The present invention relates to buckets for turbines and particularly relates to a cooling system for cooling the platforms interfacing between the bucket airfoils and bucket roots.
Over the years, gas turbines have trended towards increased inlet firing temperatures to improve output and engine efficiencies. As gas path temperatures have increased, bucket platforms have increasingly exhibited distress including oxidation, creep and low cycle fatigue cracking. With the advent of closed circuit steam cooling, e.g., in the first two stages of buckets and nozzles in industrial gas turbines, inlet profiles have become such that the platforms are exposed to temperatures close to peak inlet temperatures for the blade row. This exacerbates the potential distress on bucket platforms as they run hotter.
Many older bucket designs did not require active cooling of the platforms due to lower firing temperatures. Also, film cooling carryover from upstream nozzle side walls tended to lower the temperatures near the platforms from the resulting “pitch line bias” of the inlet temperature profile. Certain designs have utilized film cooling by drilling holes through the platform and using compressor discharge air to provide a layer of cooler insulating film on the platform surface, protecting it from the high gas flow path temperatures. This is limited to areas where there is sufficient pressure to inject the film, and many current designs have insufficient pressure to film cool the entirety of the platform. Consequently, there is a need for a cooling system which will reduce the platform temperature to a level required to meet part-life or durability requirements including oxidation, creep and low cycle fatigue cracking in steam or air-cooled buckets for gas turbines.
In a preferred aspect of the present invention, there is provided a bucket having an airfoil, a root, and a platform at an interface between the airfoil and the root, the airfoil having a cooling circuit including a plurality of passages for receiving a cooling medium and flowing the cooling medium along the airfoil to cool the airfoil, the platform having a cooling circuit including a cavity along an underside thereof. The cavity has an inlet lying in communication with one of the passages for extracting at least a portion of the cooling medium from the one passage and flowing the extracted cooling medium portion within the platform cooling circuit of the cavity to cool the platform, the cavity having an outlet lying in communication with another cooling passage of the airfoil.
In another preferred aspect of the present invention, there is provided a bucket having an airfoil, a root, and a platform at an interface between the airfoil and the root, said airfoil having a cooling circuit including a plurality of generally radial passages for receiving a cooling medium and flowing the cooling medium along the airfoil to cool the airfoil, a method of cooling the platform comprising the steps of providing a cavity within or along an underside of the platform; extracting at least a portion of the cooling medium from one of said airfoil cooling passages; flowing the extracted cooling medium portion within the platform; and cooling circuit of the cavity to convectively cool the platform, and flowing spent cooling medium from said cavity through an outlet in communication with another cooling passage of the airfoil.
Referring now to the drawing figures, particularly to
Referring to
Again referring to
A second platform cooling circuit 52 includes a second cavity 54 formed in or along the underside of the platform 16. The second cavity 54 includes an inlet 56 in communication with the cooling medium flowing in the radial inward or second cooling passage 22 of the airfoil 12 and an outlet 58 in communication with the cooling medium flowing radially outwardly in the third airfoil cooling passage 24. The extracted cooling medium from passage 22 into cavity 54 convectively cools a portion of the high pressure side of the platform 16 as the coolant traverses the second platform cooling circuit and then dumps the cooling medium into the third passage 24.
A third platform circuit generally designated 60 includes a cavity 62 formed in or along the underside of the platform 16. The third cavity 62 includes an inlet 64 in communication with the cooling medium flowing radially inwardly in the sixth passage 30 of the airfoil 12. Cavity 62 also includes an outlet 66 in communication with the cooling medium flowing radially inwardly along the trailing edge passage 34 of airfoil 12. Cavity 62 further includes walls 68 and 70 which define with the outer walls of the cavity a serpentine cooling flow designated 72 within the third cooling platform circuit. Thus, the third cooling platform circuit convectively cools a portion of the high pressure side of the platform adjacent the suction side of the airfoil. Consequently, by combining at least two and preferably all three platform cooling circuits, both the low pressure and high pressure sides of the platform are convectively cooled by the cooling medium. It will be appreciated that the bucket may employ one, two or all three of the cooling circuits as desired.
Referring now to
The passages in the platform may be formed by using ceramic cores or by forming them in wax in a lost wax, i.e., investment casting process. In the latter method, a plate, not shown, joined by welding or brazing to the bucket totally encloses the passages to form the cooling circuits. It will be appreciated that the circuit configurations are not limited to the examples illustrated in
While the invention has been described in connection with what is presently considered to be the most practical and preferred embodiment, it is to be understood that the invention is not to be limited to the disclosed embodiment, but on the contrary, is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
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6019579 | Fukuno et al. | Feb 2000 | A |
6092983 | Tomita et al. | Jul 2000 | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060056970 A1 | Mar 2006 | US |