Simulations of Multiphase Particle Deposition on a Showerhead With Staggered Film-Cooling Holes

2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Seth A. Lawson ◽  
Karen A. Thole ◽  
Yoji Okita ◽  
Chiyuki Nakamata

The demand for cleaner, more efficient energy has driven the motivation for improving the performance standards for gas turbines. Increasing the combustion temperature is one way to get the best possible performance from a gas turbine. One problem associated with increased combustion temperatures is that particles ingested in the fuel and air become more prone to deposition with an increase in turbine inlet temperature. Deposition on aero-engine turbine components caused by sand particle ingestion can impair turbine cooling methods and lead to reduced component life. It is necessary to understand the extent to which particle deposition affects turbine cooling in the leading edge region of the nozzle guide vane where intricate showerhead cooling geometries are utilized. For the current study, wax was used to dynamically simulate multiphase particle deposition on a large scale showerhead cooling geometry. The effects of deposition development, coolant blowing ratio, and particle temperature were tested. Infrared thermography was used to quantify the effects of deposition on cooling effectiveness. Although deposition decreased with an increase in coolant blowing ratio, results showed that reductions in cooling effectiveness caused by deposition increased with an increase in blowing ratio. Results also showed that effectiveness reduction increased with an increase in particle temperature. Reductions in cooling effectiveness reached as high as 36% at M = 1.0.

Author(s):  
Seth A. Lawson ◽  
Karen A. Thole ◽  
Yoji Okita ◽  
Chiyuki Nakamata

The demand for cleaner, more efficient energy has driven the motivation for improving the performance standards for gas turbines. Increasing the combustion temperature is one way to get the best possible performance from a gas turbine. One problem associated with increased combustion temperatures is that particles ingested in the fuel and air become more prone to deposition with an increase in turbine inlet temperature. Deposition on aero-engine turbine components caused by sand particle ingestion can impair turbine cooling methods and lead to reduced component life. It is necessary to understand the extent to which particle deposition affects turbine cooling in the leading edge region of the nozzle guide vane where intricate showerhead cooling geometries are utilized. For the current study, wax was used to dynamically simulate multi-phase particle deposition on a large scale showerhead cooling geometry. The effects of deposition development, coolant blowing ratio, and particle temperature were tested. Infrared thermography was used to quantify the effects of deposition on cooling effectiveness. Although deposition decreased with an increase in coolant blowing ratio, results showed that reductions in cooling effectiveness caused by deposition increased with an increase in blowing ratio. Results also showed that effectiveness reduction increased with an increase in particle temperature. Reductions in cooling effectiveness reached as high as 36% at M = 1.0.


Author(s):  
Dieter E. Bohn ◽  
Volker J. Becker ◽  
Karsten A. Kusterer ◽  
Agnes U. Rungen

This paper presents the experimental investigation of the flow and the numerical analysis of the flow and heat transfer in a turbine guide vane with showerhead cooling for two different blowing ratios. The aerodynamic results are compared with those of the experiments. Starting with a showerhead design of two rows of ejection holes, two additional rows have to be used in an enhanced design due to hot gas contact in the leading edge area. Thus, the cooling gas mass flow is doubled when keeping the blowing ratio constant at m = 1.5. Lowering the amount of cooling gas needed whilst still guaranteeing sufficient cooling is the motivation for the analysis of the influence of a lower blowing ratio on the cooling efficiency. The investigated blowing ratios are m = 1.5 and m = 1.0. The experiments are conducted using a non-intrusive LDA technique. The numerical results are gained with a conjugate heat transfer and flow computer code that has been developed at the Institute of Steam and Gas Turbines. The results show that the blowing ratio has to be chosen carefully as the leading edge flow pattern and the heat transfer are strongly influenced by the blowing ratio. Lower blowing ratios lead to a better attachment of the cooling film and thus they hardly disturb the main flow. With the lower blowing ratio, the material temperature increases up to 1.5% of the total inlet temperature in the leading edge area on the pressure side, whereas it decreases locally for about 0.8% for the lower blowing ratio on the suction side. This is due to the enhanced attachment of the cooling gas film.


Author(s):  
N. Sundaram ◽  
K. A. Thole

With the increase in usage of gas turbines for power generation and given that natural gas resources continue to be depleted, it has become increasingly important to search for alternate fuels. One source of alternate fuels is coal derived synthetic fuels. Coal derived fuels, however, contain traces of ash and other contaminants that can deposit on vane and turbine surfaces affecting their heat transfer through reduced film-cooling. The endwall of a first stage vane is one such region that can be susceptible to depositions from these contaminants. This study uses a large-scale turbine vane cascade in which the following effects on film-cooling adiabatic effectiveness were investigated in the endwall region: the effect of near-hole deposition, the effect of partial film-cooling hole blockage, and the effect of spallation of a thermal barrier coating. The results indicated that deposits near the hole exit can sometimes improve the cooling effectiveness at the leading edge, but with increased deposition heights the cooling deteriorates. Partial hole blockage studies revealed that the cooling effectiveness deteriorates with increases in the number of blocked holes. Spallation studies showed that for a spalled endwall surface downstream of the leading edge cooling row, cooling effectiveness worsened with an increase in blowing ratio.


Author(s):  
Yang Zhang ◽  
Xin Yuan

A key technology of gas turbine performance improvement was the increase in the turbine inlet temperature, which brought high thermal loads to the Nozzle Guide Vane (NGV) components. Strong pressure gradients in the NGVs and the complex secondary flow field had made thermal protection more challenging. As for the endwall surface near the pressure side gill region, the relatively higher local pressure and cross flow apparently decreased the film-cooling effectiveness. The aim of this investigation was to evaluate a new design, improving the film-cooling performance in a cooling blind area with upstream staggered slot, simulating the combustor-turbine leakage gap flow. The test cascades model was manufactured according to the GE-E3 nozzle guide vane scaled model, with a scale ratio of 2.2. The experiment was performed under the inlet Mach number 0.1 and the Reynolds number 3.5×105 based on an axial chord length of 78 mm. The staggered slots were positioned upstream of the cascades to simulate the combustor-turbine gap leakage. The Pressure Sensitive Painting (PSP) technique was used to detect the film cooling effectiveness distribution on the endwall surface. Through the investigation, the following results could be achieved: 1) the film-cooling effectiveness on the endwall surface downstream the slot and along the pitchwise direction increased, with the highest parameter at Z/Pitch = 0.6; 2) a larger cooled region developed towards the suction side as the blowing ratio increased; 3) the advantage of the staggered slot was apparent on the endwall surface near the inlet area, while the coolant film was obviously weakened along the axial chord at a low blowing ratio. The influence of the staggered slots could only be detected in the downstream area of the endwall surface at the higher blowing ratio.


Computation ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 63
Author(s):  
Sondre Norheim ◽  
Shokri Amzin

Gas turbine performance is closely linked to the turbine inlet temperature, which is limited by the turbine guide vanes ability to withstand the massive thermal loads. Thus, steam cooling has been introduced as an advanced cooling technology to improve the efficiency of modern high-temperature gas turbines. This study compares the cooling performance of compressed air and steam in the renowned radially cooled NASA C3X turbine guide vane, using a numerical model. The conjugate heat transfer (CHT) model is based on the RANS-method, where the shear stress transport (SST) k−ω model is selected to predict the effects of turbulence. The numerical model is validated against experimental pressure and temperature distributions at the external surface of the vane. The results are in good agreement with the experimental data, with an average error of 1.39% and 3.78%, respectively. By comparing the two coolants, steam is confirmed as the superior cooling medium. The disparity between the coolants increases along the axial direction of the vane, and the total volume average temperature difference is 30 K. Further investigations are recommended to deal with the local hot-spots located near the leading- and trailing edge of the vane.


2004 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 345-354 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Dittmar ◽  
Achmed Schulz ◽  
Sigmar Wittig

The demand of improved thermal efficiency and high power output of modern gas turbine engines leads to extremely high turbine inlet temperature and pressure ratios. Sophisticated cooling schemes including film cooling are widely used to protect the vanes and blades of the first stages from failure and to achieve high component lifetimes. In film cooling applications, injection from discrete holes is commonly used to generate a coolant film on the blade's surface.In the present experimental study, the film cooling performance in terms of the adiabatic film cooling effectiveness and the heat transfer coefficient of two different injection configurations are investigated. Measurements have been made using a single row of fanshaped holes and a double row of cylindrical holes in staggered arrangement. A scaled test model was designed in order to simulate a realistic distribution of Reynolds number and acceleration parameter along the pressure side surface of an actual turbine guide vane. An infrared thermography measurement system is used to determine highly resolved distribution of the models surface temperature. Anin-situcalibration procedure is applied using single embedded thermocouples inside the measuring plate in order to acquire accurate local temperature data.All holes are inclined 35° with respect to the model's surface and are oriented in a streamwise direction with no compound angle applied. During the measurements, the influence of blowing ratio and mainstream turbulence level on the adiabatic film cooling effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient is investigated for both of the injection configurations.


Author(s):  
Sadam Hussain ◽  
Xin Yan

Abstract Film cooling is one of the most critical technologies in modern gas turbine engine to protect the high temperature components from erosion. It allows gas turbines to operate above the thermal limits of blade materials by providing the protective cooling film layer on outer surfaces of blade against hot gases. To get a higher film cooling effect on plain surface, current study proposes a novel strategy with the implementation of hole-pair into ramp. To gain the film cooling effectiveness on the plain surface, RANS equations combined with k-ω turbulence model were solved with the commercial CFD solver ANSYS CFX11.0. In the numerical simulations, the density ratio (DR) is fixed at 1.6, and the film cooling effect on plain surface with different configurations (i.e. with only cooling hole, with only ramp, and with hole-pair in ramp) were numerically investigated at three blowing ratios M = 0.25, 0.5, and 0.75. The results show that the configuration with Hole-Pair in Ramp (HPR) upstream the cooling hole has a positive effect on film cooling enhancement on plain surface, especially along the spanwise direction. Compared with the baseline configuration, i.e. plain surface with cylindrical hole, the laterally-averaged film cooling effectiveness on plain surface with HPR is increased by 18%, while the laterally-averaged film cooling effectiveness on plain surface with only ramp is increased by 8% at M = 0.5. As the blowing ratio M increases from 0.25 to 0.75, the laterally-averaged film cooling effectiveness on plain surface with HPR is kept on increasing. At higher blowing ratio M = 0.75, film cooling effectiveness on plain surface with HPR is about 19% higher than the configuration with only ramp.


Author(s):  
Arthur Cohn ◽  
Mark Waters

It is important that the requirements and cycle penalties related to the cooling of high temperature turbines be thoroughly understood and accurately factored into cycle analyses and power plant systems studies. Various methods used for the cooling of high temperature gas turbines are considered and cooling effectiveness curves established for each. These methods include convection, film and transpiration cooling using compressor bleed and/or discharge air. In addition, the effects of chilling the compressor discharge cooling gas are considered. Performance is developed to demonstrate the impact of the turbine cooling schemes on the heat rate and specific power of Combined–Cycle power plants.


Author(s):  
Sepehr Sanaye ◽  
Salahadin Hosseini

A novel procedure for finding the optimum values of design parameters of industrial twin-shaft gas turbines at various ambient temperatures is presented here. This paper focuses on being off design due to various ambient temperatures. The gas turbine modeling is performed by applying compressor and turbine characteristic maps and using thermodynamic matching method. The gas turbine power output is selected as an objective function in optimization procedure with genetic algorithm. Design parameters are compressor inlet guide vane angle, turbine exit temperature, and power turbine inlet nozzle guide vane angle. The novel constrains in optimization are compressor surge margin and turbine blade life cycle. A trained neural network is used for life cycle estimation of high pressure (gas generator) turbine blades. Results for optimum values for nozzle guide vane/inlet guide vane (23°/27°–27°/6°) in ambient temperature range of 25–45 ℃ provided higher net power output (3–4.3%) and more secured compressor surge margin in comparison with that for gas turbines control by turbine exit temperature. Gas turbines thermal efficiency also increased from 0.09 to 0.34% (while the gas generator turbine first rotor blade creep life cycle was kept almost constant about 40,000 h). Meanwhile, the averaged values for turbine exit temperature/turbine inlet temperature changed from 831.2/1475 to 823/1471°K, respectively, which shows about 1% decrease in turbine exit temperature and 0.3% decrease in turbine inlet temperature.


2006 ◽  
Vol 129 (3) ◽  
pp. 599-607 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Sundaram ◽  
K. A. Thole

With the increase in usage of gas turbines for power generation and given that natural gas resources continue to be depleted, it has become increasingly important to search for alternate fuels. One source of alternate fuels is coal derived synthetic fuels. Coal derived fuels, however, contain traces of ash and other contaminants that can deposit on vane and turbine surfaces affecting their heat transfer through reduced film cooling. The endwall of a first stage vane is one such region that can be susceptible to depositions from these contaminants. This study uses a large-scale turbine vane cascade in which the following effects on film cooling adiabatic effectiveness were investigated in the endwall region: the effect of near-hole deposition, the effect of partial film cooling hole blockage, and the effect of spallation of a thermal barrier coating. The results indicated that deposits near the hole exit can sometimes improve the cooling effectiveness at the leading edge, but with increased deposition heights the cooling deteriorates. Partial hole blockage studies revealed that the cooling effectiveness deteriorates with increases in the number of blocked holes. Spallation studies showed that for a spalled endwall surface downstream of the leading edge cooling row, cooling effectiveness worsened with an increase in blowing ratio.


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