1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to air cooled turbine airfoils, and more specifically to a film cooling hole for the airfoils.
2. Description of the Related Art including information disclosed under 37 CFR 1.97 and 1.98
In a gas turbine engine, a turbine comprises a number of stages of stator vanes and rotor blades used to convert the energy from a hot gas flow into mechanical energy used to drive the rotor shaft. The efficiency of the engine can be increased by passing a higher temperature gas flow into the turbine. However, the highest temperature allowable is dependent on the material properties of the first stage airfoils (vanes and blades) and the amount of cooling provided. Once the material properties have been established, higher temperatures can be used if adequate cooling of the airfoils is provided.
Current airfoil cooling designs make use of internal convection and impingement cooling, and film cooling of the external airfoil surfaces that are exposed to the high temperature gas flow. Film cooling provides a blanket of cooling air over the airfoil surface that—in theory—prevents the hot gas flow from making contact with the airfoil surface. One major objective of a turbine airfoil designer is to maximize the effect of the cooling air while minimizing the usage of the cooling air in order to increase the efficiency of the engine, since the pressurized cooling air used for cooling the airfoils is bled of from the compressor of the engine. The bled off cooling air becomes wasted work.
Prior art film holes pass straight through the airfoil wall at a constant diameter and exit at an angle to the airfoil surface. Some of the cooling air is consequently ejected directly into the mainstream hot gas flow and causing turbulence, coolant dilution and a loss of downstream film effectiveness. Also, the hole breakout in the stream-wise elliptical shape will induce stress problems in a blade application.
The above described problems associated with turbine airfoil film cooling holes can be reduced by incorporating the film cooling hole geometry of the present invention into the prior art airfoil cooling design. The film hole of the present invention includes a curved diffusion hole in which each individual inner wall of the film hole is constructed with a various radius of curvature independent to each other. The unique film cooling hole design will allow for radial diffusion of the stream-wise oriented flow which combines the best aspects of both radial and stream-wise straight holes.
In one embodiment, the film hole is aligned with the stream-wise direction of the hot gas flow and the sides walls of the film hole have about the same amount of curvature. In a second embodiment, the film hole has side walls at different amounts of curvature to form a compound angle in which the stream-wise direction is not parallel to the film hole axis.
a through 1g shows a prior art film cooling hole with a straight film cooling hole.
a through 2c shows a prior art film cooling hole with diffusion along three sides of the hole.
a and 4b show the first embodiment of the film cooling hole of the present invention.
a and 5b show the second embodiment of the film cooling hole of the present invention.
The film cooling hole of the present invention is for use in an air cooled turbine airfoil such as a rotor blade or a stator vane of a gas turbine engine such as an industrial gas turbine (IGT) engine. However, the film cooling hole can be used in other devices in which film cooling of a surface is required in order to protect the surface from the effects of a high temperature gas flow passing over the surface. A combustor in a power plant or in a gas turbine engine requires film cooling and can make use of the film cooling hole of the present invention.
The first embodiment of the film cooling hole of the present invention is shown in
b shows the film hole from the cross sectional side view with the inlet metering section 31 and the diffusion section 32 and the film hole axis represented by the dashed line. The diffusion section 32 includes a top wall surface 35 and a bottom wall surface 36 with curvatures facing toward the bottom of this figure. The top wall 35 has a curvature of R1 and the bottom wall 36 has a curvature of R2 in which R1 is greater than R2. The outlet end of the top wall 35 has an angle of from 0-5 degrees offset from the film hole axis, while the outlet end of the bottom wall 36 forms an angle of 15-25 degrees. The hot gas flow for the film hole 30 of the first embodiment in
In the first embodiment film hole 30, the side walls 33 and 34 have about the same radius of curvature (R3=R4) while the top side wall 35 has a radius of curvature R1 greater than the bottom side wall 36 radius of curvature R2.
A second embodiment of the film cooling hole 40 is shown in
The film hole 40 includes a top side wall 45 and a bottom side wall 46 as shown in
In the stream-wise direction, the curved wall at the upstream (35 in
In the spanwise direction, the radial outward and radial inward film cooling hole walls (33 and 34 in
In summary, the various radius of curvature diffusion film hole has the expansion radial and rearward hole surfaces curved toward both the airfoil trailing edge and spanwise directions. Coolant penetration into the gas path is thus minimized, yielding good buildup of the coolant sub-boundary layer next to the airfoil surface, lower aerodynamic mixing losses due to low angle of cooling air injection, better film coverage in the spanwise direction and high film effectiveness for a longer distance downstream of the film hole. The end result of both benefits produces a better film cooling effectiveness level for the turbine airfoil.
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