Temperature Effects on Nozzle Guide Vane Deposition in a New Turbine Cascade Rig

Author(s):  
Ryan Lundgreen ◽  
Craig Sacco ◽  
Robin Prenter ◽  
Jeffrey P. Bons

A new turbine cascade has been constructed that is designed to investigate the performance of actual nozzle guide vane hardware at temperatures representative of modern gas turbine engines. The facility is designed to investigate internal and external deposition, analyze the effectiveness of new cooling techniques, characterize material systems such as metal substrates or coatings, and assess the aerodynamic performance of a vane. The results presented here are the first results obtained in this new facility. External deposition on cooled CFM56 nozzle guide vanes has been explored at inlet temperatures of 1090° C, 1265° C, and 1350° C. Results at 1090° C have been compared to similar results in a previous facility. External deposition tests at temperatures greater than 1100° C on actual turbine hardware have not been reported publicly prior to this paper. These results show that deposition is concentrated at the stagnation line at all three inlet conditions. The amount of deposition on the vane pressure surface increased with increasing inlet temperatures.

Author(s):  
J. Yan ◽  
D. G. Gregory-Smith ◽  
P. J. Walker

A linear cascade of HP steam turbine nozzle guide vanes was designed and built in order to study the effect of a non-axisymmetric profile for the endwall. The profile was designed by using CFD for the purpose of reducing the secondary flow. The method was to use convex curvature near the pressure surface to reduce the static pressure and concave curvature near the suction surface to increase it. Thus the cross passage pressure gradient which drives the secondary flow would be reduced. Detailed investigations of the flow field with a flat end-wall and the profiled end-wall were conducted. The effect of the profiled end-wall on the secondary flow development was determined and also compared with the CFD design predictions. It was found that the secondary loss and secondary kinetic energy were both reduced by about 20% with the shaped endwall, and a more uniform exit flow was also achieved.


Author(s):  
Ranjan Saha ◽  
Boris I. Mamaev ◽  
Jens Fridh ◽  
Björn Laumert ◽  
Torsten H. Fransson

Experiments are conducted to investigate the effect of the pre-history in the aerodynamic performance of a three-dimensional nozzle guide vane with a hub leading edge contouring. The performance is determined with two pneumatic probes (5 hole and 3 hole) concentrating mainly on the endwall. The investigated vane is a geometrically similar gas turbine vane for the first stage with a reference exit Mach number of 0.9. Results are compared for the baseline and filleted cases for a wide range of operating exit Mach numbers from 0.5 to 0.9. The presented data includes loading distributions, loss distributions, fields of exit flow angles, velocity vector and vorticity contour, as well as, mass-averaged loss coefficients. The results show an insignificant influence of the leading edge fillet on the performance of the vane. However, the pre-history (inlet condition) affects significantly in the secondary loss. Additionally, an oil visualization technique yields information about the streamlines on the solid vane surface which allows identifying the locations of secondary flow vortices, stagnation line and saddle point.


2017 ◽  
Vol 139 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ioanna Aslanidou ◽  
Budimir Rosic

This paper presents an experimental investigation of the concept of using the combustor transition duct wall to shield the nozzle guide vane leading edge. The new vane is tested in a high-speed experimental facility, demonstrating the improved aerodynamic and thermal performance of the shielded vane. The new design is shown to have a lower average total pressure loss than the original vane, and the heat transfer on the vane surface is overall reduced. The peak heat transfer on the vane leading edge–endwall junction is moved further upstream, to a region that can be effectively cooled as shown in previously published numerical studies. Experimental results under engine-representative inlet conditions showed that the better performance of the shielded vane is maintained under a variety of inlet conditions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 143 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kedar P. Nawathe ◽  
Rui Zhu ◽  
Enci Lin ◽  
Yong W. Kim ◽  
Terrence W. Simon

Abstract Effective coolant schemes are required for providing cooling to the first-stage stator vanes of gas turbines. To correctly predict coolant performance on the endwall and vane surfaces, these coolant schemes should also consider the effects of coolant streams introduced upstream in the combustor section of a gas turbine engine. This two-part paper presents measurements taken on a first-stage nozzle guide vane cascade that includes combustor coolant injection. The first part of this paper explains how coolant transport and coolant-mainstream interaction in the vane passage is affected by changing the combustor coolant and endwall film coolant flowrates. This paper explains how those flows affect the coolant effectiveness on the endwall and vane surfaces. Part one showed that a significant amount of coolant injected upstream of the endwall is present along the pressure surface of the vanes as well as over the endwall. Part two shows effectiveness measurement results taken in this study on the endwall and pressure and suction surfaces of the vanes. Sustained endwall coolant effectiveness is observed along the whole passage for all cases. It is uniform in the pitch-wise direction. Combustor coolant flow significantly affects cooling performance even near the trailing edge. The modified flowfield results in the pressure surface being cooled more effectively than the suction surface. While the effectiveness distribution on the pressure surface varies with combustor and film coolant flowrates, the distribution along the suction surface remains largely unchanged.


2014 ◽  
Vol 136 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ranjan Saha ◽  
Boris I. Mamaev ◽  
Jens Fridh ◽  
Björn Laumert ◽  
Torsten H. Fransson

Experiments are conducted to investigate the effect of the prehistory in the aerodynamic performance of a three-dimensional nozzle guide vane with a hub leading edge contouring. The performance is determined with two pneumatic probes (five hole and three hole) concentrating mainly on the end wall. The investigated vane is a geometrically similar gas turbine vane for the first stage with a reference exit Mach number of 0.9. Results are compared for the baseline and filleted cases for a wide range of operating exit Mach numbers from 0.5 to 0.9. The presented data includes loading distributions, loss distributions, fields of exit flow angles, velocity vector, and vorticity contour, as well as mass-averaged loss coefficients. The results show an insignificant influence of the leading edge fillet on the performance of the vane. However, the prehistory (inlet condition) affects significantly in the secondary loss. Additionally, an oil visualization technique yields information about the streamlines on the solid vane surface, which allows identifying the locations of secondary flow vortices, stagnation line, and saddle point.


Author(s):  
Charles R. B. Day ◽  
Martin L. G. Oldfield ◽  
Gary D. Lock ◽  
Stephen N. Dancer

This paper further extends the research reported by Day et al. (1997), which reported aerodynamic efficiency measurements on an annular cascade of engine representative transonic nozzle guide vanes with extensive film cooling. This work compares the measured aerodynamic efficiencies of blades with 14 rows of cylindrical cooling holes with a new geometry in which 8 of the rows have been replaced by holes having a fan-shaped exit geometry. The effects of adding trailing edge slot ejection are also presented. By selectively blocking rows of holes, the cumulative effect on the mid-span efficiency of adding rows of cooling holes has also been determined. A dense foreign gas (SF6/Ar mixture) is used to simulate engine representative coolant-to-mainstream density ratios, momentum ratios and blowing rates under ambient temperature conditions. The flowfield measurements have been obtained using a four-hole pyramid probe in a short duration blowdown facility which correctly models engine Reynolds and Mach numbers, as well as the inlet turbulence intensity. Experimental results are presented as area traverse maps (total pressure, isentropic Mach number and flow angles), from which the incremental changes in efficiency due to film cooling have been calculated. The effects of different assumptions for the coolant total pressure are shown. Experimental data agrees reasonably well with loss predictions using a Hartsel model.


Author(s):  
Imran Qureshi ◽  
Arrigo Beretta ◽  
Thomas Povey

This paper presents experimental measurements and computational predictions of surface and endwall heat transfer for a high-pressure (HP) nozzle guide vane (NGV) operating as part of a full HP turbine stage in an annular rotating turbine facility, with and without inlet temperature distortion (hot-streaks). A detailed aerodynamic survey of the vane surface is also presented. The test turbine was the unshrouded MT1 turbine, installed in the Turbine Test Facility (previously called Isentropic Light Piston Facility) at QinetiQ, Farnborough UK. This is a short duration facility, which simulates engine representative M, Re, non-dimensional speed and gas-to-wall temperature ratio at the turbine inlet. The facility has recently been upgraded to incorporate an advanced second-generation combustor simulator, capable of simulating well-defined, aggressive temperature profiles in both the radial and circumferential directions. This work forms part of the pan-European research programme, TATEF II. Measurements of HP vane and endwall heat transfer obtained with inlet temperature distortion are compared with results for uniform inlet conditions. Steady and unsteady CFD predictions have also been conducted on vane and endwall surfaces, using the Rolls-Royce CFD code HYDRA to complement the analysis of experimental results. The heat transfer measurements presented in this paper are the first of their kind in the respect that the temperature distortion is representative of an extreme cycle point measured in the engine situation, and was simulated with good periodicity and with well defined boundary conditions in the test turbine.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giuseppe Macoretta ◽  
Bernardo Disma Monelli ◽  
Paolo Neri ◽  
Federico Bucciarelli ◽  
Damaso Checcacci ◽  
...  

Abstract An increasing number of turboexpanders are equipped with Nozzle Guide Vane (NGV) as the first stator stage. By varying the throat area of the first stator vane the NGV enables an additional control methodology to the line-up power output allowing higher operational flexibility and higher efficiency at partial load and partial speed. The design of this component might become critical for enabling high expander availability considering its exposure to high temperature, thermal loading, and fluid induced vibrations. This is especially true also considering that the vibration frequencies of this sub-assembly are influenced by internal clearances and by the value of the friction coefficient, which leaves a relevant margin of error when using numerical methods (such as FEM) for predicting the actual structural behavior of this component. In this paper, the design of a full-scale test bench for the determination of both friction coefficients and modal behavior of a nozzle guide vane geometry is described. The bench enables us to simulate the pre-load due to aerodynamic forces on the NGV airfoil simulating the actual working conditions of bushes and bearings.


Author(s):  
D. Bouchard ◽  
A. Asghar ◽  
M. LaViolette ◽  
W. D. E. Allan ◽  
R. Woodason

A unique methodology and test rig was designed to evaluate the degradation of damaged Nozzle Guide Vanes in a transonic annular cascade in the short duration facility at the Royal Military College. A custom test section was designed which featured a novel rotating instrumentation suite. This permitted 360° multi-span traverse measurements downstream of unmodified turbine NGV rings from a Rolls-Royce/Allison A-250 turbo-shaft engine. Downstream total pressure was measured at four span-wise locations on both an undamaged reference and a damaged test article. Three performance metrics were developed in an effort to determine characteristic signatures for common operational damage such as trailing edge bends or cracked trailing edges. The highest average losses were observed in the root area, while the lowest occurred closer to the NGV tips. The results from this study indicated that multiple span-wise traverses were required to detect localized trailing edge damage. Recommendations have been made for future tests, for test rigs and for ideas to develop performance metrics.


Author(s):  
A. B. Johnson ◽  
M. L. G. Oldfield ◽  
M. J. Rigby ◽  
M. B. Giles

A study of the propagation of a Nozzle Guide Vane (NGV) trailing edge shock wave through a transonic turbine rotor passage is presented. The work was based on experimental tests carried out in the Isentropic Light Piston Tunnel in Oxford University using a rotating bar NGV shock wave simulator, together with schlieren photography and wide band width surface pressure and heat transfer rate measurements. The study identifies a previously unexplained interaction between the incoming wave and the rotor leading edge, which causes the nucleation of a Vortical Bubble. This bubble has been shown to enhance the thermal loading on the early pressure surface of the blade. A method of controlling this bubble and heat loading is also considered. A previously unseen “Lambda” interaction between the shock wave and the rotor pressure surface is also identified.


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