The trailing edge region of gas turbine blades is generally subjected to extremely high external heat loads due to the combined effects of high mach numbers and gas temperatures. In order to maintain the metal temperatures of these trailing edges to a level, which fulfils both the part mechanical integrity and turbine performance, highly efficient and reliable cooling of the trailing edges is required without increasing the coolant consumption. In this paper, the heat transfer and pressure drop characteristic of three different turbulator designs in a very high aspect ratio passage have been investigated. The turbulator designs included angled and tapered ribs, broken discrete ribs and V-shaped small chevrons ribs. The heat transfer and pressure drop characteristics of all the turbulator configurations was initially investigated via numerical predictions and subsequently in a scaled experimental perspex model. The experimental study was conducted for a range of operational Reynolds numbers and the TLC (thermochromic liquid crystal) method was used to measure the detailed heat transfer coefficients on all surfaces of the passage. Pressure taps were located at several locations within the perspex model and both the local and average heat transfer coefficients and pressure loss coefficients were determined. The measured and predicted results show, that for all cases investigated, the local internal heat transfer coefficient, which is driven by the highly three dimensional passage flows, is highly non-uniformly within the passage. The highest overall average heat transfer was obtained for the angled and tapered turbulator. Although the average heat transfer coefficient of the discrete broken turbulator and the small chevron turbulator were slightly lower than the baseline case, they had much higher pressure losses. In terms of the overall non-dimensional performance index, which incorporates both the heat transfer and the pressure drop, it was found that the angled and tapered turbulator gave the best overall performance.
The transient Thermochromic Liquid Crystal (TLC) method is applied to determine the distribution of the local heat transfer coefficients using a configuration with parallel cooling channels at an engine relevant Reynolds number. The rectangular channels with a moderate aspect ratio and a high length-to-diameter ratio are equipped with one-sided oblique ribs with high blockage, which is a promising configuration for turbine near wall cooling applications. In this arrangement, the three inner channels should experience same flow and thermal conditions. Numerical simulations are performed to substantiate this assumption. The symmetric single channels are sprayed with narrowband TLC with various indication temperatures. Multiple experiments were conducted. All start at ambient conditions before the fluid is heated up to several temperatures between 46°C and 73°C. The results show that the determined local heat transfer coefficients and therefore the Nusselt numbers vary significantly for the different experimental conditions especially at locations of high heat transfer coefficient behind the ribs. A simplified procedure with respect to measurement uncertainties is applied to enable an easy and fast valuation on the data quality. This might be used within the data reduction analysis for such experiments directly. The approach is illustrated using the obtained experimental data.
The present study deals with the application of the transient thermochromic liquid crystal (TLC) technique in a flow network of intersecting circular passages as a potential internal turbine component cooling geometry. The investigated network consists of six circular passages with a diameter d = 20 mm that intersect coplanar at an angle θ = 40 deg, the innermost in three, the outermost in one intersection level. Two additional nonintersecting passages serve as references. Such a flow network entails specific characteristics associated with the transient TLC method that have to be accounted for in the evaluation process: the strongly curved surfaces, the mixing and mass flow redistribution at each intersection point, and the resulting gradients between the wall and passage centerline temperatures. All this impedes the choice of a representative fluid reference temperature, which results in deviations using established evaluation methods. An alternative evaluation approach is introduced, which is supported by computational results obtained from steady-state three-dimensional (3D) Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes equations (RANS) simulations using the shear-stress transport (SST) turbulence model. The presented analysis uncouples local heat transfer (HT) coefficients from actually measured local temperatures but uses the time information of the thermocouples (TC) instead that represents the fluid temperature step change and evolution along the passages. This experimental time information is transferred to the steady-state numerical bulk temperatures, which are finally used as local references to evaluate the transient TLC experiments. As effective local mass flow rates in the passage sections are considered, the approach eventually allows for a conclusion whether HT is locally enhanced due to higher mass flow rates or the intersection effects.
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.