The effect of conjugate heat transfer is investigated on a first stage nozzle guide vane (NGV) of a high pressure gas turbine which has both impingement and film cooling holes. The study is carried out computationally by considering a linear cascade domain, having two passages formed between the vanes, with a chord length of 228 mm and spacing of 200 mm. The effect of (i) coolant and mainstream Reynolds numbers, (ii) thermal conductivity (iii) temperature difference between the mainstream and coolant at the internal surface of the nozzle guide vane are investigated under conjugate thermal condition. The results show that, with increasing coolant Reynolds number the lower conducting material shows larger percentage decrease in surface temperature as compared to the higher conducting material. However, the internal surface temperature is nearly independent of mainstream Reynolds number variation but shows significant variation for higher conducting material. Further, the temperature gradient within the solid thickness of NGV is higher for the lower conductivity material.
Conjugate heat transfer analysis is carried out in a cascade domain for a nozzle guide vane. The nozzle guide vane is internally cooled by jet impingement cooling, and the external surface is cooled by film cooling. A computational study was carried out with three different materials, having conductivity values of 0.0048, 0.2 and 1.1 W/m.K. Distribution of local surface temperature along the leading edge, pressure and suction surface is reported. The leading edge region showed the maximum increase in internal surface temperature as the conductivity increased among the different regions of the vane internal surface. However, the pressure and suction surfaces showed relatively less increase in the surface temperature distribution. In order to validate the computational result, the obtained temperature data were compared with experimentally obtained surface temperature data. The flow phenomena like jet lift-off and self-induced cross-flow affect the local temperature distribution differently in the three materials. For a constant mainstream and coolant flow, the surface temperature gradient is higher for the lower conductivity material, and the gradient decreases as conductivity increases. Hence, a material with higher conductivity is desired in a combined impingement and film cooled nozzle guide vane, to increase the durability of the vane.
Experimental and computational heat transfer investigations are reported on the interior side of a nozzle guide vane (NGV) subjected to combined impingement and film cooling. The domain of study is a two-dimensional five-vane cascade having a space chord ratio of 0.88. The vane internal surface is cooled by dry air, supplied through the two impingement inserts: the front and the aft. The blowing ratio (ρcVc/ρmVm) is varied systematically by varying the coolant mass flow through the impingement chamber and also by changing the mainstream Reynolds number, but by keeping a fixed spacing (H) to jet diameter (d) ratio of 1.2. The surface temperature distributions, at certain locations of the vane interior surface, are measured by pasting strips of liquid crystal sheets. The vane interior surface temperature distribution is also obtained by the computations carried out by using shear stress transport (SST) k–ω turbulence model in the flow solver ansys fluent-14. The computational data are in good agreement with the measured values of temperature. The internal heat transfer coefficients are thence determined from the computational data. The results show that, when the blowing ratio is increased by increasing the coolant flow rate, the average internal surface temperature decreases. However, when the blowing ratio is varied by increasing the mainstream Reynolds number, the internal surface temperature increases. Further, the temperature variations are different all along the internal surface from the leading edge to the trailing edge and are largely dependent on the coolant flow distributions on the internal as well as the external sides.
Conjugate heat transfer analysis is carried out on the internal surface of the first-stage nozzle guide vane of a gas turbine, which has both impingement and film cooling holes. The mainstream flow Reynolds number and internal coolant flow Reynolds number systematically changed and its effect on internal local surface temperature variation is studied. It is found that an increase in the coolant mass flow rate causes a non-uniform decrease in the local internal surface temperature. The external film coolant jet-lift off and internal impingement cross-flow are significant contributors to the non-uniform variation in surface temperature. It is also observed that the leading edge regions are prone to jet lift-off, whereas the tip regions of the suction surface are prone to self-induced cross-flow, due to which hot patches are formed in these regions. Hot patches are observed near the hub regions of a pressure surface due to the reduced film thickness on the external surface. From these observations it is concluded that local values of internal surface temperature are differently affected in different regions of the vane surface for a given combination of mainstream and coolant flow rates. Therefore, the conventional method of obtaining the internal temperature distributions by considering generalized geometries may not yield accurate solutions, in predicting the life of the nozzle guide vane.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.