The present application is directed to an airfoil portion of a turbine engine component.
Some existing trailing edge microcircuits consist of a single core 10 inserted into a mainbody core and run out the center of a trailing edge 12 of an airfoil portion 14 of a turbine engine component, or to a pressure side cutback (see
A turbine engine component having an airfoil portion with a pressure side wall, a suction side wall, and a trailing edge is described herein. The turbine engine component comprises at least one first cooling circuit core embedded within the pressure side wall, each said first cooling circuit core having a first exit for discharging a cooling fluid, at least one second cooling circuit core embedded within the suction side wall, each said second cooling circuit core having a second exit for discharging a cooling fluid, and said first and second exits being aligned in a spanwise direction of said airfoil portion.
Also described herein is a process for forming a turbine engine component. The process broadly comprises the steps of forming an airfoil portion having a pressure side wall, a suction side wall, and a trailing edge, forming a trailing edge cooling system which comprises at least one first cooling circuit core within said pressure side wall and at least one second cooling circuit core having within said suction side wall, and forming said at least one first cooling circuit core to have a first exit and forming said at least one second cooling circuit core to have a second exit aligned with said first exit in a spanwise direction of said airfoil portion.
Other details of the invention, as well as other objects and advantages attendant thereto are set forth in the following detailed description and the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals depict like elements.
As can be seen from
As can be seen from
As shown in
Each cooling circuit core 114 and 116 may be fabricated using any suitable technique known in the art. For example, each of the cooling circuit cores 114 and 116 may be formed using refractory metal core technology in which the airfoil portion 100 is cast around the refractory metal cores and after solidification, the refractory metal cores are removed.
The full coverage trailing edge microcircuit with alternating converging exits described herein should provide several aero-thermal benefits. As can be seen from the foregoing description, the pressure and suction side walls of the airfoil portion 100 are fully covered. Additionally, heat is only being drawn into each microcircuit from a single hot wall in the non-converging zone 128. The opposite side of each core is shielded by the opposite wall core. In the convergent section 130 of each core, heat is drawn from both hot walls. The trailing edge provides a low-pressure sink for flow to be discharged. Due to the significant pressure ratio across each core, substantial convective heat transfer can be achieved by dumping flow out in this location. Because the cooling circuit cores 114 and 116 converge at the trailing edge, Mach numbers in the passage should increase as they reach the end of the circuit. This Mach number increase should increase the flow per unit area in the core and thus should increase internal heat transfer coefficients. Conversely, the non-convergent portion 130 of the microcircuit should produce lower heat transfer coefficients and thus likely reduce the amount of heat-up in this region of the airfoil portion 100. Because external heat loads should increase externally as one move aft along the airfoil portion 100, the cooling scheme described herein provides a balance of low heat up/low heat transfer in the beginning of the circuit, moving to high heat up/high heat transfer at the end of the circuit. Thus, this configuration provides for an improved heat transfer, which will result in a cooler, more isothermal trailing edge. There should also be an aerodynamic benefit to the high Mach number at the core exits 122 and 124. The high exit velocity of the coolant better matches the external free stream velocity and thus should reduce aerodynamic mixing losses.
Additional structural benefits may exist from the wedge 140 (see
The invention may also increase the thermal effective of the airfoil portion in which it is incorporated, while reducing the required cooling air discharged into the gas path and the aforementioned aerodynamic losses.
While the core 116 has been shown as originating from the suction side of mainbody core as depicted in
It is apparent that there has been provided an inventive microcircuit design. Other unforeseeable alternatives, modifications, and variations may become apparent to those skilled in the art having read the foregoing description. Accordingly, it is intended to embrace those alternatives, modifications, and variations as fall within the broad scope of the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5328331 | Bunker et al. | Jul 1994 | A |
20050281667 | Liang | Dec 2005 | A1 |
20080050243 | Liang | Feb 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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1091092 | Apr 2001 | EP |
1847684 | Oct 2007 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090238695 A1 | Sep 2009 | US |