scholarly journals Numerical Investigation of Film Cooling Enhancement Using an Upstream Sand-Dune-Shaped Ramp

Computation ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 49 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sheng-Chang Zhang ◽  
Jing-Zhou Zhang ◽  
Xiao-Ming Tan

Film cooling enhancement by incorporating an upstream sand-dune-shaped ramp (SDSR) to the film hole exit was numerically investigated on a flat plate under typical blowing ratios ranging from 0.5 to 1.5. Three heights of SDSRs were designed: 0.25D, 0.5D, and 0.75D. The results indicated that the upstream SDSR effectively controlled the near-wall primary flow and subsequent mutual interaction with the coolant jet, which was the main mechanism of the film cooling enhancement. First, a pair of anti-kidney vortices was formed at the trailing ridges of the SDSR, which helped suppress the kidney vortex pair due to the interaction between the coolant jet and the primary flow. Second, a weak separation and a low pressure zone were induced behind the backside of the SDSR, which caused the coolant jet to spread around the film cooling hole and improve the lateral film coverage. With respect to the baseline cylindrical film cooling holes, the effect of the upstream SDSR was distinct under different blowing ratios. Under a low blowing ratio, the upstream SDSR shortened the streetwise film layer coverage in the vicinity of the film hole centerline but increased the span-wise film layer coverage. A relatively optimal ramp height seemed to be 0.5D. Under a high blowing ratio, both the streamwise and span-wise film layer coverages improved in comparison with the baseline case. The film cooling effectiveness improved gradually with increasing ramp height.

2014 ◽  
Vol 660 ◽  
pp. 664-668
Author(s):  
Kamil Abdullah ◽  
Hazim Fadli Aminnuddin ◽  
Akmal Nizam Mohammed

Film cooling has been extensively used to provide thermal protection for the external surface of the gas turbine blades. Numerous number of film cooling holes designs and arrangements have been introduced. The main motivation of these designs and arrangements are to reduce the lift-off effect cause by the counter rotating vortices (CRVP) produce by cylindrical cooling hole. One of the efforts is the introduction of newly found anti-vortex film cooling design. The present study focuses on anti-vortex holes arrangement consists of a main hole and pair of smaller holes. All three holes share a common inlet with the outlet of the smaller holes varies base on it relative position towards the main hole. Three anti-vortex holes arrangements have been considered; downstream anti-vortex hole arrangement (DAV), lateral anti-vortex hole arrangement (LAV), and upstream anti-vortex hole arrangement (UAV). In addition, a single hole (SH) film cooling has also been considered as the baseline. The investigation make used of ANSYS CFX software ver. 14. The investigations are made through Reynolds Average Navier Stokes analyses with the application of shear k-ε turbulence model. The results show that the anti-vortex designs produce significant improvement in term of film cooling effectiveness and distribution. The LAV arrangement shows the best film cooling effectiveness distribution among all considered cases and is consistent for all blowing ratios (BR). The results also unveil the formation of new vortex pair on both side of the primary hole CRVP. Interaction between the new vortices and the main CRVP structure reduce the lift off explaining the increased lateral film effectiveness.


Author(s):  
Prakhar Jindal ◽  
Shubham Agarwal ◽  
R. P. Sharma ◽  
A. K. Roy

The paper presents a novel study on film cooling effectiveness of a 3D flat plate with a multihole arrangement of mixed hole shapes. The film cooling arrangement consists of two rows of coolant holes, organized in a staggered pattern with an L/D (length to diameter ratio) of 10. The two rows consist of varied combinations of triangular and semi-elliptic shaped holes for the enhancement of film-cooling effectiveness. The results were obtained for a coolant to mainstream temperature ratio of 0.5 and a blowing ratio of 1.0. The computed flow temperature fields are presented in addition to the local two-dimensional streamwise and spanwise distribution of film cooling effectiveness. Validation of the results obtained from the turbulence model has been done with the experimental data of centerline film cooling effectiveness downstream of the cooling holes available in the open literature. The results showed the rapid merging of coolant jets emerging from front row of multiholes with the secondary staggered row of mixed holes. Due to the mainstream–coolant jet interaction, the strength of the counter rotating vortex pair was mitigated in the downstream region for certain arrangement of mixed hole shapes. The optimal hole combination with maximum overall effectiveness has been deduced from this study. The best configuration (M.R. VI) not only favored for the developed film, but also enhanced the averaged film cooling effectiveness to a large extent.


Author(s):  
Todd A. Oliver ◽  
Joshua B. Anderson ◽  
David G. Bogard ◽  
Robert D. Moser ◽  
Gregory Laskowski

Results of a recent joint experimental and computational investigation of the flow through a plenum-fed 7-7-7 shaped film cooling hole are presented. In particular, we compare the measured adiabatic effectiveness and mean temperature against implicit large eddy simulation (iLES) for blowing ratio approximately 2, density ratio 1.6, and Reynolds number 6000. The results overall show reasonable agreement between the iLES and the experimental results for the adiabatic effectiveness and gross features of the mean temperature field. Notable discrepancies include the centerline adiabatic effectiveness near the hole, where the iLES under-predicts the measurements by Δη ≈ 0.05, and the near-wall temperature, where the simulation results show features not present in the measurements. After showing this comparison, the iLES results are used to examine features that were not measured in the experiments, including the in-hole flow and the dominant fluxes in the mean internal energy equation downstream of the hole. Key findings include that the flow near the entrance to the hole is highly turbulent and that there is a large region of backflow near the exit of the hole. Further, the well-known counter-rotating vortex pair downstream of the hole is observed. Finally, the typical gradient diffusion hypothesis for the Reynolds heat flux is evaluated and found to be incorrect.


2017 ◽  
Vol 139 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathan Rogers ◽  
Zhong Ren ◽  
Warren Buzzard ◽  
Brian Sweeney ◽  
Nathan Tinker ◽  
...  

Experimental results are presented for a double wall cooling arrangement which simulates a portion of a combustor liner of a gas turbine engine. The results are collected using a new experimental facility designed to test full-coverage film cooling and impingement cooling effectiveness using either cross flow, impingement, or a combination of both to supply the film cooling flow. The present experiment primarily deals with cross flow supplied full-coverage film cooling for a sparse film cooling hole array that has not been previously tested. Data are provided for turbulent film cooling, contraction ratio of 1, blowing ratios ranging from 2.7 to 7.5, coolant Reynolds numbers based on film cooling hole diameter of about 5000–20,000, and mainstream temperature step during transient tests of 14 °C. The film cooling hole array consists of a film cooling hole diameter of 6.4 mm with nondimensional streamwise (X/de) and spanwise (Y/de) film cooling hole spacing of 15 and 4, respectively. The film cooling holes are streamwise inclined at an angle of 25 deg with respect to the test plate surface and have adjacent streamwise rows staggered with respect to each other. Data illustrating the effects of blowing ratio on adiabatic film cooling effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient are presented. For the arrangement and conditions considered, heat transfer coefficients generally increase with streamwise development and increase with increasing blowing ratio. The adiabatic film cooling effectiveness is determined from measurements of adiabatic wall temperature, coolant stagnation temperature, and mainstream recovery temperature. The adiabatic wall temperature and the adiabatic film cooling effectiveness generally decrease and increase, respectively, with streamwise position, and generally decrease and increase, respectively, as blowing ratio becomes larger.


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):  
Taha Rezzag ◽  
Bassam A. Jubran

Abstract The present study numerically evaluates the influence of hole inclination angle with a hole imperfection on film cooling performance. Here, the hole imperfection due to laser percussion drilling is modelled as a half torus. Three hole inclination angles were investigated: 35°, 45° and 55°. Furthermore, every case was evaluated at three blowing ratios: 0.45, 0.90 and 1.25. Each case is compared to a baseline case where the hole imperfection is absent. The results indicate that the hole inclination angle has a strong influence on the film effectiveness performance when a hole imperfection is present. Centerline effectiveness plots reveal a maximum effectiveness deterioration of 89% for a blowing ratio of 0.90 in the vicinity of the hole exit. Dimensionless temperature contours show that the jet produced in the presence of an imperfection is much more compact causing the counter rotating vortex pair to be closer to each other. This enhances the jet to lift off from the plate.


2013 ◽  
Vol 135 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Baitao An ◽  
Jianjun Liu ◽  
Chao Zhang ◽  
Sijing Zhou

This paper presents a method to improve the film-cooling effectiveness of cylindrical holes. A short crescent-shaped block is placed at the downstream of a cylindrical cooling hole. The block shape is defined by a number of geometric parameters including block height, length and width, etc. The single row hole on a flat plate with inclination angle of 30 deg, pitch ratio of 3, and length-diameter ratio of 6.25 was chosen as the baseline test case. Film-cooling effectiveness for the cylindrical hole with or without the downstream short crescent-shaped block was measured by using the pressure sensitive paint (PSP) technique. The density ratio of coolant (argon) to mainstream air is 1.38. The blowing ratios vary from 0.5 to 1.25. The results showed that the lateral averaged cooling effectiveness is increased remarkably when the downstream block is present. The downstream short block allows the main body of the coolant jet to pass over the block top and to form a new down-wash vortex pair, which increases the coolant spread in the lateral direction. The effects of each geometrical parameter of the block on the film-cooling effectiveness were studied in detail.


Author(s):  
Shubham Agarwal ◽  
Laurent Gicquel ◽  
Florent Duchaine ◽  
Nicolas Odier ◽  
Jérôme Dombard

Abstract Understanding the flow from a cooling hole is very important to be able to properly control film cooling of turbine blades. For this purpose, large eddy simulation (LES) investigation of the flow inside a cylindrical film cooling hole is presented in this paper. Two different geometries, with different hole metering lengths, are investigated at a blowing ratio of 0.5. The main flow structure in the hole are the hairpin vortices that originate from a shear layer formed due to flow separation near the hole entry. The comparison of these hairpin vortices in the two cases with different hole metering length is presented in detail. The results show that in case of the hole with longer length the hairpin vortices dissociate within the hole itself. In such a case a uniform flow is seen at the hole exit. However, when the hole length is significantly decreased, it is shown that these vortices exit the hole and effect the vortex structures outside the hole, thereby accounting for the reduction in film cooling effectiveness. Overall, these results bring forth one other major reason for the reduction in film cooling effectiveness with reduction in hole length, i.e. the exit of in-hole hairpin vortices into the crossflow.


2018 ◽  
Vol 140 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiaxu Yao ◽  
Jin Xu ◽  
Ke Zhang ◽  
Jiang Lei ◽  
Lesley M. Wright

The interaction of flow and film-cooling effectiveness between jets of double-jet film-cooling (DJFC) holes on a flat plate is studied experimentally. The time-averaged flow field in several axial positions (X/d = −2.0, 1.0, and 5.0) is obtained through a seven-hole probe. The downstream film-cooling effectiveness on the flat plate is measured by pressure sensitive paint (PSP). The inclination angle (θ) of all the holes is 35 deg, and the compound angle (β) is ±45 deg. Effects of the spanwise distance (p = 0, 0.5d, 1.0d, 1.5d, and 2.0d) between the two interacting jets of DJFC holes are studied, while the streamwise distance (s) is kept as 3d. The blowing ratio (M) varies as 0.5, 1.0, 1.5, and 2.0. The density ratio (DR) is maintained at 1.0. Results show that the interaction between the two jets of DJFC holes has different effects at different spanwise distances. For a small spanwise distance (p/d = 0), the interaction between the jets presents a pressing effect. The downstream jet is pressed down and kept attached to the surface by the upstream one. The effectiveness is not sensitive to blowing ratios. For mid-spanwise distances (p/d = 0.5 and 1.0), the antikidney vortex pair dominates the interaction and pushes both of the jets down, thus leading to better coolant coverage and higher effectiveness. As the spanwise distance becomes larger (p/d ≥ 1.5), the pressing effect almost disappears, and the antikidney vortex pair effect is weaker. The jets separate from each other and the coolant coverage decreases. At a higher blowing ratio, the interaction between the jets of DJFC holes happens later.


Author(s):  
David L. Rigby ◽  
James D. Heidmann

Calculations are presented demonstrating the effect of placing a delta vortex generator downstream of a film cooling hole. The effects of blowing ratio, density ratio, and spanwise pitch are included in the study. Flow over a flat plate with film cooling holes oriented at a 30 degree angle was investigated. The Reynolds numbers based on the freestream velocity and the hole diameter was 11,300. The simulation was performed using the Glenn-HT code, a full three-dimensional Navier-Stokes solver using the Wilcox k-ω turbulence model. A structured multi-block grid was used with approximately one million cells, and average y+ values on the order of unity. Local and span averaged effectiveness are presented. Analysis and visualization of the flow are presented as well as a discussion on the mechanisms which contribute to the dramatic improvement in effectiveness. The results demonstrate that the delta vortex generator was able to annihilate the up-wash vortex pair produced by the film hole and produce a down-wash pair downstream.


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