Turbine Vane Endwall Film Cooling With Slashface Leakage and Discrete Hole Configuration Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Turbine vanes are typically assembled as a section containing single or double airfoil units in an annular pattern. First stage guide vane assembly results in two common mating interfaces: a gap between combustor and vane endwall and another resulted from the adjacent sections, called slashface. High pressure coolant could leak through these gaps to reduce the ingestion of hot gas and achieve certain cooling benefit. As vane endwall region flow field is already very complicated due to highly three-dimensional secondary flows, then a significant influence on endwall cooling can be expected due to the gap leakage flows. To determine the effect of leakage flows from those gaps, film cooling effectiveness distributions were measured using pressure sensitive paint (PSP) technique on the endwall of a scaled up, midrange industrial turbine vane geometry with the multiple rows of discrete film cooling (DFC) holes inside the passages. Experiments were performed in a blow-down wind tunnel cascade facility at the exit Mach number of 0.5 corresponding to Reynolds number of 3.8105 based on inlet conditions and axial chord length. Passive turbulence grid was used to generate free-stream turbulence (FST) level about 19% with an integral length scale of 1.7cm. Two parameters, coolant-to-mainstream mass flow ratio (MFR) and density ratio (DR), were studied. The results are presented as two-dimensional film cooling effectiveness distribution on the vane endwall surface with the corresponding spanwise averaged values along the axial direction.

published proceedings

  • JOURNAL OF TURBOMACHINERY-TRANSACTIONS OF THE ASME

altmetric score

  • 0.25

author list (cited authors)

  • Chowdhury, N., Shiau, C., Han, J., Zhang, L., & Moon, H.

citation count

  • 26

complete list of authors

  • Chowdhury, Nafiz HK||Shiau, Chao-Cheng||Han, Je-Chin||Zhang, Luzeng||Moon, Hee-Koo

publication date

  • June 2017