Assessment of RANS Against LES for the Aero-Thermal Behavior of High Pressure Turbine Stages Under Realistic Inlet Conditions

Author(s):  
Stefano Vagnoli ◽  
Tom Verstraete ◽  
Charlie Koupper ◽  
Guillaume Bonneau

Modern Lean Burn combustors generate a complex field at the High Pressure turbine (HPT) inlet, characterized by non-uniform velocity and temperature distributions, together with very high turbulence levels (up to 25%). For these extreme conditions, classical numerical methods employed for the HPT design, such as Reynolds Averaged Navier Stokes (RANS) simulation, suffer from a lack of validation. This leads to a reduced confidence in predicting the combustor-turbine interactions, which requires to use extra safety margins, to the detriment of the overall engine performance. Within the European FACTOR project, a 360° non reactive combustor simulator and a 1.5 HPT stage are designed to get more insight into the mutual interaction of these two components. A first experimental and numerical campaign has demonstrated the potential of Large Eddy Simulations (LES) to accurately reproduce the turbulent flow field development at the combustor outlet. The aim of the present paper is to exploit the accuracy of LES to validate less time-consuming RANS models in predicting the hot streak migration in the turbine stage. In this sense, LES results are used as a reference to discriminate the different RANS simulations in terms of turbulence modeling and aerothermal predictions. The current investigations clearly indicate that turbulence and hot streak diffusion within the HPT are strongly linked. In this sense, the choice of the RANS turbulence model and the inlet turbulent conditions plays a major role in modeling the thermal behavior for the stator and rotor blades.

Author(s):  
Simon Gövert ◽  
Federica Ferraro ◽  
Alexander Krumme ◽  
Clemens Buske ◽  
Marc Tegeler ◽  
...  

Abstract Reducing the uncertainties in the prediction of turbine inlet conditions is a crucial aspect to improve aero engine designs and further increase engine efficiencies. To meet constantly stricter emission regulations, lean burn combustion could play a key role for future engine designs. However, these combustion systems are characterized by significant swirl for flame stabilization and reduced cooling air mass flows. As a result, substantial spatial and transient variations of the turbine inlet conditions are encountered. To investigate the effect of the combustor on the high pressure turbine, a rotating cooled transonic high-pressure configuration has been designed and investigated experimentally at the DLR turbine test facility ‘NG-Turb’ in Göttingen, Germany. It is a rotating full annular 1.5 stage turbine configuration which is coupled to a combustor simulator. The combustor simulator is designed to create turbine inlet conditions which are hydrodynamically representative for a lean-burn aero engine. A detailed description of the test rig and its instrumentation as well as a discussion of the measurement results is presented in part I of this paper. Part II focuses on numerical modeling of the test rig to further extend the understanding of the measurement results. Integrated simulations of the configuration including combustor simulator and nozzle guide vanes are performed for leading edge and passage clocking position and the effect on the hot streak migration is discussed. The simulation and experimental results at the combustor-turbine interface are compared showing a good overall agreement. The relevant flow features are correctly predicted in the simulations, proving the suitability of the numerical model for application to integrated combustor-turbine interaction analysis.


Author(s):  
Qingjun Zhao ◽  
Fei Tang ◽  
Huishe Wang ◽  
Jianyi Du ◽  
Xiaolu Zhao ◽  
...  

In order to explore the influence of hot streak temperature ratio on low pressure stage of a Vaneless Counter-Rotating Turbine, three-dimensional multiblade row unsteady Navier-Stokes simulations have been performed. The predicted results show that hot streaks are not mixed out by the time they reach the exit of the high pressure turbine rotor. The separation of colder and hotter fluids is observed at the inlet of the low pressure turbine rotor. After making interactions with the inner-extending shock wave and outer-extending shock wave in the high pressure turbine rotor, the hotter fluid migrates towards the pressure surface of the low pressure turbine rotor, and the most of colder fluid migrates to the suction surface of the low pressure turbine rotor. The migrating characteristics of the hot streaks are predominated by the secondary flow in the low pressure turbine rotor. The effect of buoyancy on the hotter fluid is very weak in the low pressure turbine rotor. The results also indicate that the secondary flow intensifies in the low pressure turbine rotor when the hot streak temperature ratio is increased. The effects of the hot streak temperature ratio on the relative Mach number and the relative flow angle at the inlet of the low pressure turbine rotor are very remarkable. The isentropic efficiency of the Vaneless Counter-Rotating Turbine decreases as the hot streak temperature ratio is increased.


Author(s):  
Chaoshan Hou ◽  
Hu Wu

The flow leaving the high pressure turbine should be guided to the low pressure turbine by an annular diffuser, which is called as the intermediate turbine duct. Flow separation, which would result in secondary flow and cause great flow loss, is easily induced by the negative pressure gradient inside the duct. And such non-uniform flow field would also affect the inlet conditions of the low pressure turbine, resulting in efficiency reduction of low pressure turbine. Highly efficient intermediate turbine duct cannot be designed without considering the effects of the rotating row of the high pressure turbine. A typical turbine model is simulated by commercial computational fluid dynamics method. This model is used to validate the accuracy and reliability of the selected numerical method by comparing the numerical results with the experimental results. An intermediate turbine duct with eight struts has been designed initially downstream of an existing high pressure turbine. On the basis of the original design, the main purpose of this paper is to reduce the net aerodynamic load on the strut surface and thus minimize the overall duct loss. Full three-dimensional inverse method is applied to the redesign of the struts. It is revealed that the duct with new struts after inverse design has an improved performance as compared with the original one.


Author(s):  
Tommaso Bacci ◽  
Tommaso Lenzi ◽  
Alessio Picchi ◽  
Lorenzo Mazzei ◽  
Bruno Facchini

Modern lean burn aero-engine combustors make use of relevant swirl degrees for flame stabilization. Moreover, important temperature distortions are generated, in tangential and radial directions, due to discrete fuel injection and liner cooling flows respectively. At the same time, more efficient devices are employed for liner cooling and a less intense mixing with the mainstream occurs. As a result, aggressive swirl fields, high turbulence intensities, and strong hot streaks are achieved at the turbine inlet. In order to understand combustor-turbine flow field interactions, it is mandatory to collect reliable experimental data at representative flow conditions. While the separated effects of temperature, swirl, and turbulence on the first turbine stage have been widely investigated, reduced experimental data is available when it comes to consider all these factors together.In this perspective, an annular three-sector combustor simulator with fully cooled high pressure vanes has been designed and installed at the THT Lab of University of Florence. The test rig is equipped with three axial swirlers, effusion cooled liners, and six film cooled high pressure vanes passages, for a vortex-to-vane count ratio of 1:2. The relative clocking position between swirlers and vanes has been chosen in order to have the leading edge of the central NGV aligned with the central swirler. In order to generate representative conditions, a heated mainstream passes though the axial swirlers of the combustor simulator, while the effusion cooled liners are fed by air at ambient temperature. The resulting flow field exiting from the combustor simulator and approaching the cooled vane can be considered representative of a modern Lean Burn aero engine combustor with swirl angles above ±50 deg, turbulence intensities up to about 28% and maximum-to-minimum temperature ratio of about 1.25. With the final aim of investigating the hot streaks evolution through the cooled high pressure vane, the mean aerothermal field (temperature, pressure, and velocity fields) has been evaluated by means of a five-hole probe equipped with a thermocouple and traversed upstream and downstream of the NGV cascade.


2012 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 799-810 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simone Salvadori ◽  
Luca Ottanelli ◽  
Magnus Jonsson ◽  
Peter Ott ◽  
Francesco Martelli

Author(s):  
Paul D. Orkwis ◽  
Mark G. Turner ◽  
John W. Barter

Steady state surface rothalpy results obtained with a lumped deterministic source term are compared with results obtained from a traditional nonlinear inviscid unsteady solution for an aircraft engine first stage high-pressure turbine rotor configuration. Boundary condition/potential field effects and the order of accuracy of the available schemes are shown to have a significant effect on surface rothalpy results. However, the new technique demonstrates a significant potential for including unsteady effects in time average calculations with minimal computer effort.


Author(s):  
Craig I. Smith ◽  
Dongil Chang ◽  
Stavros Tavoularis

The temperature of the flow entering a high-pressure turbine stage is inherently non-uniform, as it is produced by several discrete, azimuthally-distributed combustors. In general, however, industrial simulations assume inlet temperature uniformity to simplify the preparation process and reduce computation time. The effects of a non-uniform inlet field on the performance of a commercial, transonic, single-stage, high-pressure, axial turbine with a curved inlet duct have been investigated numerically by performing URANS (Unsteady Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes equations) simulations with the SST (Shear Stress Transport) turbulence model. By adjusting the alignment of the experimentally-based inlet temperature field with respect to the stator vanes, two clocking configurations were generated: an aligned case, in which each hot streak impinged on a vane and a misaligned case, in which each hot streak passed between two vanes. In the aligned configuration, the hot streaks produced higher time-averaged heat load on the vanes and lower heat load on the blades. As the aligned hot streaks impinged on the stator vanes, they also spread spanwise due to the actions of the casing passage vortices and the radial pressure gradient; this resulted in a stream entering the rotor with relatively low temperature variations. The misaligned hot streaks were convected undisturbed past the relatively cool vane section. Relatively high time-averaged enthalpy values were found to occur on the pressure side of the blades in the misaligned configuration. The non-uniformity of the time-averaged enthalpy on the blade surfaces was lower in the aligned configuration. The flow exiting the rotor section was much less non-uniform in the aligned case, but differences in calculated efficiency were not significant.


Author(s):  
C. L. Ford ◽  
J. F. Carrotte ◽  
A. D. Walker

This paper examines the effect of compressor generated inlet conditions on the air flow uniformity through lean burn fuel injectors. Any resulting nonuniformity in the injector flow field can impact on local fuel air ratios and hence emissions performance. The geometry considered is typical of the lean burn systems currently being proposed for future, low emission aero engines. Initially, Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) computational fluid dynamics (CFD) predictions were used to examine the flow field development between compressor exit and the inlet to the fuel injector. This enabled the main flow field features in this region to be characterized along with identification of the various stream-tubes captured by the fuel injector passages. The predictions indicate the resulting flow fields entering the injector passages are not uniform. This is particularly evident in the annular passages furthest away from the injector centerline which pass the majority of the flow which subsequently forms the main reaction zone within the flame tube. Detailed experimental measurements were also undertaken on a fully annular facility incorporating an axial compressor and lean burn combustion system. The measurements were obtained at near atmospheric pressure/temperatures and under nonreacting conditions. Time-resolved and time-averaged data were obtained at various locations and included measurements of the flow field issuing from the various fuel injector passages. In this way any nonuniformity in these flow fields could be quantified. In conjunction with the numerical data, the sources of nonuniformities in the injector exit plane were identified. For example, a large scale bulk variation (+/−10%) of the injector flow field was attributed to the development of the flow field upstream of the injector, compared with localized variations (+/−5%) that were generated by the injector swirl vane wakes. Using this data the potential effects on fuel injector emissions performance can be assessed.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document