Multi-Disciplinary Analyses for the Design of a High Pressure Turbine Blade Tip

Author(s):  
Stefano Caloni ◽  
Shahrokh Shahpar

The design of a high pressure turbine blade is a challenging task requiring multiple disciplines to be solved simultaneously. Most recently, conjugate analyses are being developed to tackle such a problem; they are able to resolve both the fluid dynamics in a turbine passage and the thermal distribution in the solid part of the component. In this paper, the in-house Hydra CFD solver is used to analyse a high pressure shroudless turbine blade for a modern jet engine. The turbine is internally cooled and a Thermal Barrier Coating (TBC) is applied on the aerofoil surface. The coupling technique used at the interface in the presence of the TBC is described. The flow features at the tip of the turbine blade are the main focus of this study. Four different tip configurations are analysed. A flat tip and a squealer tip are chosen as reference designs; however the effects of opening the Trailing Edge (TE) on the Suction Side (SS) and the Pressure Side (PS) are also investigated. Both a cooled and an uncooled configuration of the turbine blade are analysed and the effect of the cooling flow on the over tip leakage is studied. Finally, conjugate analyses for the cooled turbine blades are used to predict the temperature reached by the different tip designs. The design with an opened TE on the SS shows a significant aerodynamic improvement over the others without increasing the temperature the tip has to withstand in operation.

Author(s):  
J. P. Clark ◽  
A. S. Aggarwala ◽  
M. A. Velonis ◽  
R. E. Gacek ◽  
S. S. Magge ◽  
...  

The ability to predict levels of unsteady forcing on high-pressure turbine blades is critical to avoid high-cycle fatigue failures. In this study, 3D time-resolved computational fluid dynamics is used within the design cycle to predict accurately the levels of unsteady forcing on a single-stage high-pressure turbine blade. Further, nozzle-guide-vane geometry changes including asymmetric circumferential spacing and suction-side modification are considered and rigorously analyzed to reduce levels of unsteady blade forcing. The latter is ultimately implemented in a development engine, and it is shown successfully to reduce resonant stresses on the blade. This investigation builds upon data that was recently obtained in a full-scale, transonic turbine rig to validate a Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) flow solver for the prediction of both the magnitude and phase of unsteady forcing in a single-stage HPT and the lessons learned in that study.


Author(s):  
P Vass ◽  
T Arts

The current contribution reports on the validation and analysis of three-dimensional computational results of the flow around four distinct high-pressure turbine blade tip geometries (TG1, 2, 3, and 4 hereinafter), taking into account the effect of the entire internal cooling setup inside the blade, at design exit Mach number: M = 0.8, and high exit Reynolds number: Re C = 900 000. Three of the four geometries represent different tip design solutions – TG1: full squealer rim; TG2: single squealer on the suction side; TG3: partial suction and pressure side squealer, and one (TG4) models TG1 in worn condition. This article provides a comparison between the different geometries from the aerodynamic point of view, analyses the losses, and evaluates the distinct design solutions. An assessment of the effect of the uneven rubbing of the blade tip was performed as well. TG1 was found to be the top performer followed by TG3 and TG2. According to the investigations, the effect of rubbing increased the kinetic loss coefficient by 10–15 per cent.


Author(s):  
Steven G. Gegg ◽  
Nathan J. Heidegger ◽  
Ronald A. Mikkelson

High pressure turbine blades are exposed to an extreme high temperature environment due to increasing turbine inlet temperature. High heat fluxes are likely on the blade pressure surface. Other regions, such as the trailing edge and blade tip may be difficult to cool uniformly. Unshrouded blades present an additional challenge due to the pressure driven transport of hot gas across the blade tip. The blade tip region is therefore prone to severe thermal stress, fatigue and oxidation. In order to develop effective cooling methods, designers require detailed flow and heat transfer information. This paper reports on computational aerodynamics and heat transfer studies for an unshrouded high pressure turbine blade. The emphasis is placed on the application of appropriate 3-D models for the prediction of airfoil surface temperatures. Details of the film cooling model, boundary conditions and data exchange with heat transfer models are described. The analysis approach has been refined for design use to provide timely and accurate results. Film cooling designs are to be tailored for the best coverage of the blade tip region. Designs include near-tip pressure side films and blade tip cooling holes. Hole placement and angle are investigated to achieve the best coolant coverage on the blade tip. Analytical results are compared to a thermal paint test on engine hardware. In addition to film cooling strategies, other aerodynamic/heat transfer design approaches are discussed to address the cooling requirements for an unshrouded blade.


Author(s):  
Joao Vieira ◽  
John Coull ◽  
Peter Ireland ◽  
Eduardo Romero

Abstract High pressure turbine blade tips are critical for gas turbine performance and are sensitive to small geometric variations. For this reason, it is increasingly important for experiments and simulations to consider real geometry features. One commonly absent detail is the presence of welding beads on the cavity of the blade tip, which are an inherent by-product of the blade manufacturing process. This paper therefore investigates how such welds affect the Nusselt number, film cooling effectiveness and aerodynamic performance. Measurements are performed on a linear cascade of high pressure turbine blades at engine realistic Mach and Reynolds numbers. Two cooled blade tip geometries were tested: a baseline squealer geometry without welding beads, and a case with representative welding beads added to the tip cavity. Combinations of two tip gaps and several coolant mass flow rates were analysed. Pressure sensitive paint was used to measure the adiabatic film cooling effectiveness on the tip, which is supplemented by heat transfer coefficient measurements obtained via infrared thermography. Drawing from all of this data, it is shown that the weld beads have a generally detrimental impact on thermal performance, but with local variations. Aerodynamic loss measured downstream of the cascade is shown to be largely insensitive to the weld beads.


Author(s):  
B. Nagaraj ◽  
G. Katz ◽  
A. F. Maricocchi ◽  
M. Rosenzweig

Two LM2500 rainbow rotors with repaired stage 1 and stage 2 high pressure turbine blades are being assembled for marine propulsion service evaluation by the US Navy. The blades have seen between 5,000 and 15,000 hours of service in the Navy’s Fleets. A number of corrosion resistant coatings including plasma sprayed CoCrAlHf (bill of material), composite plated CoCrAlHf, platinum aluminide, aluminum silicide, and physical vapor deposited yttria stabilized zirconia thermal barrier coating (PVD TBC) will be evaluated in the rainbow rotor. This paper will discuss the advantages and microstructures of the various coatings. Composite plated CoCrAlHf, and PVD TBCs were recently service evaluated in an industrial LM2500 rainbow rotor for 10,500 hours. Both these coatings performed well, although the PVD TBC had local spallation at the leading edge. This paper will review the details of performance of these two coatings in the industrial LM2500 application.


2016 ◽  
Vol 86 (1) ◽  
pp. 225-225
Author(s):  
Cheng-Wei Fei ◽  
Yat-Sze Choy ◽  
Dian-Yin Hu ◽  
Guang-Chen Bai ◽  
Wen-Zhong Tang

Author(s):  
Brian R. Green ◽  
John W. Barter ◽  
Charles W. Haldeman ◽  
Michael G. Dunn

The unsteady aero-dynamics of a single-stage high-pressure turbine blade operating at design corrected conditions has been the subject of a thorough study involving detailed measurements and computations. The experimental configuration consisted of a single-stage high-pressure turbine and the adjacent, downstream, low-pressure turbine nozzle row. All three blade-rows were instrumented at three spanwise locations with flush-mounted, high frequency response pressure transducers. The rotor was also instrumented with the same transducers on the blade tip and platform and the stationary shroud was instrumented with pressure transducers at specific locations above the rotating blade. Predictions of the time-dependent flow field around the rotor were obtained using MSU-TURBO, a 3D, non-linear, computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code. Using an isolated blade-row unsteady analysis method, the unsteady surface pressure for the high-pressure turbine rotor due to the upstream high-pressure turbine nozzle was calculated. The predicted unsteady pressure on the rotor surface was compared to the measurements at selected spanwise locations on the blade, in the recessed cavity, and on the shroud. The rig and computational models included a flat and recessed blade tip geometry and were used for the comparisons presented in the paper. Comparisons of the measured and predicted static pressure loading on the blade surface show excellent correlation from both a time-average and time-accurate standpoint. This paper concentrates on the tip and shroud comparisons between the experiments and the predictions and these results also show good correlation with the time-resolved data. These data comparisons provide confidence in the CFD modeling and its ability to capture unsteady flow physics on the blade surface, in the flat and recessed tip regions of the blade, and on the stationary shroud.


Author(s):  
Jin-sol Jung ◽  
Okey Kwon ◽  
Changmin Son

The flow leaking over the tip of a high pressure turbine blade generates significant aerodynamic losses as it mixes with the mainstream flow. This study investigates the effect of blade tip geometries on turbine performance with both steady RANS and unsteady URANS analyses. Five different squealer geometries for a high pressure turbine blade have been examined: squealer on pressure side, squealer on suction side, cavity squealer, cavity squealer with pressure side cutback, and cavity squealer with suction side cutback. With the case of the cavity squealer, three different squealer wall thickness are investigated for the wall thickness (w) of 1x, 2x and 4x of the tip gap (G). The unsteady flow analyses using CFX have been conducted to investigate unsteady characteristics of the tip leakage flow and its influence on turbine performances. Through the comparison between URANS analyses, detailed vortex and wake structures are identified and studied at different fidelities. It is found that the over tip leakage flow loss is affected by the tip suction side geometry rather than that of the pressure side geometry. The unsteady results have contributed to resolve the fundamentals of vortex structures and aerodynamic loss mechanisms in a high pressure turbine stage.


2004 ◽  
Vol 127 (4) ◽  
pp. 736-746 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian R. Green ◽  
John W. Barter ◽  
Charles W. Haldeman ◽  
Michael G. Dunn

The unsteady aero-dynamics of a single-stage high-pressure turbine blade operating at design corrected conditions has been the subject of a thorough study involving detailed measurements and computations. The experimental configuration consisted of a single-stage high-pressure turbine and the adjacent, downstream, low-pressure turbine nozzle row. All three blade-rows were instrumented at three spanwise locations with flush-mounted, high-frequency response pressure transducers. The rotor was also instrumented with the same transducers on the blade tip and platform and the stationary shroud was instrumented with pressure transducers at specific locations above the rotating blade. Predictions of the time-dependent flow field around the rotor were obtained using MSU-TURBO, a three-dimensional (3D), nonlinear, computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code. Using an isolated blade-row unsteady analysis method, the unsteady surface pressure for the high-pressure turbine rotor due to the upstream high-pressure turbine nozzle was calculated. The predicted unsteady pressure on the rotor surface was compared to the measurements at selected spanwise locations on the blade, in the recessed cavity, and on the shroud. The rig and computational models included a flat and recessed blade tip geometry and were used for the comparisons presented in the paper. Comparisons of the measured and predicted static pressure loading on the blade surface show excellent correlation from both a time-average and time-accurate standpoint. This paper concentrates on the tip and shroud comparisons between the experiments and the predictions and these results also show good correlation with the time-resolved data. These data comparisons provide confidence in the CFD modeling and its ability to capture unsteady flow physics on the blade surface, in the flat and recessed tip regions of the blade, and on the stationary shroud.


Author(s):  
James E. Wammack ◽  
Jared Crosby ◽  
Daniel Fletcher ◽  
Jeffrey P. Bons ◽  
Thomas H. Fletcher

Turbine blade coupons with three different surface treatments were exposed to deposition conditions in an accelerated deposition facility. The facility simulates the flow conditions at the inlet to a first stage high pressure turbine (T = 1150°C, M = 0.31). The combustor exit flow is seeded with dust particulate that would typically be ingested by a large utility power plant. The three coupon surface treatments included: (1) bare polished metal, (2) polished thermal barrier coating with bondcoat, and (3) unpolished oxidation resistant bondcoat. Each coupon was subjected to four successive 2 hour deposition tests. The particulate loading was scaled to simulate 0.02 ppmw (parts per million weight) of particulate over three months of continuous gas turbine operation for each 2 hour laboratory simulation (for a cumulative one year of operation). Three-dimensional maps of the deposit-roughened surfaces were created between each test, representing a total of four measurements evenly spaced through the lifecycle of a turbine blade surface. From these measurements the surface topology and roughness statistics were determined. Despite the different surface treatments, all three surfaces exhibited similar non-monotonic changes in roughness with repeated exposure. In each case, an initial build-up of isolated roughness peaks was followed by a period when valleys between peaks were filled with subsequent deposition. This trend is well documented using the average forward facing roughness angle in combination with the average roughness height as characteristic roughness metrics. Deposition-related mechanisms leading to spallation of the thermal barrier coated coupons are identified and documented.


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