Shaped hole effects on film cooling effectiveness and a comparison of multiple effectiveness measurement techniques

This experimental study consists of two parts. For the first part, the film cooling effectiveness for a single row of seven cylindrical holes with a compound angle is measured on a flat surface using five different measurement techniques: steady-state liquid crystal thermography, transient liquid c...

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Main Author: Varvel, Trent Alan
Other Authors: Han, Je-Chin
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1524
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-15242013-01-08T10:37:39ZShaped hole effects on film cooling effectiveness and a comparison of multiple effectiveness measurement techniquesVarvel, Trent Alanfilm coolingeffectivenessgas turbineheat transfershaped holescompound angleThis experimental study consists of two parts. For the first part, the film cooling effectiveness for a single row of seven cylindrical holes with a compound angle is measured on a flat surface using five different measurement techniques: steady-state liquid crystal thermography, transient liquid crystal thermography, pressure sensitive paint (PSP), thermocouples, and infrared thermography. A comparison of the film cooling effectiveness from each of the measurement techniques is presented. All methods show a good comparison, especially for the higher blowing ratios. The PSP technique shows the most accurate measurements and has more advantages for measuring film cooling effectiveness. Also, the effect of blowing ratio on the film cooling effectiveness is investigated for each of the measurement techniques. The second part of the study investigates the effect of hole geometries on the film cooling effectiveness using pressure sensitive paint. Nitrogen is injected as the coolant air so that the oxygen concentration levels can be obtained for the test surface. The film effectiveness is then obtained by the mass transfer analogy. Five total hole geometries are tested: fan-shaped laidback with a compound angle, fan-shaped laidback with a simple angle, a conical configuration with a compound angle, a conical configuration with a simple angle, and the reference geometry (cylindrical holes) used in part one. The effect of blowing ratio on film cooling effectiveness is presented for each hole geometry. The spanwise averaged effectiveness for each geometry is also presented to compare the geometry effect on film cooling effectiveness. The geometry of the holes has little effect on the effectiveness at low blowing ratios. The laterally expanded holes show improved effectiveness at higher blowing ratios. All experiments are performed in a low speed wind tunnel with a mainstream velocity of 34 m/s. The coolant air is injected through the coolant holes at four different coolant-to-mainstream velocity ratios: 0.3, 0.6, 1.2, and 1.8.Texas A&M UniversityHan, Je-Chin2005-02-17T21:04:10Z2005-02-17T21:04:10Z2004-122005-02-17T21:04:10ZBookThesisElectronic Thesistext1105806 byteselectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1524en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic film cooling
effectiveness
gas turbine
heat transfer
shaped holes
compound angle
spellingShingle film cooling
effectiveness
gas turbine
heat transfer
shaped holes
compound angle
Varvel, Trent Alan
Shaped hole effects on film cooling effectiveness and a comparison of multiple effectiveness measurement techniques
description This experimental study consists of two parts. For the first part, the film cooling effectiveness for a single row of seven cylindrical holes with a compound angle is measured on a flat surface using five different measurement techniques: steady-state liquid crystal thermography, transient liquid crystal thermography, pressure sensitive paint (PSP), thermocouples, and infrared thermography. A comparison of the film cooling effectiveness from each of the measurement techniques is presented. All methods show a good comparison, especially for the higher blowing ratios. The PSP technique shows the most accurate measurements and has more advantages for measuring film cooling effectiveness. Also, the effect of blowing ratio on the film cooling effectiveness is investigated for each of the measurement techniques. The second part of the study investigates the effect of hole geometries on the film cooling effectiveness using pressure sensitive paint. Nitrogen is injected as the coolant air so that the oxygen concentration levels can be obtained for the test surface. The film effectiveness is then obtained by the mass transfer analogy. Five total hole geometries are tested: fan-shaped laidback with a compound angle, fan-shaped laidback with a simple angle, a conical configuration with a compound angle, a conical configuration with a simple angle, and the reference geometry (cylindrical holes) used in part one. The effect of blowing ratio on film cooling effectiveness is presented for each hole geometry. The spanwise averaged effectiveness for each geometry is also presented to compare the geometry effect on film cooling effectiveness. The geometry of the holes has little effect on the effectiveness at low blowing ratios. The laterally expanded holes show improved effectiveness at higher blowing ratios. All experiments are performed in a low speed wind tunnel with a mainstream velocity of 34 m/s. The coolant air is injected through the coolant holes at four different coolant-to-mainstream velocity ratios: 0.3, 0.6, 1.2, and 1.8.
author2 Han, Je-Chin
author_facet Han, Je-Chin
Varvel, Trent Alan
author Varvel, Trent Alan
author_sort Varvel, Trent Alan
title Shaped hole effects on film cooling effectiveness and a comparison of multiple effectiveness measurement techniques
title_short Shaped hole effects on film cooling effectiveness and a comparison of multiple effectiveness measurement techniques
title_full Shaped hole effects on film cooling effectiveness and a comparison of multiple effectiveness measurement techniques
title_fullStr Shaped hole effects on film cooling effectiveness and a comparison of multiple effectiveness measurement techniques
title_full_unstemmed Shaped hole effects on film cooling effectiveness and a comparison of multiple effectiveness measurement techniques
title_sort shaped hole effects on film cooling effectiveness and a comparison of multiple effectiveness measurement techniques
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1524
work_keys_str_mv AT varveltrentalan shapedholeeffectsonfilmcoolingeffectivenessandacomparisonofmultipleeffectivenessmeasurementtechniques
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