This application claims priority to European application 12195165.1 filed Nov. 30, 2012, the contents of which are hereby incorporated in its entirety.
The present invention relates to the field of gas turbines, in particular to combustion systems of gas turbines, which have to be properly cooled in order to ensure a sufficient lifetime, but at the same time are subject to strict regulations of emissions.
This invention applies to convective cooling schemes.
It refers to a gas turbine part according to the preamble of claim 1.
In order to achieve a high efficiency, a high turbine inlet temperature is required in standard gas turbines. As a result, there arise high NOx emission levels and higher life cycle costs. These problems are mitigated with a sequential combustion cycle, wherein the compressor delivers nearly double the pressure ratio of a conventional one.
The main flow passes the first combustion chamber (e.g. EV combustor), wherein a part of the fuel is combusted. After expanding at the high-pressure turbine stage, the remaining fuel is added and combusted (e.g. SEV combustor). Since the second combustor is fed by expanded exhaust gas of the first combustor, the operating conditions allow self-ignition (spontaneous ignition) of the fuel/air mixture without additional energy being supplied to the mixture (see for example document EP 2 169 314 A2).
Currently convective cooling is used in several combustor parts, e.g. in both the EV and SEV liners. As shown in
An alternative that can require less cooling air is a combustor part 24 shown in
In the related prior art, several solutions have been proposed with regard to gas turbine combustors:
Document EP 2 295 864 A1 discloses a combustion device for a gas turbine, which shows channels near the wall of the combustion chamber, and which comprises a portion provided with a first and a second wall provided with first passages connecting the zone between the first and second wall to the inner of the combustion device and second passages connecting said zone between the first and second wall to the outer of the combustion device. Between the first and second wall a plurality of chambers are defined, each connected with one first passage and at least one second passage, and defining a Helmholtz damper.
Document U.S. Pat. No. 6,981,358 B2 discloses a reheat combustion system for a gas turbine comprising a mixing tube adapted to be fed by products of a primary combustion zone of the gas turbine and by fuel injected by a lance; a combustion chamber fed by the said mixing tube; and at least one perforated acoustic screen. The acoustic screen is provided inside the mixing tube of the combustion chamber, at a position where it faces, but is spaced from, a perforated wall thereof. In use, the perforated wall experiences impingement cooling as it admits air into the combustion system for onward passage through the perforations of the said acoustic screen, and the acoustic screen damps acoustic pulsations in the mixing tube and combustion chamber.
Document US 2001/0016162 A1 teaches a cooled blade for a gas turbine, in which blade a cooling fluid, preferably cooling air, flows for convective cooling through internal cooling passages located close to the wall and is subsequently deflected for external film cooling through film-cooling holes onto the blade surface, and the fluid flow is directed in at least some of the internal cooling passages in counterflow to the hot-gas flow flowing around the blade, homogeneous cooling in the radial direction is achieved owing to the fact that a plurality of internal cooling passages and film-cooling holes are arranged one above the other in the radial direction in the blade in such a way that the discharge openings of the film-cooling holes in each case lie so as to be offset from the internal cooling passages, in particular lie between the internal cooling passages.
Document WO 2004/035992 A1 discloses a component capable of being cooled, for example a combustion chamber wall segment whereof the walls of the cooling channel include projecting elements of specific shape selectively arranged. The height of the projecting elements ranges between 2% and 5% of the hydraulic diameter of the cooling channel. Thus, the elements are just sufficiently high to generate a turbulent transverse exchange with the central flow in the laminar lower layer, next to the wall, of a cooling flow with fully developed turbulence, thereby considerably enhancing the heat transfer next to the wall of the cooling side without significantly increasing pressure drop in the cooling flow through influence of the central flow.
Document U.S. Pat. No. 5,647,202 teaches a cooled wall part having a plurality of separate convectively cooled longitudinally cooling ducts running near the inner wall and parallel thereto, adjacent longitudinal cooling ducts being connected to one another in each case via intermediate ribs. There is provided at the downstream end of the longitudinal cooling ducts a deflecting device which is connected to at least one backflow cooling duct which is arranged near the outer wall in the wall part and from which a plurality of tubelets extend to the inner wall of the cooled wall part and are arranged in the intermediate ribs branch off. By means of this wall part, the cooling medium can be put to multiple use for cooling (convective, effusion, film cooling).
Document U.S. Pat. No. 6,374,898 B1 discloses a process for producing a casting core which is used for forming within a casting a cavity intended for cooling purposes, through which a cooling medium can be conducted, the casting core having surface regions in which there is incorporated in a specifically selective manner a surface roughness which transfers itself during the casting operation to surface regions enclosing the cavity and leads to an increase in the heat transfer between the cooling medium and the casting.
However, when implementing a near wall cooling channel design on large surfaces, such as for example combustor liners, it is a challenge to assure the feeding and discharging of all near wall channels with cooling air. An example is sketched in
Since part of the cooling air is fed through each near wall cooling channel 15 (see arrows through the cooling channels in
However, for a constant cooling performance in all near wall channels it is desirable to have the same mass flow in all channels.
It is an object of the present invention to optimize the cooling efficiency and thus reduce cooling air consumption and/or reduce emissions.
This object is obtained by a gas turbine part according to claim 1.
The gas turbine part according to the invention, which is especially a combustor part of a gas turbine, comprises a wall, which is subjected to high temperature gas on a hot side and comprises a near wall cooling arrangement, with the wall containing a plurality of near wall cooling channels extending essentially parallel to each other in a first direction within the wall in close vicinity to the hot side and being arranged in at least one row extending in a second direction essentially perpendicular to said first direction, whereby said near wall cooling channels are each provided at one end with an inlet for the supply of cooling air, and on the other end with an outlet for the discharge of cooling air, whereby said inlets open into a common feeding channel for cooling air supply, and said outlets open into a common discharge channel for cooling air discharge, said feeding channel and said discharge channel extending in said second direction, said feeding channel being open at a first end to receive supplied cooling air and guide it the row of cooling channel inlets, and said discharge channel being open at a second end to discharge cooling air from the row of cooling air outlets.
It is characterized in that means are provided within said near wall cooling arrangement to equalize the cooling air mass flow through the near wall cooling channels having a common feeding channel and/or discharge channel.
According to an embodiment of the invention all near wall cooling channels of said near wall cooling arrangement have essentially the same cross section.
According to another embodiment of the invention all near wall cooling channels of said near wall cooling arrangement are arranged within said row with an essentially constant inter-channel distance.
Specifically, the feeding channel has a cross section, which decreases in the second direction with increasing distance from said first end.
More specifically, the discharge channel has a cross section, which increases in the second direction with decreasing distance from said second end.
Preferably, the variation of the cross section with distance is linear.
Specifically, the feeding channel and the discharge channel are separated by a common separation wall, that the cross sections of the feeding channel and the discharge channel are each defined by said common separation wall and a respective outer channel wall, and that the variation of the cross section in the second direction is effected by an oblique orientation between the common separation wall and the outer channel walls.
More specifically, the direction of the common separation wall is parallel to the second direction, and that the directions of the outer channel walls are oblique with respect to the second direction.
Alternatively, the direction of the common separation wall, and that the directions of the outer channel walls are parallel to the second direction, and that the direction of the common separation wall is oblique with respect to the second direction.
According to just another embodiment of the invention, the feeding channel and the discharge channel each have a constant cross section in the second direction, and that the number of cooling channels per unit length in the second direction decreases from the first end to the second end.
According to a further embodiment of the invention the feeding channel and the discharge channel each have a constant cross section in the second direction, and that the cross section of the cooling channels decreases in the second direction from the first end to the second end.
According to another embodiment of the invention the near wall cooling arrangement comprises a plurality of rows of near wall cooling channels, that the rows run parallel to each other in the second direction, and that each of said rows has a separate feeding channel and discharge channel with a common separation wall and respective outer channel walls, and that neighbouring rows share an outer channel wall.
The present invention is now to be explained more closely by means of different embodiments and with reference to the attached drawings.
Within the present invention and its equalizing means several ways to optimize and control the cooling performance are described.
One way is to provide feeding and discharge channels with changing cross sections:
As sketched in
In this way, the pressure distribution can be influenced and therefore the mass flow entering the near wall cooling channels 15 can be controlled. Like in the case with constant cross sections (
An equivalent variation in cross section can be achieved by the configuration shown in
Another way to control and optimize the coolant mass flow through the individual near-wall cooling channels 15 is according to the combustor part 10e of
Despite controlling the mass flow rate through the individual near-wall cooling channels 15, it is also possible to optimize the spacing of the near-wall cooling channels 15 in longitudinal direction of the row (
The characteristics and advantages of the invention are the following:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
12195165 | Nov 2012 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4339925 | Eggmann | Jul 1982 | A |
5388412 | Schulte-Werning et al. | Feb 1995 | A |
5647202 | Althaus | Jul 1997 | A |
6374898 | Vogeler et al. | Apr 2002 | B1 |
6981358 | Bellucci et al. | Jan 2006 | B2 |
20010016162 | Lutum et al. | Aug 2001 | A1 |
20020078691 | Hoecker | Jun 2002 | A1 |
20080276619 | Chopra et al. | Nov 2008 | A1 |
20090120094 | Norster | May 2009 | A1 |
20100282721 | Bunker | Nov 2010 | A1 |
20110255989 | Koyabu | Oct 2011 | A1 |
20120036858 | Lacy et al. | Feb 2012 | A1 |
20120111012 | Axelsson et al. | May 2012 | A1 |
20120159954 | Ito | Jun 2012 | A1 |
20130025287 | Cunha | Jan 2013 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0 203 431 | Dec 1986 | EP |
2 169 314 | Mar 2010 | EP |
2 295 864 | Mar 2011 | EP |
2004035992 | Apr 2004 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20140150436 A1 | Jun 2014 | US |