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Journal ArticleDOI

Gas Turbine Film Cooling

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TLDR
A review of the literature on the effects of freestream turbulence, surface curvature, and hole shape on the performance of film cooling is presented in this article. But, it is difficult to predict film cooling performance because of the inherent complex flowfields along the airfoil component surfaces in turbine engines.
Abstract
The durability of gas turbine engines is strongly dependent on the component temperatures. For the combustor and turbine airfoils and endwalls, film cooling is used extensively to reduce component temperatures. Film cooling is a cooling method used in virtually all of today's aircraft turbine engines and in many power-generation turbine engines and yet has very difficult phenomena to predict. The interaction of jets-in-crossflow, which is representative of film cooling, results in a shear layer that leads to mixing and a decay in the cooling performance along a surface. This interaction is highly dependent on the jet-to-crossflow mass and momentum flux ratios. Film-cooling performance is difficult to predict because of the inherent complex flowfields along the airfoil component surfaces in turbine engines. Film cooling is applied to nearly all of the external surfaces associated with the airfoils that are exposed to the hot combustion gasses such as the leading edges, main bodies, blade tips, and endwalls. In a review of the literature, it was found that there are strong effects of freestream turbulence, surface curvature, and hole shape on the performance of film cooling. Film cooling is reviewed through a discussion of the analyses methodologies, a physical description, and the various influences on film-cooling performance.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Turbine blade film cooling using psp technique

TL;DR: In this article, the pressure sensitive paint (PSPSPP) mass transfer analogy is used to determine the film cooling effectiveness. But the PSP method is not suitable for high-temperature applications, as it does not take into account the conduction error in high thermal gradient regions near the hole.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Adiabatic Effectiveness Measurements for a Baseline Shaped Film Cooling Hole

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a baseline shaped cooling hole design that includes the following features: hole inclination angle of 30° with a 7° expansion in the forward and lateral directions; hole length of 6 diameters; hole exit-to-inlet area ratio of 2.5; and lateral hole spacing of 6 diameter.

Effects of density ratio on the hydrodynamics of film cooling

TL;DR: In this article, the results of a detailed hydrodynamic study of a row of inclined jets issuing into a crossflow with a density ratio of injectant to freestream of two were presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Increasing adiabatic film-cooling effectiveness by using an upstream ramp

TL;DR: In this paper, a new design concept is presented to increase the adiabatic effectiveness of film cooling from a row of film-cooling holes by modifying the geometry upstream of the holes to modify the approaching boundary-layer flow and its interaction with the film cooling jets.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Film-cooling effectiveness downstream of a single row of holes with variable density ratio

TL;DR: In this article, a row of inclined holes that injected cryogenically cooled air across a flat, adiabatic test plate was used to study the effectiveness of film cooling.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Film Cooling With Compound Angle Holes: Adiabatic Effectiveness

TL;DR: In this paper, film cooling effectiveness was studied experimentally in a flat plate test facility with zero pressure gradient using a single row of inclined holes, which injected high-density, cryogenically cooled air.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Adiabatic Wall Effectiveness Measurements of Film-Cooling Holes With Expanded Exits

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present detailed measurements of the film-cooling effectiveness for three single scaled-up film cooling hole geometries, including a cylindrical hole and two holes with a diffuser-shaped exit portion.
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