internal cooling
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2022 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
James J A Hammond ◽  
Francesco Montomoli ◽  
Marco Pietropaoli ◽  
Richard Sandberg ◽  
Vittorio Michelassi

Abstract This work shows the application of Gene Expression Programming to augment RANS turbulence closure modelling, for flows through complex geometry designed for additive manufacturing. Specifically, for the design of optimised internal cooling channels in turbine blades. One of the challenges in internal cooling design is the heat transfer accuracy of the RANS formulation in comparison to higher fidelity methods, which are still not used in design on account of their computational cost. However, high fidelity data can be extremely valuable for improving current lower fidelity models and this work shows the application of data driven approaches to develop turbulence closures for an internally ribbed duct. Different approaches are compared and the results of the improved model are illustrated; first on the same geometry, and then for an unseen predictive case. The work shows the potential of using data driven models for accurate heat transfer predictions even in non-conventional configurations and indicates the ability of closures learnt from complex flow cases to adapt successfully to unseen test cases.


2022 ◽  
pp. 1-32
Author(s):  
Izzet Sahin ◽  
I-Lun Chen ◽  
Lesley Wright ◽  
Je-Chin Han ◽  
Hongzhou Xu ◽  
...  

Abstract A wide variety of pin-fins have been used to enhance heat transfer in internal cooling channels. However, due to their large blockage in the flow direction, they result in an undesirable high pressure drop. This experimental study aims to reduce pressure drop while increasing the heat transfer surface area by utilizing strip-fins in converging internal cooling channels. The channel is designed with a trapezoidal cross-section, converges in both transverse and longitudinal directions, and is also skewed β=120° with respect to the direction of rotation in order to model a trailing edge cooling channel. Only the leading and trailing surfaces of the channel are instrumented, and each surface is divided into eighteen isolated copper plates to measure the regionally averaged heat transfer coefficient. Utilizing pressure taps at the inlet and outlet of the channel, the pressure drop is obtained. Three staggered arrays of strip-fins are investigated: one full height configuration and two partial fin height arrangements (Sz=2mm and 1mm). In all cases, the strip fins are 2mm wide (W) and 10mm long (Lf ) in the flow direction. The fins are spaced such that Sy/Lf = 1 in the streamwise direction. However, due to the convergence, the spanwise spacing, Sx/W, was varied from 8 to 6.2 along the channel. The rotation number of the channel varied up to 0.21 by ranging the inlet Reynolds number from 10,000 to 40,000 and rotation speed from 0 to 300rpm. It is found that


2022 ◽  
pp. 1-28
Author(s):  
Ce Liang ◽  
Yu Rao ◽  
Jianian Chen ◽  
Peng Zhang

Abstract Experiments and numerical simulations under stationary and rotating conditions have been conducted to investigate turbulent flow and heat transfer characteristics of innovative guiding pin fin arrays in a wedge-shaped channel, which models the internal cooling passages for gas turbine blade trailing edge. The Reynolds number range is 10,000-80,000, and the inlet rotation number range is 0-0.46. With the increase of Reynolds numbers, the enhancement of heat transfer performance with guiding pin fin arrays is significantly higher than that with conventional circular pin fin arrays. At the highest Reynolds number of Re=80,000, the overall Nusselt number of the channel with guiding pin fin arrays is about 33.7% higher than that of the channel with circular pin fin arrays under the stationary condition, and is about 23.0% higher than the latter under the rotating conditions. At the highest inlet rotation number of Ro=0.46, the heat transfer difference between the trailing side and leading side of the channel is significantly lower with the guiding pin fin arrays. Both the experiments and numerical simulations indicate that the heat transfer uniformity and enhancement of the channel endwall is significantly improved by the guiding pin fin arrays under stationary and rotating conditions, which provide more reasonable flow distribution in the wedge-shaped channel, and can further produce obviously improved heat transfer in the tip region for the trailing edge internal cooling channel.


Aerospace ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 29
Author(s):  
Qinghua Deng ◽  
Huihui Wang ◽  
Wei He ◽  
Zhenping Feng

The leading edge is the critical portion for a gas turbine blade and is often insufficiently cooled due to the adverse effect of Crossflow in the cooling chamber. A novel internal cooling structure, wall jet cooling, can suppress Crossflow effect by changing the coolant flow direction. In this paper, the conjugate heat transfer and aerodynamic characteristics of blades with three different internal cooling structures, including impingement with a single row of jets, swirl cooling, and wall jet cooling, are investigated through RANS simulations. The results show that wall jet cooling combines the advantages of impingement cooling and swirl cooling, and has a 19–54% higher laterally-averaged overall cooling effectiveness than the conventional methods at different positions on the suction side. In the blade with wall jet cooling, the spent coolant at the leading edge is extracted away through the downstream channels so that the jet could accurately impinge the target surface without unnecessary mixing, and the high turbulence generated by the separation vortex enhances the heat transfer intensity. The Coriolis force induces the coolant air to adhere to the pressure side’s inner wall surface, preventing the jet from leaving the target surface. The parallel cooling channels eliminate the common Crossflow effect and make the flow distribution of the orifices more uniform. The trailing edge outlet reduces the entire cooling structure’s pressure to a low level, which means less penalty on power output and engine efficiency.


2022 ◽  
Vol 73 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Ruitao Peng ◽  
Linfeng Zhao ◽  
Jiawei Tong ◽  
Meiliang Chen ◽  
Minzi Zhou ◽  
...  

Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 148
Author(s):  
Wenbin He ◽  
Ke Zhang ◽  
Junmei Wu ◽  
Jiang Lei ◽  
Pengfei Su ◽  
...  

In order to deepen the understanding of rotating effects on internal cooling, the flow and heat transfer characteristics of 2-pass rotating rectangular smooth/ribbed channels are investigated by Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) simulation. Three rotating numbers (Ro = 0.10, 0.25, and 0.40) are simulated, and the maximum buoyancy parameter (Bo) reaches 5.0. The results show that the rotating buoyancy has significant effects on the flow and heat transfer under high Bo conditions. When Bo > 1.0, rotating buoyancy inducts flow separation near the leading edge (LE) in the first passage, while the air flow in the second passage shows a double-peak profile. With increased Bo, the heat transfer in the first passage is greatly increased, and the maximum growth rate occurs at Bo = 0.6~1.0. However, the heat transfer in the second passage has no obvious changes due to a strong turn effect. In the ribbed channel, rotating effects are much weaker than those in the smooth channel. This research helps to improve the understanding of the internal cooling heat transfer mechanism in land-based gas turbines under typical operating conditions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 141-148
Author(s):  
Ehsan Kianpour ◽  
Nor Azwadi Che Sidik

Abstract: The major effects of cylindrical and row trenched cooling holes with angles of alpha=30, beta=0, alpha=40, beta=0 and alpha=50, beta=0 at BR=3.18 on the effectiveness of film cooling near the combustor end wall surface is an important subject to study in detail. In the current study, researchers used a FLUENT package 16/11 to simulate a 3-D model of a Pratt and Whitney gas turbine engine. In this research, RNG turbulence model K-ε model was used to analyze the flow behavior on the passage ways of internal cooling. In the combustor simulator, the dilution jets and cooling flow staggered in the streamwise direction and aligned in the spanwise direction as well. In comparison with the baseline case of cooling holes, the application of trenched hole near the end wall surface increased the effectiveness of film cooling up to 100% for different trench cases.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thanapat Chotroongruang ◽  
Prasert Prapamonthon ◽  
Rungsimun Thongdee ◽  
Thanapat Thongmuenwaiyathon ◽  
Zhenxu Sun ◽  
...  

Abstract Based on the Brayton cycle for gas-turbine engines, the high thermal efficiency and power output of a gas-turbine engine can be obtainable when the gas-turbine engine operates at high turbine inlet temperatures. However, turbine components e.g., inlet guide vane, rotor blade, and stator vane request high cooling performance. Typically, internal cooling and film cooling are two effective techniques that are widely used to protect high thermal loads for the turbine components in a state-of-the-art gas turbine. Consequently, the high thermal efficiency and power output can be obtained, and the turbine lifespan can be prolonged, also. On top of that, a comprehensive understanding of flow and heat transfer phenomena in the turbine components is very important. As a result, both experiments and simulations have been used to improve the cooling performance of the turbine components. In fact, the cooling air used in the internal cooling and film cooling is partially extracted from the compressor. Therefore, variations in the cooling air affect the cooling performance of the turbine components directly. This paper presents a numerical study on the influence of the cooling air on cooling-performance sensitivity of an internally convective turbine vane, MARK II using the computational fluid dynamics (CFD)/conjugate heat transfer (CHT) with the SST k-ω turbulence model. Result comparisons are conducted in terms of pressure, temperature, and cooling effectiveness under the effects of the inlet temperature, mass flow rate, turbulence intensity, and flow direction of the cooling air. The cooling-performance sensitivity to the coolant parameters is shown through variations of local cooling effectiveness, and area and volume-weighted average cooling effectiveness.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-85
Author(s):  
Shinjan Ghosh ◽  
Erik Fernandez ◽  
Jayanta Kapat

Abstract Topology optimization uses a variable permeability approach to manipulate flow geometries. Such a method has been employed in the current work to modify the geometric configuration of internal cooling ducts by manipulating the distribution of material blockage. A modified version of the OpenFOAM solver AdjointshapeoptimizationFOAM has been used to optimize the flow path of a serpentine channel and high aspect ratio rectangular ducts, with increase in heat transfer and reduction in pressure drop as the objective functions. These duct shapes are typically used as internal cooling channels in gas turbine blades for sustaining the blade material at high inlet temperatures. The serpentine channel shape was initially topologically optimized, the fluid path from which was post-processed and re-simulated in STAR-CCM+. The end result had an improvement in thermal performance efficiency by 24%. Separation regions were found to be reduced when compared to the original baseline. The second test geometry was a high aspect ratio rectangular duct. Weight factors were assigned to the objective functions in this multi-objective approach, which were varied to obtain a unique shape for each such combination. The addition of mass penalization to the existing objective function resulted in a complex lattice like structure, which was a different outcome in geometry and shape when compared to the case without any additional penalization. The thermal performance efficiency of this shape was found to be higher by at-least 18% when compared to the CFD results of a few other turbulator shapes from literature.


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