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Turbine blade mid-chord internal cooling

Modern gas turbine engines operate at temperatures well above the melting point of the metal components. This has driven manufactures to develop sophisticated cooling methods which minimise the use of coolant to maximise engine efficiency by enabling further increases in operating temperature. This thesis investigates the cooling performance of engine representative mid-chord internal cooling passages for turbine blades. The work forms part of a larger E.C. FP7 project ERICKA (Engine Representative Internal Cooling Knowledge Applications).This thesis provides detailed maps of heat transfer coefficient (HTC) under a number of conditions, new experimental techniques, and has lead to a better understanding of the impact HTC distributions have on the thermal performance of a turbine blade at engine conditions. Transient liquid crystal experiments have been conducted on a large scale model of an engine representative internal cooling passage at three aspect ratios (width:height (chord length:spanwise length), 1:2, 1:3 and 1:4). Spatially resolved maps of Nusselt number have been produced for the full surface of the internal cooling passages. Little information exists in the literature for more engine representative geometries, and it is rare for spatial measurements to be presented over the full surface. The detailed maps provide validation data for CFD within the ERICKA programme. A novel method which produces spatially resolved maps in areas with highly non-one-dimensional heat transfer has been developed and validated. This method couples transient finite element analysis and data from transient liquid crystal experiments. Applied to the ribbed passage geometry, this produced spatially resolved maps of HTC over the rib surface. To the author’s best knowledge this is the first time spatial HTC maps have been presented for an engine representative rib. Industry best practice methods for internal cooling passage design typically apply averaged values of HTC, in part due to lack of spatially resolved data. To determine the significance of this approximation on blade design and life, experimental measurements have been applied to finite element (FEA) models at typical engine conditions. Application of a 3D HTC distribution to a FEA model of a section of ribbed wall demonstrated a significant under prediction (up to 58%) of localised thermal gradients when an average value is applied compared to a spatially resolved profile. This work demonstrated good agreement between distributions taken from experimental data and CFD predictions, indicating that CFD distributions may be more appropriate than bulk values in the design process. A 2D FEA study was undertaken to quantify the impact of HTC distribution approximations and aspect ratio on cooling of a generic turbine section. This study considered multiple adjacent internal cooling passages. It was confirmed that multi-pass arrangements offer greater heat removal for a given mass flow rate. Also a symmetric heat transfer profile with a higher HTC on the ribbed wall is the most desirable distribution. Use of average values significantly impacted the metal temperature, causing an underprediction up to 13◦C and 8◦C in the maximum and average values respectively. Based on the experimental HTC data, the 1:3 aspect ratio passage offered the lowest metal temperatures. Applying HTC distributions from CFD data (calculated with using the centreline temperature) showed, in general, good agreement, with the lowest metal temperatures (by up to 8◦C) in the 1:4 aspect ratio passage. Use of and HTC distribution provided by CFD prediction based on the mixed bulk temperature, produced average and peak metal temperatures 16◦C and 17◦C, respectively, lower in the 1:4 aspect ratio passage than the next best design. This highlights the need for appropriate and consistent method to be used in the analysis. As expected, reducing the passage aspect ratio led to increases in both thermal gradient and total pressure loss.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:627872
Date January 2014
CreatorsRyley, Joshua Claydon
ContributorsGilispie, David R. H.; McGilvray, Matthew
PublisherUniversity of Oxford
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:14469a51-517c-400c-b477-4fb432c8b648

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