Numerical Approach at Flat Plate for Predicting the Film Cooling Effectiveness Part A: Effect Blowing Ratio

2018 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
pp. 30-44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Farouk Kebir ◽  
Azzeddine Khorsi

Film cooling is vital for gas turbine blades to protect them from thermal stresses and high temperatures due to the hot gas flow in the blade surface. Film cooling is applied to almost all external surfaces associated with aerodynamic profiles that are exposed to hot combustion gases such as main bodies, end-walls, blade tips and leading edges. In a review of the literature, it was found that there are strong effects of free-stream turbulence, surface curvature and hole shape on film cooling performance also blowing ratio. The performance of the film cooling is difficult to predict due to the inherent complex flow fields along the surfaces of the airfoil components in the turbine engines. From all what we introducing the film cooling is reviewed through a discussion of the analyses methodologies, a physical description, and the various influences on film-cooling performance. Initially Computational analysis was done on a flat plate with hole inclined at 55° to the surface plate. This study focuses on the efficient computation of film cooling flows with three blowing ratio. The numerical results show the effectiveness cooling and heat transfer behavior with increasing injection blowing ratio M (0.5, 1, and 1.5). The influence of increased blade film cooling can be assessed via the values of Nusselt number in terms of reduced heat transfer to the blade. Predictions of film effectiveness are compared with experimental results for a circular jet at blowing ratios ranging from 0.5, 1.0 and 1.5. The present results are obtained at a free stream turbulence of 10%, which are the typical conditions upstream of the effectiveness is generally lower for a large stream-wise angle of 55°.

2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmed M. Elsayed ◽  
Farouk M. Owis ◽  
M. Madbouli Abdel Rahman

Film cooling is vital to gas turbine blades to protect them from high temperatures and hence high thermal stresses. In the current work, optimization of film cooling parameters on a flat plate is investigated numerically. The effect of film cooling parameters such as inlet velocity direction, lateral and forward diffusion angles, blowing ratio, and streamwise angle on the cooling effectiveness is studied, and optimum cooling parameters are selected. The numerical simulation of the coolant flow through flat plate hole system is carried out using the “CFDRC package” coupled with the optimization algorithm “simplex” to maximize overall film cooling effectiveness. Unstructured finite volume technique is used to solve the steady, three-dimensional and compressible Navier-Stokes equations. The results are compared with the published numerical and experimental data of a cylindrically round-simple hole, and the results show good agreement. In addition, the results indicate that the average overall film cooling effectiveness is enhanced by decreasing the streamwise angle for high blowing ratio and by increasing the lateral and forward diffusion angles. Optimum geometry of the cooling hole on a flat plate is determined. In addition, numerical simulations of film cooling on actual turbine blade are performed using the flat plate optimal hole geometry.


Author(s):  
Vinod U. Kakade ◽  
Steven J. Thorpe ◽  
Miklós Gerendás

The thermal management of aero gas turbine engine combustion systems commonly employs effusion-cooling in combination with various cold-side convective cooling schemes. The combustor liner incorporates many small holes which are usually set in staggered arrays and at a shallow angle to the cooled surface; relatively cold compressor delivery air is then allowed to flow through these holes to provide the full-coverage film-cooling effect. The efficient design of such systems requires robust correlations of film-cooling effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient at a range of aero-thermal conditions, and the use of appropriately validated computational models. However, the flow conditions within a combustor are characterised by particularly high turbulence levels and relatively large length scales. The experimental evidence for performance of effusion-cooling under such flow conditions is currently sparse. The work reported here is aimed at quantifying typical effusion-cooling performance at a range of combustor relevant free-stream conditions (high turbulence), and also to assess the importance of modeling the coolant to free-stream density ratio. Details of a new laboratory wind-tunnel facility for the investigation of film-cooling at high turbulence levels are reported. For a typical combustor effusion geometry that uses cylindrical holes, spatially resolved measurements of adiabatic effectiveness, heat transfer coefficient and net heat flux reduction are presented for a range of blowing ratios (0.48 to 2), free-stream turbulence conditions (4 and 22%) and density ratios (0.97 and 1.47). The measurements reveal that elevated free-stream turbulence impacts on both the adiabatic effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient, although this is dependent upon the blowing ratio being employed and particularly the extent to which the coolant jets detach from the surface. At low blowing ratios the presence of high turbulence levels causes increased lateral spreading of the coolant adjacent to the injection points, but more rapid degradation in the downstream direction. At high blowing ratios, high turbulence levels cause a modest increase in effectiveness due to turbulent transport of the detached coolant fluid. Additionally, the augmentation of heat transfer coefficient caused by the coolant injection is seen to be increased at high free-stream turbulence levels.


Author(s):  
Lin Ye ◽  
Cun-liang Liu ◽  
Hai-yong Liu ◽  
Hui-ren Zhu ◽  
Jian-xia Luo

To investigate the effects of the inclined ribs on internal flow structure in film hole and the film cooling performance on outer surface, experimental and numerical studies are conducted on the effects of rib orientation angle on film cooling of compound cylindrical holes. Three coolant channel cases, including two ribbed cross-flow channels (135° and 45° angled ribs) and the plenum case, are studied under three blowing ratios (0.5, 1.0 and 2.0). 2D contours of film cooling effectiveness as well as heat transfer coefficient were measured by transient liquid crystal measurement technique (TLC). The steady RANS simulations with realizable k-ε turbulence model and enhanced wall treatment were performed. The results show that the spanwise width of film coverage is greatly influenced by the rib orientation angle. The spanwise width of the 45° rib case is obviously larger than that of the 135° rib case under lower blowing ratios. When the blowing ratio is 1.0, the area-averaged cooling effectiveness of the 135° rib case and the 45° rib case are higher than that of the plenum case by 38% and 107%, respectively. With the increase of blowing ratio, the film coverage difference between different rib orientation cases becomes smaller. The 45° rib case also produces higher heat transfer coefficient, which is higher than the 135° rib case by 3.4–8.7% within the studied blowing ratio range. Furthermore, the discharge coefficient of the 45° rib case is the lowest among the three cases. The helical motion of coolant flow is observed in the hole of 45° rib case. The jet divides into two parts after being blown out of the hole due to this motion, which induces strong velocity separation and loss. For the 135° rib case, the vortex in the upper half region of the secondary-flow channel rotates in the same direction with the hole inclination direction, which leads to the straight streamlines and thus results in lower loss and higher discharge coefficient.


Author(s):  
Donald L. Schmidt ◽  
David G. Bogard

A flat plate test section was used to study how high free-stream turbulence with large turbulence length scales, representative of the turbine environment, affect the film cooling adiabatic effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient for a round hole film cooling geometry. This study also examined cooling performance with combined high free-stream turbulence and a rough surface which simulated the roughness representative of an in-service turbine. The injection was from a single row of film cooling holes with injection angle of 30°. The density ratio of the injectant to the mainstream was 2.0 for the adiabatic effectiveness tests, and 1.0 for the heat transfer coefficient tests. Streamwise and lateral distributions of adiabatic effectiveness and heat transfer coefficients were obtained at locations from 2 to 90 hole diameters downstream. At small to moderate momentum flux ratios, which would normally be considered optimum blowing conditions, high free-stream turbulence dramatically decreased adiabatic effectiveness. However, at large momentum flux ratios, conditions for which the film cooling jet would normally be detached, high free-stream turbulence caused an increase in adiabatic effectiveness. The combination of high free-stream turbulence with surface roughness resulted in an increase in adiabatic effectiveness relative to the smooth wall with high free-stream turbulence. Heat transfer rates were relatively unaffected by a film cooling injection. The key result from this study was a substantial increase in the momentum flux ratios for maximum film cooling performance which occurred for high free-stream turbulence and surface roughness conditions which are more representative of actual turbine conditions.


2004 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 443-457 ◽  
Author(s):  
Je-Chin Han

Gas turbines are used extensively for aircraft propulsion, land-based power generation, and industrial applications. Developments in turbine cooling technology play a critical role in increasing the thermal efficiency and power output of advanced gas turbines. Gas turbine blades are cooled internally by passing the coolant through several rib-enhanced serpentine passages to remove heat conducted from the outside surface. External cooling of turbine blades by film cooling is achieved by injecting relatively cooler air from the internal coolant passages out of the blade surface in order to form a protective layer between the blade surface and hot gas-path flow. For internal cooling, this presentation focuses on the effect of rotation on rotor blade coolant passage heat transfer with rib turbulators and impinging jets. The computational flow and heat transfer results are also presented and compared to experimental data using the RANS method with various turbulence models such as k-ε, and second-moment closure models. This presentation includes unsteady high free-stream turbulence effects on film cooling performance with a discussion of detailed heat transfer coef- ficient and film-cooling effectiveness distributions for standard and shaped film-hole geometry using the newly developed transient liquid crystal image method.


Author(s):  
Lin Ye ◽  
Cun-liang Liu ◽  
Hui-ren Zhu ◽  
Jian-xia Luo ◽  
Ying-ni Zhai

This paper presents an experimental and numerical investigation on the film cooling with different coolant feeding channel structures. Two ribbed cross-flow channels with rib-orientation of 135° and 45° respectively and the plenum coolant channel have been studied and compared to find out the effect of rib orientation on the film cooling performances of cylindrical holes. The film cooling effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient were measured by the transient heat transfer measurement technique with narrow-band thermochromic liquid crystal. Numerical simulations with realizable k-ε turbulence model were also performed to analyze the flow mechanism. The results show that the coolant channel structure has a notable effect on the flow structure of film jet which is the most significant mechanism affecting the film cooling performance. Generally, film cooling cases fed with ribbed cross-flow channels have asymmetric counter-rotating vortex structures and related asymmetric temperature distributions, which make the film cooling effectiveness and the heat transfer coefficient distributions asymmetric to the hole centerline. The discharge coefficient of the 45° rib case is the lowest among the three cases under all the blowing ratios. And the plenum case has higher discharge coefficient than the 135° rib case under low blowing ratio. With the increase of blowing ratio, the discharge coefficient of the 135° rib case gets larger than the plenum case gradually, because the vortex in the upper half region of the coolant channel rotates in the same direction with the film hole inclination direction and makes the jet easy to flow into the film hole in the 135° rib case.


Author(s):  
Lin Ye ◽  
Cun-liang Liu ◽  
Hai-yong Liu ◽  
Qi-jiao He ◽  
Gang Xie

The trailing edge of the high-pressure turbine blade presents significant challenges to cooling structure design. To achieve better cooling performance at turbine blade trailing edge, a novel ribbed cutback structure is proposed for trailing edge cooling, which has rib structures on the cutback surface for heat transfer enhancement. In this study, numerical simulations have been performed on the effects of V-shaped rib angle on the film cooling characteristics and flow physics. Three V-shaped rib angles of 30°, 45° and 60° are studied. The distributions of adiabatic cooling effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient are obtained under blowing ratios with the value of 0.5, 1.0 and 1.5 respectively. Due to the relatively small rib height, the effect of V-shaped ribs on the film cooling effectiveness is not notable. The disadvantage of V-shaped ribs mainly exhibits at the downstream area of cutback surface. With the increase of V-shaped rib angle, the film cooling effectiveness becomes lower, but the values are still above 0.9. The V-shaped ribs obviously enhance the heat transfer on trailing edge cutback surface. The area-averaged heat transfer coefficient of the V-rib case is higher than that of the smooth case by 26.3–41.2%. The 45° V-rib case has higher heat transfer intensity than the other two V-shaped rib cases under all the three blowing ratios. However, the heat transfer coefficient distribution of the 60° V-rib case is more uniform. The heat transfer intensity of the 30° V-rib case is higher in the downstream region than the other two cases, but lower in the upstream region in which the difference becomes smaller with the increase of blowing ratio. The 45° V-rib case and the 60° V-rib case both reach the maximum value of area-averaged heat transfer intensity under blowing ratio is 1.0. Under higher blowing ratio, the 30° V-rib case and the 45° V-rib case outperform 2.1% and 6.7% higher value relative to the 60° V-rib case respectively due to the smaller velocity gradient in the 60° V-rib case in the downstream.


Author(s):  
Hong Wu ◽  
Huichuan Cheng ◽  
Yulong Li ◽  
Shuiting Ding

Film cooling performance of a sister hole was investigated in a flat plate model by applying Thermochromic Liquid Crystal (TLC) technique under the stationary and rotating conditions. The flat plate model is installed in the test section. The sister hole include one main hole and two additional side holes with the smaller diameter in the spanwise direction. The diameter of the main hole is 4 mm and the injection angle is 30°. The density ratio of coolant to mainstream is 1.05. The Reynolds number (ReD) based on the velocity of mainstream and the diameter of the main hole are 2300, 3400 and 4500. Four rotational speeds of 200, 400, 600 and 800 rpm are conducted on both pressure side (trailing wall) and suction side (leading wall) with the blowing ratio varying from 0.14 to 3.5. The effects of blowing ratio, Reynolds number (ReD) and rotation number are mainly analyzed according to film coverage and film cooling effectiveness. The results show that the film performance firstly increases then decreases with the rising of blowing ratio, the optimal blowing ratio is about M=0.5. The film cooling performance is improved with higher Reynolds number (ReD). Under the rotation condition, the film trajectory has an obvious centrifugal deflection which can be enhanced by higher rotation number on the pressure side, and the film deflection moves a little centripetally on the suction side. The film cooling effectiveness on the suction side increases with the rising of rotation number and it is higher than that on the pressure side.


Author(s):  
Lei Zhao ◽  
Ting Wang

Film cooling is a cooling technique widely used in high-performance gas turbines to protect the turbine airfoils from being damaged by hot flue gases. Motivated by the need to further improve film cooling in terms of both cooling effectiveness and coolant coverage area, the mist/air film cooling scheme is investigated through experiments in this study. A small amount of tiny water droplets (7% wt.) with an average diameter about 5 μm (mist) is injected into the cooling air to enhance the cooling performance. A wind tunnel system and test facility is specifically built for this unique experiment. A Phase Doppler Particle Analyzer (PDPA) system is employed to measure droplet size, velocity, and turbulence information. An infrared camera and thermocouples are both used for temperature measurements. Part 1 is focused on the heat transfer result on the wall and Part 2 is focused on the two-phase droplet multiphase flow behavior. Mist film cooling performance is evaluated and compared against air-only film cooling in terms of adiabatic film cooling effectiveness and film coverage. A row of five circular cylinder holes is used, injecting at an inclination angle of 30° into the main flow. For the 0.6 blowing ratio cases, it is found that adding mist performs as wonderfully as we mindfully sought: the net enhancement reaches a maximum 190% locally and 128% overall at the centerline, the cooling coverage increases by 83%, and more uniform surface temperature is achieved. The latter is critical for reducing wall thermal stresses. When the blowing ratio increases from 0.6 to 1.4, both the cooling coverage and net enhancement are reduced to below 60%. Therefore, it is more beneficial to choose a relatively low blowing ratio to keep the coolant film attached to the surface when applying the mist cooling. The concept of Film Decay Length (FDL) is introduced and proven to be a useful guideline to quantitatively evaluate the effective cooling coverage and cooling decay rate.


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.


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