Computer aided turbine blade surface design

Author(s):  
P. Sundar Varada Raj ◽  
R. Sankar ◽  
M. Mangla ◽  
Rajesh Kumar
Author(s):  
Roger W. Moss ◽  
Roger W. Ainsworth ◽  
Tom Garside

Measurements of turbine blade surface heat transfer in a transient rotor facility are compared with predictions and equivalent cascade data. The rotating measurements involved both forwards and reverse rotation (wake free) experiments. The use of thin-film gauges in the Oxford Rotor Facility provides both time-mean heat transfer levels and the unsteady time history. The time-mean level is not significantly affected by turbulence in the wake; this contrasts with the cascade response to freestream turbulence and simulated wake passing. Heat transfer predictions show the extent to which such phenomena are successfully modelled by a time-steady code. The accurate prediction of transition is seen to be crucial if useful predictions are to be obtained.


2003 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 364-373 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan T. Hudson ◽  
Thomas F. Zoladz ◽  
Daniel J. Dorney

Author(s):  
Mahalingam Arulprakasajothi ◽  
Pegyyem Lokaiah Rupesh ◽  
Hitesh Kumar Rana ◽  
Kariappan Elangovan

The gas turbine is being used in the applications of the aircraft propulsion system and land-based power generating systems more effectively. The manufacturers should optimise the temperature of the gas turbine engine components to enhance the life span of the components. The present research work concentrates on determining the surface temperature gradient on the fabricated turbine blades using a colour changing paint based on temperature attained on the surface. A calibration database has been created, and the surface temperature has been detected based on the available colour contours on the blade surface using human vision. An image processing algorithm has also been proposed for accurate temperature measurement on the blade surface. The obtained surface temperature using colour changing paint multi-colour change 350-8 has been calibrated with the conventional measurement technique IR thermography for experimental validation. A computational fluid dynamics simulation model of the turbine blade has been simulated to predict the surface temperature of blades using analysis systems fluid dynamics for numerical validation. The experimental and numerical validation results have shown a nominal value of error, which proves that the surface temperature gradient can be easily predicted with the help of temperature indicating paint using the proposed algorithm. The study has been extended further to evaluate the amount of emissive power radiated by the flue gas on the turbine blade surface based on the temperature and the wavelength of the colour obtained for the health monitoring of the blade.


Author(s):  
Brian R. Green ◽  
John W. Barter ◽  
Charles W. Haldeman ◽  
Michael G. Dunn

The unsteady aero-dynamics of a single-stage high-pressure turbine blade operating at design corrected conditions has been the subject of a thorough study involving detailed measurements and computations. The experimental configuration consisted of a single-stage high-pressure turbine and the adjacent, downstream, low-pressure turbine nozzle row. All three blade-rows were instrumented at three spanwise locations with flush-mounted, high frequency response pressure transducers. The rotor was also instrumented with the same transducers on the blade tip and platform and the stationary shroud was instrumented with pressure transducers at specific locations above the rotating blade. Predictions of the time-dependent flow field around the rotor were obtained using MSU-TURBO, a 3D, non-linear, computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code. Using an isolated blade-row unsteady analysis method, the unsteady surface pressure for the high-pressure turbine rotor due to the upstream high-pressure turbine nozzle was calculated. The predicted unsteady pressure on the rotor surface was compared to the measurements at selected spanwise locations on the blade, in the recessed cavity, and on the shroud. The rig and computational models included a flat and recessed blade tip geometry and were used for the comparisons presented in the paper. Comparisons of the measured and predicted static pressure loading on the blade surface show excellent correlation from both a time-average and time-accurate standpoint. This paper concentrates on the tip and shroud comparisons between the experiments and the predictions and these results also show good correlation with the time-resolved data. These data comparisons provide confidence in the CFD modeling and its ability to capture unsteady flow physics on the blade surface, in the flat and recessed tip regions of the blade, and on the stationary shroud.


Author(s):  
E. Go¨ttlich ◽  
L. Innocenti ◽  
A. Vacca ◽  
W. Sanz ◽  
J. Woisetschla¨ger ◽  
...  

Gas turbine design technology requires the development of transonic turbine stages capable of carrying high stage load and of handling hot gas temperatures at turbine inlet. A reliable cooling system is necessary to cope with shocks emanating from preceding blade rows and impinging on the blade especially in the leading edge region. In order to fulfill these requirements researchers at Graz University of Technology have been working on an Innovative Cooling System (ICS) since 1995. The ICS is able to cover large areas of the blade surface with an effective cooling film and to reduce the metal temperature without a shower head cooling arrangement at the leading edge and any trailing edge cooling air ejection. In this paper the authors present a numerical comparison of the ICS to a conventional modern film cooling system both implemented in the same industrial transonic gas turbine blade. An experimental determination of the adiabatic film cooling effectiveness distribution around the blades surface was necessary for the ICS because of its uncommon design. The measurements were done on a cylindrical blade in a linear cascade arrangement. An infrared camera system was used to determine the effectiveness of this newly designed cooling system by measuring the temperature distribution on the blade surface. Then a numerical simulation of heat transfer and of internal and external cooling for the turbine blade at test rig conditions was performed. The ICS showed a lower outer wall temperature distribution of the blade compared to a standard film cooling system. The heavily loaded leading edge as well as the trailing edge are well cooled. Further conclusions on the advantages and disadvantages of the ICS are drawn.


Author(s):  
Yongxin Feng ◽  
Tao Yang ◽  
Xiaowen Deng ◽  
Qingshui Gao ◽  
Chu Zhang ◽  
...  

The basic fault types of wind turbine blades are introduced, a novel blade surface damage detection method based on machine vision is being suggested. The network of wind turbine blade surface damage fault on-line monitoring and fault diagnosis system has already been developed. The system architecture, software modules and functions are described, and given application example illustrates the usefulness and effectiveness of this system. The result shows that this system can monitor the surface damage failure of the blade in real time, and can effectively reduce the blade’s maintenance costs for wind farms, especially offshore wind farm.


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