Steady and Unsteady Modeling for Heat Transfer Predictions of High Pressure Turbine Blade Internal Cooling

Author(s):  
Rémy Fransen ◽  
Nicolas Gourdain ◽  
Laurent Y. M. Gicquel

This work focuses on numerical simulations of flows in blade internal cooling system. Large Eddy Simulation (LES) and Reynolds-Averaged Navier Stokes (RANS) approaches are compared in a typical blade cooling related problem. The case is a straight rib-roughened channel with high blockage ratio, computed and compared for both a periodic and full spatial domains. The configuration was measured at the Von Karman Institute (VKI) using Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) in near gas turbine operating conditions. Results show that RANS models used fail to predict the full evolution of the flow within the channels where massive separation and large scale unsteady features are evidenced. In contrast LES succeeds in reproducing these complex flow motions and both mean and fluctuating components are clearly improved in the channels and in the near wall region. Periodic computations are gauged against the spatial computational domain and results on the heat transfer problem are addressed.

2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Singh ◽  
P. K. Panigrahi ◽  
G. Biswas

Abstract A numerical study of rib augmented cooling of turbine blades is reported in this paper. The time-dependent velocity field around a pair of symmetrically placed ribs on the walls of a three-dimensional rectangular channel was studied by use of a modified version of Marker-And-Cell algorithm to solve the unsteady incompressible Navier-Stokes and energy equations. The flow structures are presented with the help of instantaneous velocity vector and vorticity fields, FFT and time averaged and rms values of components of velocity. The spanwise averaged Nusselt number is found to increase at the locations of reattachment. The numerical results are compared with available numerical and experimental results. The presence of ribs leads to complex flow fields with regions of flow separation before and after the ribs. Each interruption in the flow field due to the surface mounted rib enables the velocity distribution to be more homogeneous and a new boundary layer starts developing downstream of the rib. The heat transfer is primarily enhanced due to the decrease in the thermal resistance owing to the thinner boundary layers on the interrupted surfaces. Another reason for heat transfer enhancement can be attributed to the mixing induced by large-scale structures present downstream of the separation point.


2018 ◽  
Vol 213 ◽  
pp. 04001
Author(s):  
Chao Fang ◽  
Biao-hua Cai ◽  
Shi-hua Ma ◽  
Bin Li

The centralized cooling system of a certain type of oil ship is a large-scale complex fluid network system. Fluid system simulation software (FLOWMASTER) was used to establish simulation model for steady operating conditions. The design of central cooling system was validated reasonably by simulation in steady-state condition. In this paper, the flow and heat transfer experiment was carried out. The experimental results were in good agreement with the simulation results, which suggested that using FLOWMASTER to validate the heat transfer performance of fluid system is reliable.


Author(s):  
Philippe T. Lott ◽  
Ingrid Lepot ◽  
Emmanuel Chérière ◽  
François Thirifay ◽  
Klaus Semmler ◽  
...  

The design of turbine cooling systems remains one of the most challenging processes in engine development. Modern turbine cooling systems indeed invariably combine internal convection cooling with external film cooling in complex flow systems. The heat transfer and cooling processes are at the limit of current understanding and engine designers heavily rely on empirical tools and engineering judgment to produce new designs. These designs are moreover developed in the context of continuously increasing Turbine Entry Temperature (TET) as the latter leads to improvement of Specific Fuel Consumption (SFC). The present contribution fits into the frame of the ongoing FP7 ER-ICKA project. It focuses on achieving a significant progress in understanding turbine blade passages internal cooling systems by gathering high quality experimental data and by developing cooling state-of-the-art design capabilities based upon computer codes calibrated through these experimental data. In this context, the paper will describe the design optimisation and analysis work performed for two different internal cooling passages configurations, namely a static leading edge LP configuration passage (baseline experimentally tested at Stuttgart University) and a rotating mid-chord HP configuration passage (baseline experimentally tested at ONERA). The aim of the work was to develop a design methodology to optimise turbulence promoting ribs shape and arraying to improve the thermal behaviour of the internal cooling passages while avoiding excessive head loss. The optimisation was driven using decoupled rib design parameters for each ribbed wall to enhance flow interactions and maximise disturbances, to maximise potential increase in Heat Transfer Coefficients (HTCs). Any improvement in the thermal behaviour of the cooling system may indeed allow to either reduce the coolant mass flow rate requirements or increase the TET. To drive these optimisations, the ultimate target was hence to reduce the maximum blade metal temperature. To this end, suitable cost functions (objectives and constraints) have been derived and implemented. They will first be presented and discussed along with the parameterisations, so as to define the complete optimisation specification. The computational chain setup, among which the challenging mesh regeneration choices set based on a mesh dependence study will then be detailed. Validation of the CFD evaluation against the experimental results will be described for the static baseline configuration at least (rotating test measurements are still ongoing) and the optimisation results, which have led to significant gains in HTCs, will finally be analysed, data mining techniques allow to identify key parameters, path taken in the conception space and major trends.


1992 ◽  
Vol 114 (4) ◽  
pp. 847-857 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. H. Wagner ◽  
B. V. Johnson ◽  
R. A. Graziani ◽  
F. C. Yeh

Experiments were conducted to determine the effects of buoyancy and Coriolis forces on heat transfer in turbine blade internal coolant passages. The experiments were conducted with a large-scale, multipass, heat transfer model with both radially inward and outward flow. Trip strips on the leading and trailing surfaces of the radial coolant passages were used to produce the rough walls. An analysis of the governing flow equations showed that four parameters influence the heat transfer in rotating passages: coolant-to-wall temperature ratio, Rossby number, Reynolds number, and radius-to-passage hydraulic diameter ratio. The first three of these four parameters were varied over ranges that are typical of advanced gas turbine engine operating conditions. Results were correlated and compared to previous results from stationary and rotating similar models with trip strips. The heat transfer coefficients on surfaces, where the heat transfer increased with rotation and buoyancy, varied by as much as a factor of four. Maximum values of the heat transfer coefficients with high rotation were only slightly above the highest levels obtained with the smooth wall model. The heat transfer coefficients on surfaces where the heat transfer decreased with rotation, varied by as much as a factor of three due to rotation and buoyancy. It was concluded that both Coriolis and buoyancy effects must be considered in turbine blade cooling designs with trip strips and that the effects of rotation were markedly different depending upon the flow direction.


Author(s):  
He Zhang ◽  
Fenglei Niu ◽  
Yu Yu ◽  
Peipei Chen

Thermal mixing and stratification often appears in passive containment cooling system (PCCS), which is an important part of passive safety system. So, it is important to accurately predict the temperature and density distributions both for design optimization and accident analysis. However, current major reactor system analysis codes only provide lumped parameter models which can only get very approximate results. The traditional 2-D or 3-D CFD methods require very long simulation time, and it’s not easy to get result. This paper adopts a new simulation code, which can be used to calculate heat transfer problems in large enclosures. The new code simulates the ambient fluid and jets with different models. For the ambient fluid, it uses a one-dimensional model, which is based on the thermal stratification and derived from three conservation equations. While for different jets, the new code contains several jet models to fully simulate the different break types in containment. Now, the new code can only simulate rectangular enclosures, not the cylinder enclosure. So it is meaningful for us to modify the code to simulate the actual containment, then it can be applied to solve the heat transfer problem in PCCS accurately.


Author(s):  
D. Jackson ◽  
P. Ireland ◽  
B. Cheong

Progress in the computing power available for CFD predictions now means that full geometry, 3 dimensional predictions are now routinely used in internal cooling system design. This paper reports recent work at Rolls-Royce which has compared the flow and htc predictions in a modern HP turbine cooling system to experiments. The triple pass cooling system includes film cooling vents and inclined ribs. The high resolution heat transfer experiments show that different cooling performance features are predicted with different levels of fidelity by the CFD. The research also revealed the sensitivity of the prediction to accurate modelling of the film cooling hole discharge coefficients and a detailed comparison of the authors’ computer predictions to data available in the literature is reported. Mixed bulk temperature is frequently used in the determination of heat transfer coefficient from experimental data. The current CFD data is used to compare the mixed bulk temperature to the duct centreline temperature. The latter is measured experimentally and the effect of the difference between mixed bulk and centreline temperature is considered in detail.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew Searle ◽  
Arnab Roy ◽  
James Black ◽  
Doug Straub ◽  
Sridharan Ramesh

Abstract In this paper, experimental and numerical investigations of three variants of internal cooling configurations — dimples only, ribs only and ribs with dimples have been explored at process conditions (96°C and 207bar) with sCO2 as the coolant. The designs were chosen based on a review of advanced internal cooling features typically used for air-breathing gas turbines. The experimental study described in this paper utilizes additively manufactured square channels with the cooling features over a range of Reynolds number from 80,000 to 250,000. Nusselt number is calculated in the experiments utilizing the Wilson Plot method and three heat transfer characteristics — augmentation in Nusselt number, friction factor and overall Thermal Performance Factor (TPF) are reported. To explore the effect of surface roughness introduced due to additive manufacturing, two baseline channel flow cases are considered — a conventional smooth tube and an additively manufactured square tube. A companion computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation is also performed for the corresponding cooling configurations reported in the experiments using the Reynolds Averaged Navier Stokes (RANS) based turbulence model. Both experimental and computational results show increasing Nusselt number augmentation as higher Reynolds numbers are approached, whereas prior work on internal cooling of air-breathing gas turbines predict a decay in the heat transfer enhancement as Reynolds number increases. Comparing cooling features, it is observed that the “ribs only” and “ribs with dimples” configurations exhibit higher Nusselt number augmentation at all Reynolds numbers compared to the “dimples only” and the “no features” configurations. However, the frictional losses are almost an order of magnitude higher in presence of ribs.


2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Greiner ◽  
P. F. Fischer ◽  
H. M. Tufo

Abstract Two-dimensional Navier-Stokes simulations of heat and momentum transport in an intermittently grooved passage are performed using the spectral element technique for the Reynolds number range 600 ≤ Re ≤ 1800. The computational domain has seven contiguous transverse grooves cut symmetrically into opposite walls, followed by a flat section with the same length. Periodic inflow/outflow boundary conditions are employed. The development and decay of unsteady flow is observed in the grooved and flat sections, respectively. The axial variation of the unsteady component of velocity is compared to the local heat transfer, shear stress and pressure gradient. The results suggest that intermittently grooved passages may offer even higher heat transfer for a given pumping power than the levels observed in fully grooved passages.


Author(s):  
C. Selcan ◽  
B. Cukurel ◽  
J. Shashank

In an attempt to investigate the acoustic resonance effect of serpentine passages on internal convection heat transfer, the present work examines a typical high pressure turbine blade internal cooling system, based on the geometry of the NASA E3 engine. In order to identify the associated dominant acoustic characteristics, a numerical FEM simulation (two-step frequency domain analysis) is conducted to solve the Helmholtz equation with and without source terms. Mode shapes of the relevant identified eigenfrequencies (in the 0–20kHz range) are studied with respect to induced standing sound wave patterns and the local node/antinode distributions. It is observed that despite the complexity of engine geometries, as a first order approximation, the predominant resonance behavior can be modeled by a same-ended straight duct. Therefore, capturing the physics observed in a generic geometry, the heat transfer ramifications are experimentally investigated in a scaled wind tunnel facility at a representative resonance condition. Focusing on the straight cooling channel’s longitudinal eigenmode in the presence of an isolated rib element, the impact of standing sound waves on convective heat transfer and aerodynamic losses are demonstrated by liquid crystal thermometry, local static pressure and sound level measurements. The findings indicate a pronounced heat transfer influence in the rib wake separation region, without a higher pressure drop penalty. This highlights the potential of modulating the aero-thermal performance of the system via acoustic resonance mode excitations.


Author(s):  
Christian Egger ◽  
Jens von Wolfersdorf ◽  
Martin Schnieder

In this paper a transient method for measuring heat transfer coefficients in internal cooling systems using infrared thermography is applied. The experiments are performed with a two-pass internal cooling channel connected by a 180° bend. The leading edge and the trailing edge consist of trapezoidal and nearly rectangular cross sections, respectively, to achieve an engine-similar configuration. Within the channels rib arrangements are considered for heat transfer enhancement. The test model is made of metallic material. During the experiment the cooling channels are heated by the internal flow. The surface temperature response of the cooling channel walls is measured on the outer surface by infrared thermography. Additionally, fluid temperatures as well as fluid and solid properties are determined for the data analysis. The method for determining the distribution of internal heat transfer coefficients is based on a lumped capacitance approach which considers lateral conduction in the cooling system walls as well as natural convection and radiation heat transfer on the outer surface. Because of time-dependent effects a sensitivity analysis is performed to identify optimal time periods for data analysis. Results are compared with available literature data.


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