Conjugate Heat Transfer and Film Cooling of a Multi-Stage Cooling Scheme Conference Paper uri icon

abstract

  • Cooling techniques play a key role in improving efficiency and power output of modern gas turbines. The conjugate technique of film and impingement cooling schemes is considered in this study. The Multi-Stage Cooling Scheme (MSCS) involves coolant passing from inside to outside turbine blade through two stages. The first stage; the coolant passes through first hole to internal gap where the impinging jet cools the external layer of the blade. Finally, the coolant passes through the internal gap to the second hole which has specific designed geometry for external film cooling. The effect of design parameters, such as, offset distance between two-stage holes, gap height, and inclination angle of the first hole, on upstream conjugate heat transfer rate and downstream film cooling effectiveness performance are investigated computationally. An Inconel 617 alloy with variable properties is selected for the solid material. The conjugate heat transfer and film cooling characteristics of MSCS are analyzed across blowing ratios of Br = 1 and 2 for density ratio, 2. This study presents upstream wall temperature distributions due to conjugate heat transfer for different gap design parameters. The maximum film cooling effectiveness with upstream conjugate heat transfer is less than adiabatic film cooling effectiveness by 2434%. However, the full coverage of cooling effectiveness in spanwise direction can be obtained using internal cooling with conjugate heat transfer, whereas adiabatic film cooling effectiveness has narrow distribution.

name of conference

  • Volume 10: Heat Transfer, Fluid Flows, and Thermal Systems, Parts A, B, and C

published proceedings

  • Volume 10: Heat Transfer, Fluid Flows, and Thermal Systems, Parts A, B, and C

author list (cited authors)

  • Ghorab, M., Kim, S. I., & Hassan, I.

citation count

  • 1

complete list of authors

  • Ghorab, M||Kim, SI||Hassan, I

publication date

  • January 2008