Measurement of Film Cooling Effectiveness for the First-Stage Vane and Endwall of a Gas Turbine With Fan-Shaped Holes

Author(s):  
Jin Young Jeong ◽  
Jae Su Kwak ◽  
Jung Shin Park ◽  
Kidon Lee

The adiabatic film cooling effectiveness for the first-stage vane and endwall of a gas turbine were investigated in a low speed cascade using the pressure sensitive paint (PSP) technique. The cascade consisted of four linear vanes. The tested Reynolds number based on the vane chord and vane exit velocity was 7.15 × 105. The overall blowing ratio of the coolant was controlled between 1 to 2, and two density ratios, 1.5 and 2.0, were tested. In order to test the different density ratios, two different coolants were used, one carbon dioxide and the other a mixture of nitrogen and sulfur hexafluoride. All cases showed clear traces of coolant on the vane surfaces and the endwall. The film cooling effectiveness near the film cooling holes was very high and gradually decreased downstream. The coolant trace showed an almost two-dimensional distribution on the pressure side. However, the coolant on the suction side shifted mid-span due to the passage vortex. Generally, the film cooling effectiveness on the vane and the endwall increased as the blowing ratio increased. The film cooling effectiveness on the vane was strongly affected by the shower head injection. Depending on the blowing ratio, the effect of density ratio on the vane surface film cooling effectiveness was varied. On the endwall, the film cooling effectiveness was higher for higher density ratio cases.

Author(s):  
Shang-Feng Yang ◽  
Je-Chin Han ◽  
Alexander MirzaMoghadam ◽  
Ardeshir Riahi

This paper studies the effect of transonic flow velocity on local film cooling effectiveness distribution of turbine vane suction side, experimentally. A conduction-free Pressure Sensitive Paint (PSP) method is used to determine the local film cooling effectiveness. Tests were performed in a five-vane annular cascade at Texas A&M Turbomachinery laboratory blow-down flow loop facility. The exit Mach numbers are controlled to be 0.7, 0.9, and 1.1, from subsonic to transonic flow conditions. Three foreign gases N2, CO2 and Argon/SF6 mixture are selected to study the effects of three coolant-to-mainstream density ratios, 1.0, 1.5, and 2.0 on film cooling. Four averaged coolant blowing ratios in the range, 0.7, 1.0, 1.3 and 1.6 are investigated. The test vane features 3 rows of radial-angle cylindrical holes around the leading edge, and 2 rows of compound-angle shaped holes on the suction side. Results suggest that the PSP technique is capable of producing clear and detailed film cooling effectiveness contours at transonic condition. The effects of coolant to mainstream blowing ratio, density ratio, and exit Mach number on the vane suction-surface film cooling distribution are obtained, and the consequence results are presented and explained in this investigation.


Author(s):  
Kevin Liu ◽  
Shang-Feng Yang ◽  
Je-Chin Han

Adiabatic film-cooling effectiveness is examined systematically on a typical high pressure turbine blade by varying three critical flow parameters: coolant blowing ratio, coolant-to-mainstream density ratio, and freestream turbulence intensity. Three average coolant blowing ratios 1.0, 1.5, and 2.0; three coolant density ratios 1.0, 1.5, and 2.0; two turbulence intensities 4.2% and 10.5%, are chosen for this study. Conduction-free pressure sensitive paint (PSP) technique is used to measure film-cooling effectiveness. Three foreign gases — N2 for low density, CO2 for medium density, and a mixture of SF6 and Argon for high density are selected to study the effect of coolant density. The test blade features 45° compound-angle shaped holes on the suction side and pressure side, and 3 rows of 30° radial-angle cylindrical holes around the leading edge region. The inlet and the exit Mach number are 0.27 and 0.44, respectively. Reynolds number based on the exit velocity and blade axial chord length is 750,000. Results reveal that the PSP is a powerful technique capable of producing clear and detailed film effectiveness contours with diverse foreign gases. As blowing ratio exceeds the optimum value, it induces more mixing of coolant and mainstream. Thus film-cooling effectiveness reduces. Greater coolant-to-mainstream density ratio results in lower coolant-to-mainstream momentum and prevents coolant to lift-off; as a result, film-cooling increases. Higher freestream turbulence causes effectiveness to drop everywhere except in the region downstream of suction side. Results are also correlated with momentum flux ratio and compared with previous studies. It shows that compound shaped hole has the greatest optimum momentum flux ratio, and then followed by axial shaped hole, compound cylindrical hole, and axial cylindrical hole.


Author(s):  
Lesley M. Wright ◽  
Evan L. Martin

Detailed film cooling effectiveness distributions are obtained on a flat plate using the pressure sensitive paint (PSP) technique. The effects of average blowing ratio (M = 0.25–1.0) and coolant – to – mainstream density ratio (DR = 1.0–1.4) are evaluated in a low speed wind tunnel with a freestream velocity of 8.5 m/s and a freestream turbulence intensity of 6.8%. The coolant – to – mainstream density ratio is varied by using either nitrogen (DR = 1.0) or argon (DR = 1.4) as the coolant gases. The double hole geometry consists of a row of simple angle (θ = 35°), cylindrical holes coupled with one row of compound angle holes (θ = 45°, β = 50°). With the selected geometry, the compound holes effectively weaken the counter rotating vortex pair formed within the traditional simple angle hole. Therefore, the surface film cooling effectiveness is increased compared to a single row of simple angle film cooling holes. While increasing the blowing ratio decreases the film cooling effectiveness, the severity of the film cooling effectiveness reduction is less than with the single row of holes.


2014 ◽  
Vol 521 ◽  
pp. 104-107
Author(s):  
Ling Zhang ◽  
Quan Heng Jin ◽  
Da Fei Guo

The Realizable k-ε turbulence model was performed to investigate the film cooling effectiveness with different blowing ratio 1,1.5,2 and different density ratio 1,1.5,2.The results show that, cooling effectiveness increases with the augment of blowing ratio. On the pressure side, cooling effectiveness increases with the augment of density ratio. On the suction side, with higher density ratio the leading edge cooling increases, the middle section reduces, and the trailing edge cooling effectiveness increases first decreases.


Author(s):  
Diganta P. Narzary ◽  
Christopher LeBlanc ◽  
Srinath Ekkad

Film cooling performance of two hole geometries is evaluated on a flat plate surface with steady-state IR (infrared thermography) technique. The base geometry is a simple cylindrical hole design inclined at 30° from the surface with pitch-to-diameter ratio of 3.0. The second geometry is an anti-vortex design where the two side holes, also of the same diameter, branch out from the root at 15° angle. The pitch-to-diameter ratio is 6.0 between the main holes. The mainstream Reynolds number is 3110 based on the coolant hole diameter. Two secondary fluids — air and carbon-dioxide — were used to study the effects of coolant-to-mainstream density ratio (DR = 0.95 and 1.45) on film cooling effectiveness. Several blowing ratios in the range 0.5 –4.0 were investigated independently at the two density ratios. Results indicate significant improvement in effectiveness with anti-vortex holes compared to cylindrical holes at all the blowing ratios studied. At any given blowing ratio, the anti-vortex hole design uses 50% less coolant and provides at least 30–40% higher cooling effectiveness. The use of relatively dense secondary fluid improves effectiveness immediately downstream of the anti-vortex holes but leads to poor performance downstream.


Author(s):  
Gi Mun Kim ◽  
Soo In Lee ◽  
Jin Young Jeong ◽  
Jae Su Kwak ◽  
Seokbeom Kim ◽  
...  

Abstract In the vicinity of gas turbine blades, a complex flow field is formed due to the flow separation, reattachment, and secondary flows, and results in locally non-uniform and high heat transfer on the surfaces. In this study, the effects of leakage flow through the slot between gas turbine vane and blade rows on the film cooling effectiveness of the forward region of the shroud ring segment were experimentally investigated. The experiment was carried out in a linear cascade with five blades. Instead of vane, a row of rods at the location of the vane trailing edge was installed to consider the wake effect. The leakage flow was introduced through the slot between vane and blade rows and additional coolant air was injected from the cooling holes installed at the vane outer zone. The effects of the slot geometry, hole size, and blowing ratio on the film cooling effectiveness were experimentally investigated by using a pressure sensitive paint technique. CO2 gas and the mixture of SF6 and N2 (25%+75%) were used as leakage flow in order to simulate leakage flow to mainstream density ratios of 1.5 and 2.0, respectively. Results showed that the area averaged film cooling effectiveness was more affected by the slot width than the cooling hole size at the same blowing ratio, and the lower density ratio cases showed higher film cooling effectiveness than that of higher density ratio case at the same cooling configuration.


Author(s):  
Andrew F. Chen ◽  
Shiou-Jiuan Li ◽  
Je-Chin Han

A systematic study was performed to investigate the combined effects of hole geometry, blowing ratio, density ratio and free-stream turbulence intensity on flat plate film cooling with forward and backward injection. Detailed film cooling effectiveness distributions were obtained using the steady state pressure sensitive paint (PSP) technique. Four common film-hole geometries with forward injection were used in this study: simple angled cylindrical holes and fan-shaped holes, and compound angled (β = 45°) cylindrical holes and fan-shaped holes. Additional four film-hole geometries with backward injection were tested by reversing the injection direction from forward to backward to the mainstream. There are seven holes in a row on each plate and each hole is 4 mm in diameter. The hole length to diameter ratio is 7.5. The blowing ratio effect was studied at 10 different blowing ratios ranging from M = 0.3 to M = 2.0. The coolant to main stream density ratio (DR) effect was studied by using foreign gases with DR = 1 (N2), 1.5 (CO2), and 2 (15% SF6 + 85% Ar). The free stream turbulence intensity effect was tested at 0.5% and 6%. The results show higher density coolant provides higher effectiveness than lower density coolant, fan-shaped holes perform better than cylindrical holes, and compound angled holes are better than simple angled holes. In general, the results show the film cooling effectiveness with backward injection is greatly reduced for shaped holes as compared with the forward injection. However, significant improvements can be seen in both simple angled and compound angled cylindrical holes at higher blowing ratios and density ratio (DR = 2). Comparison was made between experimental data and empirical correlations for simple angled fan-shaped holes at engine representative density ratios. An improved correlation which covers a wider range of density ratios (DR = 1.0 to DR = 2.0) is proposed.


Author(s):  
Virginia C. Witteveld ◽  
Marc D. Polanka ◽  
David G. Bogard

An experimental study was conducted to determine the effects of film cooling on a gas turbine vane at two mainstream turbulence intensities of Tu = 0.5% and Tu = 22%. The low speed turbine vane test facility was designed to match the Reynolds number of operating engine conditions. The nine-time scale model airfoil simulates a gas turbine first-stage stator vane. The leading edge film cooling hole showerhead array included six rows of film cooling holes configured with one stagnation row, two pressure side rows, and three suction side rows. This paper presents film cooling effectiveness measurements in the stagnation region and near-suction side. Cooled air injection was used to conduct the tests at a density ratio of DR = 1.8 and blowing conditions over a range of M = 0.5 to M = 2.9. Infrared imaging techniques were used to measure the surface temperature distribution. The results provide a detailed evaluation of the effects of blowing ratio, mainstream turbulence, and stagnation line position on the measured effectiveness in the showerhead. The effect of increasing blowing ratio generally resulted in increased spanwise averaged effectiveness levels. The effect of mainstream turbulence varies with blowing ratio within the showerhead region. At low blowing ratio, high turbulence produced greater effectiveness, whereas at high blowing ratio, low turbulence produced greater effectiveness. The effect of stagnation line position also varied with blowing ratio. Overall, the dominating effect occurred when the blowing ratio was sufficiently strong to cause a spanwise merging of adjacent cooling jets resulting in very good spanwise uniformity and high adiabatic effectiveness.


Author(s):  
T. Elnady ◽  
O. Hassan ◽  
I. Hassan ◽  
L. Kadem ◽  
T. Lucas

An experimental investigation has been performed to measure the film cooling performance of louver scheme over a scaled vane of high-pressure gas turbine using a two-dimensional cascade. Two rows of axially oriented louver scheme are used to cool the suction side and their performance is compared with two similar rows of standard cylindrical holes. The effect of hole location on the cooling performance is investigated for each row individually, then the row interaction is investigated for both rows at four different blowing ratios ranging from 1 to 2 with a 0.9 density ratio. The exit Reynolds number based on the true chord is 1.5E5 and exit Mach number is 0.23. The temperature distribution on the vane is mapped using a transient Thermochromic Liquid Crystal (TLC) technique to obtain the local distributions of the heat transfer coefficient and film cooling effectiveness. The louver scheme shows a superior cooling effectiveness than that of the cylindrical holes at all blowing ratios in terms of protection and lateral coverage. The row location highly affects the cooling performance for both the louver and cylindrical scheme.


Author(s):  
Chao-Cheng Shiau ◽  
Nafiz H. K. Chowdhury ◽  
Je-Chin Han ◽  
Alexander V. Mirzamoghadam ◽  
Ardeshir Riahi

This work focuses on the parametric experimental study of film cooling effectiveness on the suction side of a scaled turbine vane under transonic flow condition. The experiments were performed in a five-vane annular sector cascade blowdown facility. The controlled exit Mach numbers were 0.7, 0.9, and 1.1, from high subsonic to transonic conditions. N2, CO2, and Argon/SF6 mixture were used to investigate the effects of coolant-to-mainstream density ratios, ranging from 1.0, 1.5 to 2.0. Three row-averaged coolant-to-mainstream blowing ratios in the range 0.7, 1.0, and 1.6 are studied. The test vane includes three rows of radial-angle cylindrical holes around the leading edge and two rows of compound-angle shaped holes on the suction side. All the cooling holes are active in order to study the resultant film cooling on suction side as well as from leading edge. Pressure sensitive paint (PSP) technique was used to obtain the film cooling effectiveness distributions from suction side holes and the contribution from leading edge showerhead holes. This work shows the effects of coolant-to-mainstream blowing ratio, density ratio, and exit Mach number on the film cooling effectiveness as well as its interaction with a potential shock wave. The results indicate that when the cooling holes are located in a critical region on the vane suction surface, the parametric effect on film cooling performance will significantly deviate from the common trend for a typical hole geometry.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document