INVESTIGATIONS OF THE EFFECTS OF BULK FLOW PULSATIONS ON FILM COOLING AS APPLIED TO GAS TURBINE ENGINES

Author(s):  
Phillip Ligrani ◽  
Joon Sik Lee ◽  
H. J. Seo
Author(s):  
H. J. Seo ◽  
J. S. Lee ◽  
P. M. Ligrani

Bulk flow pulsations in the form of sinusoidal variations of velocity and static pressure at injectant Strouhal numbers from 0.8 to 10.0 are investigated as they affect film cooling from a single row of simple angle holes. Similar flow variations are produced by potential flow interactions and passing shock waves near turbine surfaces in gas turbine engines. Time-averaged temperature distributions, phase-averaged temperature distributions, adiabatic film cooling effectiveness values, and iso-energetic Stanton numbers show that important alterations to film cooling protection occur as pulsation frequency, coolant Strouhal number, blowing ratio, and non-dimensional injection hole length are changed. Overall, the pulsations affect film performance end behavior more significantly both as L/D decreases, and as blowing ratio decreases.


Author(s):  
M. Ghorab ◽  
I. Hassan ◽  
M. Beauchamp

This paper presents heat transfer characteristics for a Multi-Stage Cooling Scheme (MSCS) design applicable to high temperature gas turbine engines in aerospace and electric power generation. The film cooling and impingement techniques are considered concurrently throughout this study. The proposed design involves passing cooling air from the inside of the turbine blade to the outside through three designed stages. The coolant air is passed through a circular hole into an internal gap creating an impingement of air inside the blade. It then exits through a sequence of two differently shaped holes onto the blade’s external surface. The film cooling effectiveness is enhanced by increasing the internal gap height and offset distance. This effect is significantly diminished however by changing the inclination angle from 90° to 30° at large gap height. The coolant momentum became more uniform by creating the internal gap consequently the coolant air is spread closer to the external blade surface. This reduces jet liftoff as the air exits its hole and also provides internal cooling for the blade. The hole exit positioned on the outer surface of the blade is designed to give a positive and a wide downstream lateral spreading. The MSCS demonstrates greater film cooling effectiveness performance than traditional schemes.


1999 ◽  
Vol 121 (3) ◽  
pp. 542-550 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. J. Seo ◽  
J. S. Lee ◽  
P. M. Ligrani

Bulk flow pulsations in the form of sinusoidal variations of velocity and static pressure at injectant Strouhal numbers from 0.8 to 10.0 are investigated as they affect film cooling from a single row of simple angle holes. Similar flow variations are produced by potential flow interactions and passing shock waves near turbine surfaces in gas turbine engines. Time-averaged temperature distributions, phase-averaged temperature distributions, adiabatic film cooling effectiveness values, and iso-energetic Stanton numbers show that important alterations to film cooling protection occur as pulsation frequency, coolant Strouhal number, blowing ratio, and nondimensional injection hole length are changed. Overall, the pulsations affect film performance and behavior more significantly both as L/D decreases, and as blowing ratio decreases.


Author(s):  
M. A. Alvin ◽  
J. Klinger ◽  
B. McMordie ◽  
M. Chyu ◽  
S. Siw ◽  
...  

As future land-based gas turbine engines are being designed to operate with inlet temperatures exceeding 1300°C (2370°F), efforts at NETL have been focused on developing advanced materials systems that are integrated with novel airfoil cooling architectures. Recent achievements in the areas of low cost diffusion bond coat systems applied to single- and poly-crystalline nickel-based superalloys, as well as development of thin nickel-based oxide dispersion strengthened layers are presented in this paper. Integration of these material systems with commercially cast, novel, pin-fin internal cooling airfoil arrays, tripod film cooling hole architectures, trailing edge cooling geometries, and near surface micro-channel concepts is also presented.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Silambarasan Balasubrammaniyan

The performance of aircraft gas turbine engines mainly depends on performance of the turbine which expands the combusted air into the atmosphere. The turbine is a critical part which gets affected by the hot gas from combustor exhaust. So in order to enhance the performance of gas turbine engines, a proposed cooling type called film cooling is used for more than six decades. The current work is also an attempt to enhance the performance of the gas turbine engine by enhancing the film cooling performance. The film cooling performance was numerically calculated on a flat plate with micro-hole and compared the cooling performance from the macro-hole. The analysis was carried out for different blowing ratios and found that the coolant from micro-hole performs better in the vicinity region and also spreads well in the lateral direction. The vortex structure is also captured from the proposed turbulence model and discussed. The behaviour of micro flow inside the coolant pipe was also analyzed. The comparison between multiple micro-hole jets and discrete jets was also made and discussed.


Author(s):  
Curtis K. Stimpson ◽  
Jacob C. Snyder ◽  
Karen A. Thole ◽  
Dominic Mongillo

As additive manufacturing (AM) technologies utilizing metal powders continue to mature, the usage of AM parts in gas turbine engines will increase. Current metal AM technologies produce parts with substantial surface roughness that can only be removed from external surfaces and internal surfaces that are accessible for smoothing. Difficulties arise in making smooth the surfaces of small internal channels, which means the augmentation of pressure loss and heat transfer due to roughness must be accounted for in the design. As gas turbine manufacturers have only recently adopted metal AM technologies, much remains to be examined before the full impacts of applying AM to turbine parts are understood. Although discrete film cooling holes have been extensively studied for decades, this objective of this study was to understand how the roughness of film cooling holes made using AM can affect the overall cooling effectiveness. Coupons made from a high temperature nickel alloy with engine-scale film holes were tested in a rig designed to simulate engine relevant conditions. Two different hole sizes and two different build directions were examined at various blowing ratios. Results showed that the effectiveness is dependent on the build direction and the relative size of the hole. It was also discovered that commercially available AM processes could not reliably produce small holes with predictable behavior.


2017 ◽  
Vol 140 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Curtis K. Stimpson ◽  
Jacob C. Snyder ◽  
Karen A. Thole ◽  
Dominic Mongillo

As additive manufacturing (AM) technologies utilizing metal powders continue to mature, the usage of AM parts in gas turbine engines will increase. Current metal AM technologies produce parts with substantial surface roughness that can only be removed from external surfaces and internal surfaces that are accessible for smoothing. Difficulties arise in making smooth the surfaces of small internal channels, which means the augmentation of pressure loss and heat transfer due to roughness must be accounted for in the design. As gas turbine manufacturers have only recently adopted metal AM technologies, much remains to be examined before the full impacts of applying AM to turbine parts are understood. Although discrete film cooling holes have been extensively studied for decades, this objective of this study was to understand how the roughness of film cooling holes made using AM can affect the overall cooling effectiveness. Coupons made from a high temperature nickel alloy with engine-scale film holes were tested in a rig designed to simulate engine relevant conditions. Two different hole sizes and two different build directions were examined at various blowing ratios. Results showed that the effectiveness is dependent on the build direction and the relative size of the hole. It was also discovered that commercially available AM processes could not reliably produce small holes with predictable behavior.


Author(s):  
Bharath Viswanath Ravi ◽  
Samruddhi Deshpande ◽  
Sridharan Ramesh ◽  
Prethive Dhilip Dhilipkumar ◽  
Srinath Ekkad

In view of the growing energy demand, there is an increasing need to augment the thermal efficiency of gas turbine engines. The thermal efficiency and power output of gas turbine engines increase with increasing overall pressure ratio which in turn leads to an increase in turbine inlet temperature. The maximum permissible turbine inlet temperature is limited by the material strength of the components of the gas turbine engines. In this regard, it is important to ensure that the endwalls of the first stage nozzle guide vane, which is one of the critical regions, are adequately cooled. The cooling of the endwall is of particular interest because the leading edge region along the endwall of the stator vane experiences high heat transfer rates resulting from formation of horseshoe vortices. In this paper, the performance of upstream purge slot has been compared against discrete film cooling holes. Three different cooling configurations — slot, cylindrical holes and tripod holes have been investigated by comparing the adiabatic film cooling effectiveness. Furthermore, the effect of coolant to mainstream mass flow ratio on the effectiveness of the different cooling schemes has also been studied. The steady-state experiments were conducted in a low speed, linear cascade wind tunnel. Spatially resolved temperature data was captured using infrared thermography technique to compute adiabatic film cooling effectiveness. Amongst the configurations studied, slot ejection offered the best cooling performance at all mass flow ratios. The performance of tripod ejection was comparable to slot ejection at mass flow ratios between 0.5 and 1.5, with the difference in laterally averaged effectiveness being ∼5%. However, at the highest mass flow ratio (MFR=2.5), the difference increased to ∼20%. Low effectiveness values were observed downstream of cylindrical ejection which could be attributed to jet lift-off.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Silambarasan Balasubrammaniyan

The performance of aircraft gas turbine engines mainly depends on performance of the turbine which expands the combusted air into the atmosphere. The turbine is a critical part which gets affected by the hot gas from combustor exhaust. So in order to enhance the performance of gas turbine engines, a proposed cooling type called film cooling is used for more than six decades. The current work is also an attempt to enhance the performance of the gas turbine engine by enhancing the film cooling performance. The film cooling performance was numerically calculated on a flat plate with micro-hole and compared the cooling performance from the macro-hole. The analysis was carried out for different blowing ratios and found that the coolant from micro-hole performs better in the vicinity region and also spreads well in the lateral direction. The vortex structure is also captured from the proposed turbulence model and discussed. The behaviour of micro flow inside the coolant pipe was also analyzed. The comparison between multiple micro-hole jets and discrete jets was also made and discussed.


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