vortex holes are laid back in the upstream region, film cooling diminishes considerably. Although an enhancement in heat transfer coefficient is seen in cases with high film cooling effectiveness, the overall heat flux ratio as compared to standard cylindrical holes is much lower. Thus cases with anti vortex holes placed near the main holes certainly show promising results.


Author(s):  
Devaraj K

Abstract: The present computational study involves a flat plate subjected to combined effect of jet impingement and film cooling. A conjugate heat transfer model in conjunction with k-ω SST turbulence model is employed to study the turbulence effects. The effect of Reynolds number varying from 389 to 2140 on static temperature, Nusselt number and film cooling effectiveness has be discussed for the blowing ratios of 0.6, 0.8, 1.0. The variation in the size of vortices formed on the impinging surface with Reynolds number is studied. It has been observed that the local Nusselt number shows a rising trend with the increase in Reynolds number, while the static temperatures follow the downfall in its values. As a result, an enhancement in the effectiveness is observed, which is credited to the capabilities of combined impingement and film cooling. At Reynolds number of 972, the coolant jet is found to be attached to the surface, for this condition the heat transfer phenomena for blowing ratios of 0.6, 0.8, 1.0, 1.2, 1.6, 2.0, 2.4, 2.6 are studied to understand the flow distribution on the plate surface. Keywords: Jet impingement, film cooling, effectiveness, conjugate heat transfer


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