Claims
- 1. The nozzle band as recited in claim 22 wherein said wall is segmented into sectors, the circumferential extremities of which are provided with seals to preclude substantial leakage of cooling fluid from said cooling fluid passage into said hot gas passage.
- 2. A turbomachinery nozzle comprising:
- a plurality of circumferentially spaced vanes; and
- a nozzle band including an annular wall extending generally laterally of said vanes and cooperating therewith to partially define a hot gas passage having a throat, the band having a portion upstream of the throat and another portion downstream of the throat, a serpentine conduit within the downstream portion for routing cooling fluid therethrough and to the portion upstream of the throat, and means for exhausting all of the cooling fluid from said serpentine conduit into the hot gas passage as a film along the wall upstream of the throat.
- 3. The turbomachinery nozzle as recited in claim 2 wherein said vanes are carried by said wall.
- 4. In a method of cooling a nozzle band partially defining a hot gas passage having a throat, the steps of:
- routing cooling fluid through a nozzle band portion downstream of the throat; and
- further routing the cooling fluid back upstream of the throat; and
- exhausting the cooling fluid into the hot gas passage upstream of the throat.
- 5. The method of claim 4 wherein the cooling fluid comprises air.
- 6. In a gas turbine nozzle band having a wall bounding an annular stage of nozzle vanes and defining therewith a hot gas passage having a throat, said band characterized as having a portion extending generally laterally of the vanes upstream of the throat and another portion extending generally laterally of the vanes downstream of the throat, and
- an internal serpentine conduit for routing a coolant through the downstream portion to cool the downstream portion by the convection principle, the improvement comprising means for exhausting all of the coolant from said serpentine conduit into the hot gas passage as a coolant film along the wall upstream of the throat, thereby reducing momentum losses due to mixing.
- 7. The nozzle band as recited in claim 6 further comprising a generally radially projecting flange located at approximately the throat and having a pair of separated openings therethrough, one of said openings comprising a coolant entrance to said serpentine conduit and the other opening comprising an exit therefrom.
- 8. The nozzle band as recited in claim 7 further comprising a liner upstream of the flange and spaced from said hot gas passage defining wall for defining therewith a plenum and means for introducing coolant into said plenum and into impingement against said wall, thereby cooling said wall.
- 9. The nozzle band as recited in claim 8 wherein said exhausting means comprises a coolant pocket disposed between said wall and said liner and separated from said plenum by a rib extending substantially between said wall and said liner, and wherein the exit from said serpentine conduit terminates in said pocket, and further comprising apertures through said wall for exhausting coolant from said pocket and over said wall as a coolant film.
- 10. The nozzle band as recited in claim 8 wherein said liner also partially defines a cooling fluid passage for routing coolant to said nozzle band and wherein the entrance to said serpentine conduit communicates fluidly with said cooling fluid passage.
Government Interests
The invention herein described was made in the course of or under a contract, or sub-contract thereunder, with the U.S. Department of the Air Force.
US Referenced Citations (9)
Foreign Referenced Citations (4)
Number |
Date |
Country |
488302 |
Nov 1952 |
CAX |
1604143 |
Jul 1971 |
FRX |
2316440 |
Jan 1977 |
FRX |
1188401 |
Apr 1970 |
GBX |