High-Pressure Gas Turbine Vane Turbulent Flows and Heat Transfer Predicted by RANS/LES/DES

Author(s):  
Ping Dong ◽  
R. S. Amano

The lifetime of the modern gas turbines greatly depends on the durability of hot section components operating at high temperatures. Film cooling is key to air cooling technologies in modern gas turbine and widely used in high-temperature and high-pressure blades as an active cooling scheme. The requirements of accurate prediction of aerodynamic flow and heat transfer in gas turbine blades lay the essential foundation of cooling effectiveness improvement and working life estimation. In recent days, Large Eddy Simulations (LES) is considered as a useful tool to predict turbulent flows and heat transfer around gas turbine blades, but, comparing to the Reynolds-Averaged Navier–Stokes (RANS) methods, the LES method usually needs more computing resource and depends on computational power and mesh quality. In this paper, LES/DES (Detached Eddy Simulation) predictions were compared to RANS prediction with interest in the accuracy and improvement of turbulent flow and heat transfer phenomena around NASA’s C3X high-pressure gas turbine vane with leading edge cooling film. RANS/LES/DES were detailed and further investigated to assess their ability to predict flow and heat transfer in boundary layer around C3X vane. The current predictions showed that the mix between film cooling injections and free stream resulted in complex flow and heat transfer in the boundary layer on the external vane surface. The predictions of the aerodynamic load along the C3X vane with RANS/LES/DES were almost identical and agreed well with the experimental results. However, the heat transfer predictions with RANS/LES/DES were different. The transition prediction showed the best agreement with the experiment data in the most region. The LES prediction only partially agreed with the experimental data before separation point on the suction side and mild pressure gradient region on the pressure side. The DES and RANS predictions agreed with the experiment data after separation point on the suction side and most region on the pressure side.

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Faisal Shaikh ◽  
Budimir Rosic

Abstract Gas turbine blades and vanes are typically manufactured with small clearances between adjacent vane and blade platforms, termed the midpassage gap. The midpassage gap reduces turbine efficiency and causes additional heat load into the vane platform, as well as changing the distribution of endwall heat transfer and film cooling. This paper presents a low-order analytical analysis to quantify the effects of the midpassage gap on aerodynamics and heat transfer, verified against an experimental campaign and CFD. Using this model, the effects of the gap can be quantified, for a generic turbine stage, based only on geometric features and the passage static pressure field. It is found that at present there are significant losses and a large proportion of heat load caused by the gap, but that with modified design this could be reduced to negligible levels. Cooling flows into the gap to prevent ingression are investigated analytically and with CFD. Recommendations are given for targets that turbine designers should work toward in reducing the adverse effects of the midpassage gap. A method to estimate the effect of gap flow is presented, so that for any machine the significance of the gap may be assessed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (09) ◽  
pp. 56-57
Author(s):  
Lachlan J. Jardine ◽  
Robert J. Miller

Abstract For over 50 years, high-pressure gas turbine blades have been cooled using air bled from the compressor. This cooling results in very high rates of heat transfer, both within the fluid and within the blade, shown in figure 1. The heat transfer often occurs across large temperature differences and is thus highly irreversible. It is therefore surprising that little is understood about the effect of this heat transfer on turbine performance.


Author(s):  
Faisal Shaikh ◽  
Budimir Rosic

Abstract Gas turbine blades and vanes are typically manufactured with small clearances between adjacent vane and blade platforms, termed the midpassage gap. The midpassage gap reduces turbine efficiency and causes additional heat load into the vane platform, as well as changing the distribution of endwall heat transfer and film cooling. This paper presents a low-order analytical analysis to quantify the effects of the midpassage gap on aerodynamics and heat transfer, verified against an experimental campaign and CFD. Using this model, the effects of the gap can be quantified, for a generic turbine stage, based only on geometric features and the passage static pressure field. It is found that at present there are significant losses and a large proportion of heat load caused by the gap, but that with modified design this could be reduced to negligible levels. Cooling flows into the gap to prevent ingression are investigated analytically and with CFD. Recommendations are given for targets that turbine designers should work toward in reducing the adverse effects of the midpassage gap. A method to estimate the effect of gap flow is presented, so that for any machine the significance of the gap may be assessed.


Author(s):  
Zhenfeng Wang ◽  
Peigang Yan ◽  
Hongyan Huang ◽  
Wanjin Han

The ANSYS-CFX software is used to simulate NASA-Mark II high pressure air-cooled gas turbine. The work condition is Run 5411 which have transition flow characteristics. The different turbulence models are adopted to solve conjugate heat transfer problem of this three-dimensional turbine blade. Comparing to the experimental results, k-ω-SST-γ-θ turbulence model results are more accurate and can simulate accurately the flow and heat transfer characteristics of turbine with transition flow characteristics. But k-ω-SST-γ-θ turbulence model overestimates the turbulence kinetic energy of blade local region and makes the heat transfer coefficient higher. It causes that local region temperature of suction side is higher. In this paper, the compiled code adopts the B-L algebra model and simulates the same computation model. The results show that the results of B-L model are accurate besides it has 4% temperature error in the suction side transition region. In addition, different turbulence characteristic boundary conditions of turbine inner-cooling passages are given and K-ω-SST-γ-θ turbulence model is adopted in order to obtain the effect of turbulence characteristic boundary conditions for the conjugate heat transfer computation results. The results show that the turbulence characteristic boundary conditions of turbine inner-cooling passages have a great effect on the conjugate heat transfer results of high pressure gas turbine. ANSYS is applied to analysis the thermal stress of Mark II blade which has ten radial cooled passages and the results of Von Mises stress show that the temperature gradient results have a great effect on the results of blade thermal stress.


Author(s):  
Lv Ye ◽  
Zhao Liu ◽  
Xiangyu Wang ◽  
Zhenping Feng

This paper presents a numerical simulation of composite cooling on a first stage vane of a gas turbine, in which gas by fixed composition mixture is adopted. To investigate the flow and heat transfer characteristics, two internal chambers which contain multiple arrays of impingement holes are arranged in the vane, several arrays of pin-fins are arranged in the trailing edge region, and a few arrays of film cooling holes are arranged on the vane surfaces to form the cooling film. The coolant enters through the shroud inlet, and then divided into two parts. One part is transferred into the chamber in the leading edge region, and then after impinging on the target surfaces, it proceeds further to go through the film cooling holes distributed on the vane surface, while the other part enters into the second chamber immediately and then exits to the mainstream in two ways to effectively cool the other sections of the vane. In this study, five different coolant flow rates and six different inlet pressure ratios were investigated. All the cases were performed with the same domain grids and same boundary conditions. It can be concluded that for the internal surfaces, the heat transfer coefficient changes gradually with the coolant flow rate and the inlet total pressure ratio, while for the external surfaces, the average cooling effectiveness increases with the increase of coolant mass flow rates while decreases with the increase of the inlet stagnation pressure ratios within the study range.


Author(s):  
Duccio Griffini ◽  
Massimiliano Insinna ◽  
Simone Salvadori ◽  
Francesco Martelli

A high-pressure vane equipped with a realistic film-cooling configuration has been studied. The vane is characterized by the presence of multiple rows of fan-shaped holes along pressure and suction side while the leading edge is protected by a showerhead system of cylindrical holes. Steady three-dimensional Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) simulations have been performed. A preliminary grid sensitivity analysis with uniform inlet flow has been used to quantify the effect of spatial discretization. Turbulence model has been assessed in comparison with available experimental data. The effects of the relative alignment between combustion chamber and high-pressure vanes are then investigated considering realistic inflow conditions in terms of hot spot and swirl. The inlet profiles used are derived from the EU-funded project TATEF2. Two different clocking positions are considered: the first one where hot spot and swirl core are aligned with passage and the second one where they are aligned with the leading edge. Comparisons between metal temperature distributions obtained from conjugate heat transfer simulations are performed evidencing the role of swirl in determining both the hot streak trajectory within the passage and the coolant redistribution. The leading edge aligned configuration is resulted to be the most problematic in terms of thermal load, leading to increased average and local vane temperature peaks on both suction side and pressure side with respect to the passage aligned case. A strong sensitivity of both injected coolant mass flow and heat removed by heat sink effect has also been highlighted for the showerhead cooling system.


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