Turbine Vane Endwall Film Cooling With Slashface Leakage and Discrete Hole Configuration

2017 ◽  
Vol 139 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nafiz H. K. Chowdhury ◽  
Chao-Cheng Shiau ◽  
Je-Chin Han ◽  
Luzeng Zhang ◽  
Hee-Koo Moon

Turbine vanes are typically assembled as a section containing single or double airfoil units in an annular pattern. First stage guide vane assembly results in two common mating interfaces: a gap between combustor and vane endwall and another resulted from the adjacent sections, called slashface. High pressure coolant could leak through these gaps to reduce the ingestion of hot gas and achieve certain cooling benefit. As vane endwall region flow field is already very complicated due to highly three-dimensional secondary flows, then a significant influence on endwall cooling can be expected due to the gap leakage flows. To determine the effect of leakage flows from those gaps, film cooling effectiveness distributions were measured using pressure sensitive paint (PSP) technique on the endwall of a scaled up, midrange industrial turbine vane geometry with the multiple rows of discrete film cooling (DFC) holes inside the passages. Experiments were performed in a blow-down wind tunnel cascade facility at the exit Mach number of 0.5 corresponding to Reynolds number of 3.8 × 105 based on inlet conditions and axial chord length. Passive turbulence grid was used to generate free-stream turbulence (FST) level about 19% with an integral length scale of 1.7 cm. Two parameters, coolant-to-mainstream mass flow ratio (MFR) and density ratio (DR), were studied. The results are presented as two-dimensional film cooling effectiveness distribution on the vane endwall surface with the corresponding spanwise averaged values along the axial direction.

Author(s):  
Nafiz H. K. Chowdhury ◽  
Chao-Cheng Shiau ◽  
Je-Chin Han ◽  
Luzeng Zhang ◽  
Hee-Koo Moon

Turbine vanes are typically assembled as a section containing single or double airfoil units in an annular pattern. First stage guide vane assembly results in two common mating interfaces — a gap between combustor and vane endwall and another resulted from the adjacent sections, called slashface. High pressure coolant could leak through these gaps to reduce the ingestion of hot gas and achieve certain cooling benefit. As vane endwall region flow field is already very complicated due to highly three-dimensional secondary flows, then a significant influence on endwall cooling can be expected due to the gap leakage flows. To determine the effect of leakage flows from those gaps, film cooling effectiveness distributions were measured using Pressure Sensitive Paint (PSP) technique on the endwall of a scaled up, mid-range industrial turbine vane geometry with the multiple rows of discrete film cooling holes inside the passages. Experiments were performed in a blow-down wind tunnel cascade facility at the exit Mach number of 0.5 corresponding to Reynolds number of 3.8 × 105 based on inlet conditions and axial chord length. Passive turbulence grid was used to generate freestream turbulence level about 19% with an integral length scale of 1.7 cm. Two parameters, coolant-to-mainstream mass flow ratio and density ratio were studied. The results are presented as two-dimensional film cooling effectiveness distribution on the vane endwall surface and the corresponding spanwise averaged values along the axial direction are also demonstrated.


2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gunther Müller ◽  
Christian Landfester ◽  
Martin Böhle ◽  
Robert Krewinkel

Abstract This study is concerned with the film cooling effectiveness of the flow issuing from the gap between the nozzle guide vane (NGV) and the transition duct on the NGV endwall, i.e., the purge slot. Different slot widths, positions, and injection angles were examined in order to represent changes due to thermal expansion as well as design modifications. Apart from these geometric variations, different blowing ratios (BRs) and density ratios (DRs) were realized to investigate the effects of the interaction between secondary flow and film cooling effectiveness. The experimental tests were performed in a linear scale-1 cascade equipped with four highly loaded turbine vanes at the Institute of Fluid Mechanics and Fluid Machinery of the University of Kaiserslautern. The mainstream flow parameters were, with a Reynolds number of 300,000 and a Mach number (outlet) of 0.6, set to meet real engine conditions. By using various flow conditioners, periodic flow was obtained in the region of interest (ROI). The adiabatic film cooling effectiveness was determined using the pressure sensitive paint (PSP) technique. In this context, nitrogen and carbon dioxide were used as tracer gases realizing two different density ratios DR = 1.0 and 1.6. The investigation was conducted for a broad range of blowing ratios with 0.25 ≤ BR ≤ 1.50. In combination with 10 geometry variations and the aforementioned blowing and density ratio variations, 100 single operating points were investigated. For a better understanding of the coolant distribution, the secondary flows on the endwall were visualized by oil dye. The measurement results will be discussed based on the areal distribution of film cooling effectiveness, its lateral spanwise, as well as its area average. The results will provide a better insight into various parametric effects of gap variations on turbine vane endwall film cooling performance—notably under realistic engine conditions.


Author(s):  
Nafiz H. K. Chowdhury ◽  
Chao-Cheng Shiau ◽  
Je-Chin Han ◽  
Luzeng Zhang ◽  
Hee-Koo Moon

The performance of a full coverage film cooling configuration called cross-row (CR) configuration including upstream inlet leakage flow was studied by measuring the adiabatic film cooling effectiveness distribution using PSP technique. Experiments were conducted in a blow-down wind tunnel cascade facility at the isentropic exit Mach number of 0.5 corresponding to inlet Reynolds number of 3.8 × 105, based on axial chord length. A free-stream turbulence level was generated as high as 19% with a length scale of 1.7 cm at the inlet. The results are presented as two-dimensional adiabatic film cooling effectiveness distributions on the endwall surface with corresponding spanwise averaged distributions. The focus of this study is to investigate the effect of coolant-to-mainstream mass flow ratio (MFR) and density ratio (DR) on the proposed endwall cooling design. Initially, increased MFR for the endwall cooling and upstream leakage levels up the local adiabatic cooling effectiveness and yields relatively uniform coverage on the entire endwall. However, in either case, highest MFR does not provide any improvement as endwall cooling suffered from the jet lift-off and leakage coolant coverage restricted by the downstream near-wall flow field. Results also indicated a density ratio of 1.5 provides the best performance. Finally, a fair comparison is made with another design called axial-row (AR) configuration from a companion paper.


Author(s):  
Gunther Müller ◽  
Christian Landfester ◽  
Martin Böhle ◽  
Robert Krewinkel

Abstract This study is concerned with the film cooling effectiveness of the flow issuing from the gap between the NGV and the transition duct on the NGV endwall, i.e. the purge slot. Different slot widths, positions and injection angles were examined in order to represent changes due to thermal expansion as well as design modifications. Apart from these geometric variations, different blowing ratios (BR) and density ratios (DR) were realized to investigate the effects of the interaction between secondary flow and film cooling effectiveness. The experimental tests were performed in a linear scale-1 cascade equipped with four highly loaded turbine vanes at the Institute of Fluid Mechanics and Fluid Machinery of the University of Kaiserslautern. The mainstream flow parameters were, with a Reynolds number of 300,000 and a Mach number (outlet) of 0.6, set to meet real engine conditions. By using various flow conditioners, periodic flow was obtained in the region of interest (ROI). The adiabatic film cooling effectiveness was determined by using the Pressure Sensitive Paint (PSP) technique. In this context, nitrogen and carbon dioxide were used as tracer gases realizing two different density ratios DR = 1.0 and 1.6. The investigation was conducted for a broad range of blowing ratios with 0.25 ≤ BR ≤ 1.50. In combination with 10 geometry variations and the aforementioned blowing and density ratio variations 100 single operating points were investigated. For a better understanding of the coolant distribution, the secondary flows on the endwall were visualized by oil dye. The measurement results will be discussed based on the areal distribution of film cooling effectiveness, its lateral spanwise as well as its area average. The results will provide a better insight into various parametric effects of gap variations on turbine vane endwall film cooling performance — notably under realistic engine conditions.


Author(s):  
Nafiz H. K. Chowdhury ◽  
Chao-Cheng Shiau ◽  
Je-Chin Han ◽  
Hongzhou Xu ◽  
Michael Fox

Film cooling performance comparison on a turbine vane endwall with two different cluster configurations incorporating upstream inlet leakage flow was studied by applying PSP measurement technique. Experiments were conducted in a blow-down wind tunnel cascade facility at the exit isentropic Mach number of 0.5 corresponding to inlet Reynolds number of 380,000, based on axial chord length. A freestream turbulence level was generated as high as 19% with an integral length scale of 1.7 cm at the inlet of vanes’ leading edge plane. The results of each design and the comparison are presented in two-dimensional adiabatic film cooling effectiveness distributions on the endwall surface as well as the corresponding laterally averaged distributions. The focus of this study is to compare two different endwall cooling designs by the parametric effect of coolant-to-mainstream mass flow ratio (MFR) and density ratio (DR) on film cooling effectiveness. Initially, increased MFR for the endwall cooling and upstream leakage levels up the local film cooling effectiveness and yields improved coverage on the endwall. However, the endwall and upstream leakage demonstrate different behavior, while highest MFR does not provide any improvement as endwall cooling is suffered from the jet lift-off, highest MFR from the upstream leakage shows a monotonic increasing effectiveness on the endwall. On the other hand, the DR effect on effectiveness reveals different trend at a different design. Under a given amount of coolant supply and a fixed number of cooling hole, the comparison results really emphasize the importance of the cooling hole arrangement as one of the proposed cluster design can properly cover the whole endwall area.


Author(s):  
Pingting Chen ◽  
Hongyu Gao ◽  
Xueying Li ◽  
Jing Ren ◽  
Hongde Jiang

With the development of gas turbine, the secondary flow loss in vane passage is getting higher. To reduce the strength of secondary flows within vane passage, endwall 3D contouring is an effective design. Endwall 3D contouring can lead to significant changes in the secondary flow vortices, which lead to changes on jet-to-secondary flow interaction and then changes on the film cooling effectiveness. Meanwhile, the geometry configuration of the contoured endwall, such as the rising and falling on the endwall, can also have an impact on film cooling performance. As a result, the film cooling performance on contoured endwall differs from that on flat endwall. Understanding the difference in film cooling characteristics on the contoured endwall and flat endwall may help to make better endwall contouring design and better endwall film cooling arrangement. The present experiment compares the film cooling effectiveness of cylindrical hole injections at different locations on 3D contoured endwall versus flat endwall in an NGV (nozzle guide vane) passage. The measurement is performed in a low speed wind tunnel with a F-class annular sector NGV cascade. The cylindrical hole injections are located as 4 different rows at −30% axial chord, 30% axial chord, 50% axial chord and 70% axial chord. Endwall pressure distribution is measured with pressure taps by pressure sensor while film cooling effectiveness is measured using PSP (Pressure Sensitive Paint). Two density ratios with 1.0 and 1.5 and several average blowing ratios are investigated. Effects of endwall contouring, density ratio and blowing ratio on film cooling effectiveness are obtained and the results are presented and explained in this investigation.


Author(s):  
Lesley M. Wright ◽  
Stephen T. McClain ◽  
Charles P. Brown ◽  
Weston V. Harmon

A novel, double hole film cooling configuration is investigated as an alternative to traditional cylindrical and fanshaped, laidback holes. This experimental investigation utilizes a Stereo-Particle Image Velocimetry (S-PIV) to quantitatively assess the ability of the proposed, double hole geometry to weaken or mitigate the counter-rotating vortices formed within the jet structure. The three-dimensional flow field measurements are combined with surface film cooling effectiveness measurements obtained using Pressure Sensitive Paint (PSP). The double hole geometry consists of two compound angle holes. The inclination of each hole is θ = 35°, and the compound angle of the holes is β = ± 45° (with the holes angled toward one another). The simple angle cylindrical and shaped holes both have an inclination angle of θ = 35°. The blowing ratio is varied from M = 0.5 to 1.5 for all three film cooling geometries while the density ratio is maintained at DR = 1.0. Time averaged velocity distributions are obtained for both the mainstream and coolant flows at five streamwise planes across the fluid domain (x/d = −4, 0, 1, 5, and 10). These transverse velocity distributions are combined with the detailed film cooling effectiveness distributions on the surface to evaluate the proposed double hole configuration (compared to the traditional hole designs). The fanshaped, laidback geometry effectively reduces the strength of the kidney-shaped vortices within the structure of the jet (over the entire range of blowing ratios considered). The three-dimensional velocity field measurements indicate the secondary flows formed from the double hole geometry strengthen in the plane perpendicular to the mainstream flow. At the exit of the double hole geometry, the streamwise momentum of the jets is reduced (compared to the single, cylindrical hole), and the geometry offers improved film cooling coverage. However, moving downstream in the steamwise direction, the two jets form a single jet, and the counter-rotating vortices are comparable to those formed within the jet from a single, cylindrical hole. These strong secondary flows lift the coolant off the surface, and the film cooling coverage offered by the double hole geometry is reduced.


Author(s):  
Gi Mun Kim ◽  
Soo In Lee ◽  
Jin Young Jeong ◽  
Jae Su Kwak ◽  
Seokbeom Kim ◽  
...  

Abstract In the vicinity of gas turbine blades, a complex flow field is formed due to the flow separation, reattachment, and secondary flows, and this results in a locally non-uniform and high heat transfer on the surfaces. The present study experimentally investigates the effects of leakage flow through the slot between the gas turbine vane and blade rows on the film cooling effectiveness of the forward region of the shroud ring segment. The experiment is carried out in a linear cascade with five blades. Instead of the vane, a row of rods at the location of the vane trailing edge is installed to consider the wake effect. The leakage flow is introduced through the slot between the vane and blade rows, and additional coolant air is injected from the cooling holes installed at the vane's outer zone. The effects of the slot geometry, cooling hole configuration, and blowing ratio on the film cooling effectiveness are experimentally investigated using the pressure sensitive paint (PSP) technique. CO2 gas and a mixture of SF6 and N2 (25%+75%) are used to simulate the leakage flow to the mainstream density ratios of 1.5 and 2.0, respectively. The results indicate that the area averaged film cooling effectiveness is affected more by the slot width than by the cooling hole configuration at the same injection conditions, and the lower density ratio cases show higher film cooling effectiveness than the higher density ratio case at the same cooling configuration.


Author(s):  
Shang-Feng Yang ◽  
Je-Chin Han ◽  
Alexander MirzaMoghadam ◽  
Ardeshir Riahi

This paper studies the effect of transonic flow velocity on local film cooling effectiveness distribution of turbine vane suction side, experimentally. A conduction-free Pressure Sensitive Paint (PSP) method is used to determine the local film cooling effectiveness. Tests were performed in a five-vane annular cascade at Texas A&M Turbomachinery laboratory blow-down flow loop facility. The exit Mach numbers are controlled to be 0.7, 0.9, and 1.1, from subsonic to transonic flow conditions. Three foreign gases N2, CO2 and Argon/SF6 mixture are selected to study the effects of three coolant-to-mainstream density ratios, 1.0, 1.5, and 2.0 on film cooling. Four averaged coolant blowing ratios in the range, 0.7, 1.0, 1.3 and 1.6 are investigated. The test vane features 3 rows of radial-angle cylindrical holes around the leading edge, and 2 rows of compound-angle shaped holes on the suction side. Results suggest that the PSP technique is capable of producing clear and detailed film cooling effectiveness contours at transonic condition. The effects of coolant to mainstream blowing ratio, density ratio, and exit Mach number on the vane suction-surface film cooling distribution are obtained, and the consequence results are presented and explained in this investigation.


Author(s):  
Chao-Cheng Shiau ◽  
Andrew F. Chen ◽  
Je-Chin Han ◽  
Salam Azad ◽  
Ching-Pang Lee

Researchers in gas turbine field take great interest in the cooling performance on the first-stage vane because the complex flow characteristics and intensive heat load that comes from the exit of the combustion chamber. A better understanding is needed on how the coolant flow interacts with the mainstream and the resulting cooling effect in the real engine especially for the first-stage vane. An authentic flow channel and condition should be achieved. In this study, three full-scale turbine vanes are used to construct an annular-sector cascade. The film-cooling design is attained through numerous layback fan-shaped and cylindrical holes dispersed on the vane and both end-walls. With the three-dimensional vane geometry and corresponding wind tunnel design, the true flow field can thus be simulated as in the engine. This study targets the film-cooling effectiveness on the inner end-wall (hub) of turbine vane. Tests are performed under the mainstream Reynolds number 3.5 × 105; the related inlet Mach number is 0.09 and the free stream turbulence intensity is 8%. Two variables, coolant-to-mainstream mass flow ratios (MFR = 2%, 3%, 4%) and density ratios (DR = 1.0, 1.5) are examined. Pressure-sensitive paint (PSP) technique is utilized to capture the detail contour of film-cooling effectiveness on the inner end-wall and demonstrate the coolant trace. The presented results serve a comparison basis for other sets of vanes with different cooling designs. The results are expected to strengthen the promise of PSP technique on evaluating the film-cooling performance of the engine geometries.


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