Numerical Studies on The Effect of Swirl and Transient Temperature Data on Flat Surface Film Cooling
Date
2023
Authors
G A, Vashista
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute Of Technology Karnataka Surathkal
Abstract
Higher inlet temperatures to increase the efficiency of gas turbine engines
require improved component cooling. In this regard, the shape of the film cooling
hole proved to impact the cooling performance considerably. Plenty of research are
being carried out to develop a novel film cooling hole concept. In film cooling flows,
the counter-rotating vortex pair (CRVP) is of paramount significance due to its
inherited characteristics in lifting the coolant away from the wall. Most of the
advanced hole design concepts are aimed at weakening the strength of this vortex,
there by reducing jet penetration and enhancing film cooling effectiveness.
The present thesis is intended to study the film cooling behavior in the
presence of a twisted tape insert inside a film hole through computational fluid
dynamics simulations. The twisted tape insert imparts a swirl to the coolant flow. The
presence of serpentine passage channels and impingement angles are the sources of
swirl generators on the coolant flow during internal cooling. The twisted tape insert
can further be used to control such swirls systematically. This method allows
controlling the coolant swirl intensity by varying the pitch of the twisted tape.
The present study investigates swirl numbers of 0.0289, 0.116 and 0.168 at the
beginning. Area-averaged effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient are evaluated as
the measure of performance parameters for blowing ratios of 0.5, 1.0, 1.5 and 2.0.
Results revealed a significant improvement in the effectiveness in the presence of
swirl. Coolant swirl predominantly modifies the jet trajectory resulting in a reduced
jet penetration and increased lateral expansion. Further investigation on the effect of
twisted tape thickness on the coolant distribution is found to be negligible. But
inserting a twisted tape created higher pressure losses across the hole with a nearly
11% reduction in discharge coefficient, indicating additional pumping power
requirements.
Further, the study is extended to higher swirl numbers of 0.2, 0.4,0.6 and 0.7.
For blowing ratios less than 1.0, peak effectiveness occurred at a swirl number of
around 0.4, enhancing effectiveness up to 180%. While at higher blowing ratios, the
effectiveness peaks at higher swirl numbers. The spatially averaged effectiveness for
ithe case of blowing ratio 2.0 and swirl number 0.6 has increased by almost 2500%.
The case with swirl number of 0.7 resulted in high cooling efficiency in the
immediate downstream of injection at high blowing ratios while completely ignoring
the far downstream region. Mean while, the average net heat flux reduction due to
swirl is achieved as high as 500% when blowing ratio and swirl numbers are at 1.5
and 0.6, respectively. The swirl effect on CRVP is apparent at high swirl numbers
creating a highly asymmetrical structure. On the other hand, heat transfer coefficients
are seen barely affected by the presence of swirl.
A parametric study by varying injection angle and hole length at a particular
swirl number and blowing ratio revealed enhancement in the effectiveness with the
angle, a contrary feature to the absence of swirl. However, the hole length effect was
moderate on the swirled film cooling behavior. It also attempted to obtain an
optimized geometrical combination of swirl number, injection angle and hole length,
employing a Radial Basis Function Neural Network as a surrogate model and Genetic
algorithm as an optimizing tool. At a blowing ratio of 1.0, the optimized parameters
of geometry were obtained as a swirl number of 0.32, injection angle of 19.3° and
hole length to diameter ratio of 4.
In the last part of this thesis, an inverse heat conduction based data reduction
technique is proposed for the simultaneous estimation of film cooling effectiveness
and heat transfer coefficient from transient temperature measurements. This method
employs an optimization technique known as the Levenberg-Marquardt Algorithm to
estimate the unknown thermal boundary parameters of film cooling. The objective
function for the inverse algorithm is constructed using the analytical solution of a
transient one-dimensional semi-infinite body. The transient surface temperature data
required for the analysis is obtained through a conjugate numerical simulation.
Laterally averaged effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient for blowing ratios of
0.5, 0.8, and 1.0 are analyzed using the present technique and compared against the
steady-state simulation results to demonstrate the methodology. An average deviation
of around 7% for the estimated effectiveness and 4% for the heat transfer coefficient
values are observed. This method avoids the existing two-test strategy and yields
unknown parameters with short duration measurements.
Description
Keywords
Swirled film cooling, Effectiveness, Net heat flux reduction, Counter- rotating vortex pair