An Experimental Investigation of Flow Characteristics Downstream of Discrete Film Cooling Holes on Turbine Blade Leading Edge

2011 ◽  
Vol 383-390 ◽  
pp. 5553-5560
Author(s):  
Shao Hua Li ◽  
Hong Wei Qu ◽  
Mei Li Wang ◽  
Ting Ting Guo

The gas turbine blade was studied on the condition that the mainstream velocity was 10m/s and the Renolds number based on the chord length of the blade was 160000.The Hot-film anemometer was used to measure the two-dimension speed distribution along the downstream of the film cooling holes on the suction side and the pressure side. The conclusions are as follows: When the blowing ratio of the suction side and the pressure side increasing, the the mainstream and the jet injection mixing center raising. Entrainment flow occurs at the position where the blade surface with great curvature gradient, simultaneously the mixing flow has a wicked adhere to the wall. The velocity gradient of the u direction that on the suction side increase obviously, also the level of the wall adherence is better than the pressure side. With the x/d increasing, the velocity u that on the pressure side gradually become irregularly, also the secondary flow emerged near the wall region where the curvature is great. The blowing ratio on the suction side has a little influence on velocity v than that on the pressure side.

Author(s):  
Guillaume Wagner ◽  
Peter Ott ◽  
Gregory Vogel ◽  
Shailendra Naik

Transient liquid crystal experiments have been carried out to measure the effectiveness and heat transfer characteristics of leading-edge film cooling for three different film cooling holes configurations at design and off-design incidence angle. The three configurations are based on the same representative leading edge model of a turbine blade, consisting of a symmetrical blunt body with a specific leading edge wedge angle. Film cooling is introduced from two rows of cooling holes, representative of a pressure-side row and a suction-side row. At design incidence, film cooling performances are symmetric. There is a jet lift-off situation and shaped holes significantly improve the film cooling performances because of a better lateral coverage and a reduced coolant momentum at the hole exit. At 5° off-design incidence angle, on the suction side, the situation is similar to that of a 0° incidence but with higher film cooling performances due to a reduced local blowing ratio. At 5° incidence on the pressure side, a beneficial interaction between the jets of the pressure side row appears. For middle and high blowing ratio, the film cooling performances are also better than 0° incidence. At 5° incidence on the pressure side, shaped holes also improve the film cooling performances in comparison to cylindrical holes.


Author(s):  
Andrew F. Chen ◽  
Chao-Cheng Shiau ◽  
Je-Chin Han

The combined effects of inlet purge flow and the slashface leakage flow on the film cooling effectiveness of a turbine blade platform were studied using the pressure sensitive paint (PSP) technique. Detailed film cooling effectiveness distributions on the endwall were obtained and analyzed. The inlet purge flow was generated by a row of equally-spaced cylindrical injection holes inside a single-tooth generic stator-rotor seal. In addition to the traditional 90 degree (radial outward) injection for the inlet purge flow, injection at a 45 degree angle was adopted to create a circumferential/azimuthal velocity component toward the suction side of the blades, which created a swirl ratio (SR) of 0.6. Discrete cylindrical film cooling holes were arranged to achieve an improved coverage on the endwall. Backward injection was attempted by placing backward injection holes near the pressure side leading edge portion. Slashface leakage flow was simulated by equally-spaced cylindrical injection holes inside a slot. Experiments were done in a five-blade linear cascade with an average turbulence intensity of 10.5%. The inlet and exit Mach numbers were 0.26 and 0.43, respectively. The inlet and exit mainstream Reynolds numbers based on the axial chord length of the blade were 475,000 and 720,000, respectively. The coolant-to-mainstream mass flow ratios (MFR) were varied from 0.5%, 0.75%, to 1% for the inlet purge flow. For the endwall film cooling holes and slashface leakage flow, blowing ratios (M) of 0.5, 1.0, and 1.5 were examined. Coolant-to-mainstream density ratios (DR) that range from 1.0 (close to low temperature experiments) to 1.5 (intermediate DR) and 2.0 (close to engine conditions) were also examined. The results provide the gas turbine engine designers a better insight into improved film cooling hole configurations as well as various parametric effects on endwall film cooling when the inlet (swirl) purge flow and slashface leakage flow were incorporated.


2012 ◽  
Vol 614-615 ◽  
pp. 592-595
Author(s):  
Ling Zhang ◽  
Hai Rui Dong ◽  
Guo Liang Wen

The technology of film cooling is one of the most effective means of protecting the turbine blades. In this paper, flow structures of the turbine stator blade with six hole-rows at different blowing ratio(M=0.5, 1.0 and 1.5)and setting angles(β=40°, 50°, 60°, 70°, 80° and 90°) was measured by PIV in piston flow type of low-speed wind tunnel laboratory. Velocity was analyzed. Results show that: velocity gradient of suction side was much higher than pressure side and increased with setting angle reduction; Adherence of film is influenced by setting angle and blowing ratio, when M=1.0 and β=70° anchorage dependent is best and suction side is greater than pressure side.


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):  
Yi Lu ◽  
Yinyi Hong ◽  
Zhirong Lin ◽  
Xin Yuan

Detailed film cooling effectiveness distributions were experimentally obtained on a turbine vane platform within a linear cascade. Testing was done in a large scale five-vane cascade with low freestream Renolds number condition 634,000 based on the axial chord length and the exit velocity. The detailed film-cooling effectiveness distributions on the platform were obtained using pressure sensitive paint technique. Two film-cooling hole configurations, cylindrical and fan-shaped, were used to cool the vane surface with two rows on pressure side, two rows on suction side and three rows on leading edge. For cylindrical holes, the blowing ratio of the coolant through the discrete cooling holes on pressure side and suction side ranged from 0.3 to 1.5 (based on the inlet mainstream velocity) while the blowing ratio ranging from 0.15 to 1.5 on leading edge; for fan-shaped holes, the four blowing ratios were 0.5, 1.0, 1.5 and 2.0. Results showed that average film-cooling effectiveness decreased with increasing blowing rate for the cylindrical holes, while the fan-shaped passage showed increased film-cooling effectiveness with increasing blowing ratio, indicating the fan-shaped cooling holes helped to improve film-cooling effectiveness by reducing overall jet liftoff. Fan-shaped holes improved average film-cooling effectiveness by 93.2%, 287.6% and 489.6% on pressure side, −4.1%, 27.9% and 78.2% on suction side over cylindrical holes at the blowing ratio of 0.5, 1.0 and 1.5 respectively. Numerical results were used to analyze the details of the flow and heat transfer on the cooling area with two turbulence models. Results demonstrated that tendency of the film cooling effectiveness distribution of numerical calculation and experimental measurement was generally consistent at different blowing ratio.


Author(s):  
E. M. Hohlfeld ◽  
J. R. Christophel ◽  
E. L. Couch ◽  
K. A. Thole

The clearance gap between the tip of a turbine blade and its associated shroud provides a flow path for leakage from the pressure side of the blade to the suction side. The tip region is one area that experiences high heat transfer and, as such, can be the determining factor for blade life. One method for reducing blade tip heat transfer is to use cooler fluid from the compressor, that exits from relatively large dirt purge holes placed in the tip, for cooling purposes. Dirt purge holes are typically manufactured in the blade tip to extract dirt from the coolant flow through centrifugal forces such that these dirt particles do not block smaller diameter film-cooling holes. This paper discusses the results of numerous computational simulations of cooling injection from dirt purge holes along the tip of a turbine blade. Some comparisons are also made to experimental results in which a properly scaled-up blade geometry (12X) was used to form a two-passage linear cascade. Computational results indicate that the cooling achieved through the dirt purge injection from the blade tip is dependent on the gap size as well as the blowing ratio. For a small tip gap (0.54% of the span) the flow exiting the dirt purge holes act as a blockage for the leakage flow across the gap. As the blowing ratio is increased for a large tip gap (1.63% of the span), the tip cooling increases only slightly while the cooling to the shroud increases significantly.


2011 ◽  
Vol 134 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Diganta P. Narzary ◽  
Kuo-Chun Liu ◽  
Akhilesh P. Rallabandi ◽  
Je-Chin Han

Adiabatic film-cooling effectiveness is examined on a high-pressure turbine blade by varying three critical engine parameters, viz., coolant blowing ratio, coolant-to-mainstream density ratio, and freestream turbulence intensity. Three average coolant blowing ratios (BR=1.2, 1.7, and 2.2 on the pressure side and BR=1.1, 1.4, and 1.8 on the suction side), three average coolant density ratios (DR=1.0, 1.5, and 2.5), and two average freestream turbulence intensities (Tu=4.2% and 10.5%) are considered. Conduction-free pressure sensitive paint (PSP) technique is adopted 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 two rows of cylindrical film-cooling holes on the suction side (45 deg compound), 4 rows on the pressure side (45 deg compound) and 3 around the leading edge (30 deg radial). The inlet and the exit Mach numbers are 0.24 and 0.44, respectively. The Reynolds number of the mainstream flow is 7.5×105 based on the exit velocity and blade chord length. Results suggest that the PSP is a powerful technique capable of producing clear and detailed film-effectiveness contours with diverse foreign gases. Large improvement on the pressure side and moderate improvement on the suction side effectiveness is witnessed when blowing ratio is raised from 1.2 to 1.7 and 1.1 to 1.4, respectively. No major improvement is seen thereafter with the downstream half of the suction side showing drop in effectiveness. The effect of increasing coolant density is to increase effectiveness everywhere on the pressure surface and suction surface except for the small region on the suction side, xss/Cx<0.2. Higher freestream turbulence causes effectiveness to drop everywhere except in the region downstream of the suction side where significant improvement in effectiveness is seen.


Author(s):  
Shantanu Mhetras ◽  
Je-Chin Han ◽  
Ron Rudolph

The effect of film cooling holes placed along the span of a fully-cooled high pressure turbine blade in a stationary, linear cascade on film cooling effectiveness is studied using the Pressure Sensitive Paint (PSP) technique. Effect of showerhead injection at the leading edge and the presence of compound angled, diffusing holes on the pressure and suction side are also examined. Six rows of compound angled shaped film cooling holes are provided on the pressure side while four such rows are provided on the suction side of the blade. The holes have a laidback and fan-shaped diffusing cross-section. Another three rows of cylindrical holes are drilled at a typical angle on the leading edge to capture the effect of showerhead film coolant injection. The film cooling hole arrangement simulates a typical film cooled blade design used in stage 1 rotor blades for gas turbines used for power generation. A typical blowing ratio is defined for each film hole row and tests are performed for 100%, 150% and 200% of this typical value. Tests are performed for inlet Mach numbers of 0.36 and 0.45 with corresponding exit Mach numbers of 0.51 and 0.68 respectively. The flow remains subsonic in the throat region for both Mach numbers. The corresponding free stream Reynolds number, based on the axial chord length and the exit velocity, are 1.3 million and 1.74 million respectively. Freestream turbulence intensity level at the cascade inlet is 6%. Results show that varying blowing ratios can have a significant impact on film-cooling effectiveness distribution. Large spanwise variations in effectiveness distributions are also observed. Similar distributions were observed for both Mach numbers.


2006 ◽  
Vol 326-328 ◽  
pp. 1161-1164
Author(s):  
Kwang Su Kim ◽  
Youn Jea Kim

In order to protect turbine blades from high temperature, film cooling can be applied to gas turbine engine system since it can prevent corrosion and facture of material. To enhance the film cooling performance in the vicinity of the turbine blade leading edge, flow characteristics of the film-cooled turbine blade have been investigated using a cylindrical body model. Mainstream Reynolds number based on the cylinder diameter was 1.01×105 and the mainstream turbulence intensities were about 0.2%. CO2 was used as coolant to simulate the effect of coolant-tomainstream density ratio. The effect of coolant flow rates was studied for various blowing ratios of 0.5, 0.8, 1.1 and 1.4, respectively. Results show that the blowing ratio has a strong effect on film cooling effectiveness and the coolant trajectory is sensitive to the blowing ratio.


2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shantanu Mhetras ◽  
Diganta Narzary ◽  
Zhihong Gao ◽  
Je-Chin Han

Film-cooling effectiveness from shaped holes on the near tip pressure side and cylindrical holes on the squealer cavity floor is investigated. The pressure side squealer rim wall is cut near the trailing edge to allow the accumulated coolant in the cavity to escape and cool the tip trailing edge. Effects of varying blowing ratios and squealer cavity depth are also examined on film-cooling effectiveness. The film-cooling effectiveness distributions are measured on the blade tip, near tip pressure side and the inner pressure side and suction side rim walls using pressure sensitive paint technique. The internal coolant-supply passages of the squealer tipped blade are modeled similar to those in the GE-E3 rotor blade with two separate serpentine loops supplying coolant to the film-cooling holes. Two rows of cylindrical film-cooling holes are arranged offset to the suction side profile and along the camber line on the tip. Another row of shaped film-cooling holes is arranged along the pressure side just below the tip. The average blowing ratio of the cooling gas is controlled to be 0.5, 1.0, 1.5, and 2.0. A five-bladed linear cascade in a blow down facility with a tip gap clearance of 1.5% is used to perform the experiments. The free-stream Reynolds number, based on the axial chord length and the exit velocity, was 1,480,000 and the inlet and exit Mach numbers were 0.23 and 0.65, respectively. A blowing ratio of 1.0 is found to give best results on the pressure side, whereas the tip surfaces forming the squealer cavity give best results for M=2. Results show high film-cooling effectiveness magnitudes near the trailing edge of the blade tip due to coolant accumulation from upstream holes in the tip cavity. A squealer depth with a recess of 2.1mm causes the average effectiveness magnitudes to decrease slightly as compared to a squealer depth of 4.2mm.


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