This disclosure relates to a cooling passage for an airfoil.
Turbine blades are utilized in gas turbine engines. As known, a turbine blade typically includes a platform having a root on one side and an airfoil extending from the platform opposite the root. The root is secured to a turbine rotor. Cooling circuits are formed within the airfoil to circulate cooling fluid, such as air. Typically, multiple relatively large cooling channels extend radially from the root toward a tip of the airfoil. Air flows through the channels and cools the airfoil, which is relatively hot during operation of the gas turbine engine.
Some advanced cooling designs use one or more radial cooling passages that extend from the root toward the tip. Typically, the cooling passages are arranged between the cooling channels and an exterior surface of the airfoil. The cooling passages provide extremely high convective cooling.
The Assignee of the present disclosure has discovered that in some cooling designs the airfoil is overcooled at the base of the airfoil near the platform. It is believed that strong secondary flows, particularly on the suction side, force the migration of relatively cool fluid off the end wall and onto the suction side of the blade. This results in relatively low external gas temperatures. Internally, the coolant temperature is relatively cool as it has just entered the blade. The high heat transfer coefficients provided by the cooling passage in this region are undesirable as it causes overcooling of the external surface and premature heating of the coolant air.
What is needed is a cooling passage that provides desired cooling of the airfoil.
A turbine engine airfoil is disclosed that includes an airfoil structure having a side with an exterior surface. The structure includes a cooling passage extending a length within the structure and providing a convection surface facing the side. The convection surface is twisted along the length, which varies a heat transfer rate between the exterior surface and the convection surface along the length.
In one example, the cooling passage is provided by a refractory metal core that is used during the airfoil casting process. The core includes multiple legs arranged in a fan-like shape and joined by a connecting portion. At least one of the legs is twisted along its length. The legs are deformed toward one another opposite the connecting portion to provide a desired core shape that corresponds to the shape of the cooling passage.
Accordingly, the cooling passage provides desired cooling of the airfoil by varying the cooling rate as desired.
These and other features of the disclosure can be best understood from the following specification and drawings, the following of which is a brief description.
The turbine section 11 includes alternating rows of blades 20 and static airfoils or vanes 19. It should be understood that
An example blade 20 is shown in
The airfoil 34 includes an exterior surface 58 extending in a chord-wise direction C from a leading edge 38 to a trailing edge 40. The airfoil 34 extends between pressure and suction sides 42, 44 in an airfoil thickness direction T, which is generally perpendicular to the chord-wise direction C. The airfoil 34 extends from the platform 32 in a radial direction R to an end portion or tip 33. Cooling holes 48 are typically provided on the leading edge 38 and various other locations on the airfoil 34 (not shown).
Referring to
Current advanced cooling designs incorporate supplemental cooling passages arranged between the exterior surface 58 and one or more of the cooling channels 50, 52, 54. The larger cooling channels can be omitted entirely, if desired, as shown in
As shown in
Referring to
Referring to
An example core structure 74 for forming the disclosed cooling passages 56 is shown in
The reduction in the cross-sectional area increases the Mach number as the coolant moves to the end of the cooling passage 56. The increase in Mach number in turn allows the heat transfer coefficient, h, near the exit of the cooling passage to be higher than near its inlet. This allows the designer to maintain a uniform value (or adjust to the most desirable value) based upon the product of h*A*(ΔT) resulting in a uniformly cooled blade, where h is the convection heat transfer coefficient, A is the area and ΔT is the temperature gradient. The twisting and overlapping cooling passages reduce the heat transfer coefficient and thereby reduce the heat transfer rate q going into the coolant fluid. The reduced q indicates less overcooling in regions where the twist and overlap is used.
With continuing reference to
Returning to
Another airfoil 134 shown in
Another airfoil 234 having cooling passages 256 similar to those shown in
Cupping allows the designer to tailor the h*A*(ΔT) term to either side of the airfoil by changing the amount of coolant passage area that is in near proximity to the external surface 58.
After the legs 276 have been twisted, the legs 276 are deformed and pushed toward one another at a location opposite the connecting portion 278 to provide the desired core shape, which is shown in
Although example embodiments have been disclosed, a worker of ordinary skill in this art would recognize that certain modifications would come within the scope of the claims. For that reason, the following claims should be studied to determine their true scope and content.
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