An Experimental Study of Heat Transfer and Film Cooling on Large-Scale Turbine Endwalls

1974 ◽  
Vol 96 (4) ◽  
pp. 524-529 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. F. Blair

Experiments were conducted to determine the film cooling effectiveness and convective heat transfer coefficient distributions on the endwall of a large-scale turbine vane passage. The vane test models employed simulated the passage geometry and upstream cooling slot geometry of a typical first stage turbine. The test models were constructed of low thermal conductivity foam and foil heaters. The tests were conducted at a typical engine Reynolds number but at lower than typical Mach numbers. The film cooling effectiveness distribution for the entire endwall and the heat transfer distribution for the downstream one-half of the endwall were characterized by large gapwise variations which were attributed to a secondary flow vortex.

Author(s):  
M. F. Blair

Experiments were conducted to determine the film cooling effectiveness and convective heat transfer coefficient distributions on the endwall of a large-scale turbine vane passage. The vane test models employed simulated the passage geometry and upstream cooling slot geometry of a typical first-stage turbine. The test models were constructed of low thermal conductivity foam and foil heaters. The tests were conducted at a typical engine Reynolds number but at lower than typical Mach numbers. The film cooling effectiveness distribution for the entire endwall and the heat transfer distribution for the downstream one-half of the endwall were characterized by large gapwise variations which were attributed to a secondary flow vortex.


Author(s):  
Jason E. Albert ◽  
David G. Bogard

Film cooling performance is typically quantified by separating the external convective heat transfer from the other components of the conjugate heat transfer that occurs in turbine airfoils. However, it is also valuable to assess the conjugate heat transfer in terms of the overall cooling effectiveness, which is a parameter of importance to airfoil designers. In the current study, adiabatic film effectiveness and overall cooling effectiveness values were measured for the pressure side of a simplified turbine vane model with three rows of showerhead cooling at the leading edge and one row of body film cooling holes on the pressure side. This was done by utilizing two geometrically identical models made from different materials. Adiabatic film effectiveness was measured using a very low thermal conductivity material, and the overall cooling effectiveness was measured using a material with a higher thermal conductivity selected such that the Biot number of the model matched that of a turbine vane at engine conditions. The theoretical basis for this matched-Biot number modeling technique is discussed in some detail. Additionally, two designs of pressure side body film cooling holes were considered in this study: a standard design of straight, cylindrical holes and an advanced design of “trenched” cooling holes in which the hole exits were situated in a recessed, transverse trench. This study was performed using engine representative flow conditions, including a coolant-to-mainstream density ratio of DR = 1.4 and a mainstream turbulence intensity of Tu = 20%. The results of this study show that adiabatic film and overall cooling effectiveness increase with blowing ratio for the showerhead and pressure side trenched holes. Performance decreases with blowing ratio for the standard holes due to coolant jet separation from the surface. Both body film designs have similar performance at a lower blowing ratio when the standard hole coolant jets remain attached. Far downstream of the cooling holes both designs perform similarly because film effectiveness decays more rapidly for the trenched holes.


1975 ◽  
Vol 97 (4) ◽  
pp. 539-543 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. F. Blair ◽  
R. D. Lander

Techniques to measure local film effectiveness distributions on large-scale models of turbine blade and vane sections were developed for use in subsonic, room-temperature wind-tunnel environments. Highly detailed film cooling effectiveness distributions were obtained on near-adiabatic, cast rigid foam test models using infrared radiometer scanning techniques. Sample results from both flat-plate film cooling studies and airfoil leading-edge film cooling studies are presented.


Author(s):  
Chun-yi Yao ◽  
Hui-ren Zhu ◽  
Cun-liang Liu ◽  
Bo-lun Zhang ◽  
Xin-lei Li

Abstract A number of experimental studies have been performed to study the effect of geometric and aerodynamic parameters on the film cooling performance on the flat plate and turbine blade, however, the experimental investigations on a fully-cooled turbine vane is limited, especially at different density ratios. Consequently, an experiment on a fully-cooled turbine vane with multi-row film cooling holes was carried out to investigate the effect of mass flow ratio and density ratio on the film cooling performance, in which the film cooling effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient was measured by transient liquid crystal. The mainstream inlet Reynolds number based on the inlet velocity and the true chord length is 120000 and the mainstream turbulence intensity is 15%, three mass flow ratios of 5.5%, 8.4% and 11% and two density ratios of 1.0 and 1.5 were tested. The air was selected as the mainstream, the air and carbon dioxide were independently selected as secondary flow to produce two density ratios of 1.0 and 1.5. The test vane is similar in geometry to a first stage turbine vane of a normal aeroengine. Two cavities were manufactured in the test vane to feed 18 rows of film cooling holes. Results show that with the mass flow ratio increasing for DR = 1.0 and 1.5, the film cooling effectiveness on pressure side gradually increases, however, that on the suction side gradually decreases. Generally, increased density ratio produces higher film cooling effectiveness because the injection momentum was reduced, however, the film cooling effectiveness on the suction side for DR = 1.5 is lower than that for DR = 1.0. The coolant outflow significantly enhances the surface heat transfer coefficient for 0 < S/C < 0.5 and S/C < −0.5. The heat transfer coefficient in the leading edge is less affected by the density ratio, however, the increase in density ratio reduces the heat transfer coefficient ratio in other regions, especially for large mass flow ratios.


2013 ◽  
Vol 135 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason E. Albert ◽  
David G. Bogard

Film cooling performance is typically quantified by separating the external convective heat transfer from the other components of the conjugate heat transfer that occurs in turbine airfoils. However, it is also valuable to assess the conjugate heat transfer in terms of the overall cooling effectiveness, which is a parameter of importance to airfoil designers. In the current study, adiabatic film effectiveness and overall cooling effectiveness values were measured for the pressure side of a simplified turbine vane model with three rows of showerhead cooling at the leading edge and one row of body film cooling holes on the pressure side. This was done by utilizing two geometrically identical models made from different materials. Adiabatic film effectiveness was measured using a very low thermal conductivity material, and the overall cooling effectiveness was measured using a material with a higher thermal conductivity selected such that the Biot number of the model matched that of a turbine vane at engine conditions. The theoretical basis for this matched-Biot number modeling technique is discussed in some detail. Additionally, two designs of pressure side body film cooling holes were considered in this study: a standard design of straight, cylindrical holes and an advanced design of “trenched” cooling holes in which the hole exits were situated in a recessed, transverse trench. This study was performed using engine representative flow conditions, including a coolant-to-mainstream density ratio of DR = 1.4 and a mainstream turbulence intensity of Tu = 20%. The results of this study show that adiabatic film and overall cooling effectiveness increase with blowing ratio for the showerhead and pressure side trenched holes. Performance decreases with blowing ratio for the standard holes due to coolant jet separation from the surface. Both body film designs have similar performance at a lower blowing ratio when the standard hole coolant jets remain attached. Far downstream of the cooling holes both designs perform similarly because film effectiveness decays more rapidly for the trenched holes.


2005 ◽  
Vol 128 (1) ◽  
pp. 62-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. D. Cardwell ◽  
N. Sundaram ◽  
K. A. Thole

To maintain acceptable turbine airfoil temperatures, film cooling is typically used whereby coolant, extracted from the compressor, is injected through component surfaces. In manufacturing a turbine, the first stage vanes are cast in either single airfoils or double airfoils. As the engine is assembled, these singlets or doublets are placed in a turbine disk in which there are inherent gaps between the airfoils. The turbine is designed to allow outflow of high-pressure coolant rather than hot gas ingestion. Moreover, it is quite possible that the singlets or doublets become misaligned during engine operation. It has also become of interest to the turbine community as to the effect of corrosion and deposition of particles on component heat transfer. This study uses a large-scale turbine vane in which the following two effects are investigated: the effect of a midpassage gap on endwall film cooling and the effect of roughness on endwall film cooling. The results indicate that the midpassage gap was found to have a significant effect on the coolant exiting from the combustor-turbine interface slot. When the gap is misaligned, the results indicate a severe reduction in the film-cooling effectiveness in the case where the pressure side endwall is below the endwall associated with the suction side of the adjacent vane.


2018 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 291-303 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cun-Liang Liu ◽  
Dan Zhao ◽  
Ying-Ni Zhai ◽  
Hui-Ren Zhu ◽  
Yi-Hong He ◽  
...  

AbstractNumerical simulations have been performed on the film cooling characteristics of counter-inclined structures, which have advantage in manufacturing relative to the usually used parallel-inclined film-hole row structure, on a turbine vane leading edge model. Single row structure and dual-row structure with counter-inclined film holes were applied in the simulation of leading edge film cooling of turbine vane. The effect of jet-interaction between counter-inclined film-hole rows was studied. The distributions of film cooling effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient were obtained at blowing ratios of 1.0 and 2.0. The results of single row structure show that the film cooling performances of counter-inclined film-hole row are not weakened compared to the traditional parallel-inclined film-hole row structure. The film cooling effectiveness of the counter-inclined film-hole row structure decreases with the increase of blowing ratio, while the heat transfer coefficient increases. The jet-interaction in the dual-row film cooling structure has more notable influence on the film cooling effectiveness than the heat transfer coefficient. Compared to the single row case, the interactions between the upstream counter-blowing jets and the downstream jet improve the film coverage performance and reduce the heat transfer intensity of this downstream jet under larger blowing ratio condition.


Author(s):  
Qi-ling Guo ◽  
Cun-liang Liu ◽  
Hui-ren Zhu ◽  
Hai-yong Liu ◽  
Rui-dong Wang ◽  
...  

Experimental investigation has been performed to study the film cooling characteristics of counter-inclined structures on the turbine vane leading edge. In this paper, four counter-inclined models are measured including cylindrical film holes with and without impingement holes, laid-back film holes with and without impingement holes. A semi-cylinder model is used to model the turbine vane leading edge. Two rows of film holes are located at ±15° on either side of the leading edge model, inclined 90° to the flow direction and 45° to the spanwise direction. Film cooling effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient have been obtained using a transient heat transfer measurement technique with double thermochromic liquid crystals with four blowing ratios ranging from 0.5 to 2 at a 1.0 density ratio. The results show that the film cooling effectiveness decreases with the increase of blowing ratio. No matter cylindrical hole or laid-back hole, the addition of impingement enhances the film cooling effectiveness. Compared with cylindrical hole, laid-back hole produces a better film cooling performance mainly because of stronger lateral momentum. Moreover, the benefits of both adding impingement and exit shaping are more obvious under a large blowing ratio.


Author(s):  
Holger Werschnik ◽  
Jonathan Hilgert ◽  
Martin Bruschewski ◽  
Heinz-Peter Schiffer

The Large Scale Turbine Rig (LSTR) at Technische Universit ät Darmstadt, Germany is used to examine the aerothermal interaction of combustor exit flow conditions on the subsequent turbine stage. The rig resembles a high pressure turbine and is scaled to low Mach number conditions. A baseline configuration with axial, low-turbulent inflow and an aerodynamic inflow condition of a state-of-the-art lean combustor is modeled by the means of swirl generators, whose clocking position towards the nozzle guide vane’s leading edge can be varied. A hub side coolant injection consisting of a double-row of cylindrical holes is implemented to examine the impact on endwall cooling. This paper is directed to study the effect of swirling inflow on heat transfer and film cooling effectiveness on the hub side endwall. Nusselt numbers are calculated using infrared thermography and the auxiliary wall method. This method allows for a high spatial resolution and in addition also yields adiabatic wall temperature data within the same measurement using a superposition approach. Aerodynamic measurements and numerical simulations complement the examination. The results for the baseline case show Nusselt numbers to increase significantly with higher coolant mass flux rates for the whole endwall area. With swirling inflow, in general, a decrease of film cooling effectiveness and an increase of Nusselt numbers is observed for identical mass flux rates in comparison to the baseline case. The difference varies depending on clocking position.


2017 ◽  
Vol 139 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Holger Werschnik ◽  
Jonathan Hilgert ◽  
Manuel Wilhelm ◽  
Martin Bruschewski ◽  
Heinz-Peter Schiffer

At the large scale turbine rig (LSTR) at Technische Universität Darmstadt, Darmstadt, Germany, the aerothermal interaction of combustor exit flow conditions on the subsequent turbine stage is examined. The rig resembles a high pressure turbine and is scaled to low Mach numbers. A baseline configuration with an axial inflow and a swirling inflow representative for a lean combustor is modeled by swirl generators, whose clocking position toward the nozzle guide vane (NGV) leading edge can be varied. A staggered double-row of cylindrical film cooling holes on the endwall is examined. The effect of swirling inflow on heat transfer and film cooling effectiveness is studied, while the coolant mass flux rate is varied. Nusselt numbers are calculated using infrared thermography and the auxiliary wall method. Boundary layer, turbulence, and five-hole probe measurements as well as numerical simulations complement the examination. The results for swirling inflow show a decrease of film cooling effectiveness of up to 35% and an increase of Nusselt numbers of 10–20% in comparison to the baseline case for low coolant mass flux rates. For higher coolant injection, the heat transfer is on a similar level as the baseline. The differences vary depending on the clocking position. The turbulence intensity is increased to 30% for swirling inflow.


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