This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. ยง119 to European Patent Application No. 09160581.6 filed in Europe on May 19, 2009, the entire content of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The disclosure relates generally to gas turbine vanes and to cooling configurations thereof.
For the purposes of this specification the term sequential cooling refers to cooling in sequence without a supplementary addition of cooling fluid and includes arrangements where cooling flow can be divided and subsequently recombined for use in further cooling.
The output rate of a gas turbine can be a strong function of inlet temperature. However, how hot a gas turbine can be operated at can be limited by metallurgical constraints of the turbine parts and the cooling effectiveness of those parts. To keep parts cool and therefore maximise output, cooling air drawn from the gas turbine compressor can be used to cool parts. This draw-off, however, can represent a direct loss in gas turbine efficiency. It can be desirable to minimise the draw-off by, for example, ensuring optimal use of the cooling air.
A large number of cooling designs have been developed with the objective of providing effective cooling. Known designs use a variety of convection cooling designs including cooling augmentation features and film cooling schemes with impingement cooling arrangements. Convective cooling arrangements additionally may also include cooling augmentation features, which are features that can improve cooling effectiveness by increasing wall surface area and/or creating wall turbulence. Examples of cooling augmentation features can include pins projected from the inside walls of the of the vane, ribs positioned obtusely to the cooling air flow and pedestals, which are a form of pin, projected across the gap between vane pressure side and suction side walls.
An example of a cooling arrangement is provided in U.S. Pat. No. 7,097,418 which discloses an airfoil impingement cooling arrangement. EP 1 221 538 B1 discloses another arrangement that includes an airfoil impingement cooling system utilising impingement tubes contained and partitioned within a plurality of cavities of the airfoil. Further disclosed are chordwise ribs used to direct cooling medium flow in the chordwise direction within these cavities. The foregoing documents are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
A hollow gas turbine vane is disclosed comprising: a first endwall including a first endwall cooling passage configured to receive cooling air for cooling the first endwall; an airfoil, extending radially from the first endwall, including opposite pressure and suction side walls extending chordwise between a leading edge and a trailing edge of the airfoil, and including an airfoil cooling passage radially extending between radial ends of the airfoil, configured by connection, to receive cooling air from the first endwall cooling passage; a second endwall at an airfoil end radially distal from the first endwall, having a second endwall cooling passage connected to the airfoil cooling passage to be in cooling air communication with the airfoil cooling passage, wherein the airfoil cooling passage extends from the first endwall cooling passage to the second endwall cooling passage and is configured by direct connection for exclusively receiving cooling air used to cool the first endwall; and a wall cooling passage of the airfoil extending from a region of the leading edge to the trailing edge and being configured, in the leading edge region, for receiving cooling air exclusively from the airfoil cooling passage and, at the trailing edge for ejecting cooling air therethrough such that cooling air in the wall cooling passage sequentially cools the airfoil from the leading edge to the trailing edge, wherein the second endwall cooling passage is configured by direct connection to the airfoil cooling passage so that cooling air for cooling of the second endwall will be exclusively received from the airfoil cooling passage.
By way of example, exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure are described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure are now described with reference to the drawings, wherein like reference numerals are used to refer to like elements throughout. In the following description, for purposes of explanation, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the disclosure. It may be evident, however, that the disclosure may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known structures and devices are shown in block diagram form in order to facilitate description of the disclosure.
Exemplary embodiments are disclosed which can address cooling air demand for cooling of vanes and the detrimental effect this demand can have on gas turbine efficiency.
Exemplary embodiments disclosed herein can improve the utilisation of a cooling medium with alternate and/or improved designs.
For example, sequential cooling is provided for an endwall of the vane and its airfoil and, at the same time, the two endwalls of the vane. This arrangement has been calculated to reduce cooling air demand by up to 20% (or greater) wherein the actual benefit is dependent on, for example, design and operational factors.
An exemplary embodiment provides a hollow gas turbine vane including a first endwall having a first endwall cooling passage configured to receive cooling air for cooling the first endwall. An airfoil extends radially from the first endwall and includes opposing pressure and suction side walls extending chordwise between a leading edge and a trailing edge. The airfoil has an airfoil cooling passage that radially extends between radial ends of the airfoil and can be configured to receive cooling air from the first endwall cooling passage. The vane includes a second endwall, at an airfoil end radially distal from the first endwall that has a second endwall cooling passage configured to receive cooling air from the airfoil cooling passage. The exemplary gas turbine vane includes:
In an exemplary embodiment the vane can include a hollow impingement tube located in the airfoil wherein the hollow of the impingement tube forms the airfoil cooling passage. The impingement tube can also extend chordwise from the leading edge through a mid-chord region to a region adjacent to the trailing edge and be spaced from the pressure side wall and the suction side wall. The space between the impingement tube and the side walls, in an embodiment, splits the wall cooling passage in this the regions into a pressure side wall cooling passage and a suction side wall cooling passage respectively. In addition, the impingement tube can be configured for impingement cooling only of a leading edge region extending chordwise between the leading ledge and the mid chord region.
Another exemplary embodiment provides the vane with the pressure side wall and the suction side wall, in the mid chord region, with cooling augmentation features. The cooling augmentation features in a region of the mid chord region adjacent the trailing edge region can be configured to provide enhanced cooling augmentation compared to the cooling augmentation features adjacent the leading edge region. This may be achieved, in an aspect, by the closer spacing of the cooling augmentation features in the region of the mid chord region adjacent the trailing edge region.
Another exemplary embodiment of the vane provides a configuration of the side wall cooling passages such that they have different flow resistances relative to each other. The difference can also be disproportionate to the in use relative heat loads of the side wall cooling passages in the vicinity of the mid-chord region. In an arrangement shown to provide reduced cooling air demand, the cooling air flow split between the suction side wall cooling passage and the pressure side wall cooling passage is between 65:35 and 75:25. In an exemplary embodiment, the relative flow resistance to cooling air may be a function of the spacing of the impingement tube from the side walls wherein, for example, the space can be defined by the extension of the cooling augmentation features, which, for example, can be pins, from each of the side walls respectively.
In an exemplary embodiment the suction side wall cooling passage and the pressure side wall cooling passage can join to form a trailing edge wall cooling passage in the trailing edge region. For example, the trailing edge region can include chordwise extending ribs for directing cooling air in a chordwise direction.
Contained within the side wall cooling passages 23,25 are cooling augmentation features that improve cooling effectiveness. The cooling augmentation features may be pins 26, as shown in
In region B-C, cooling air can be configured to flow in the chordwise direction CD towards the trailing edge 3 across the cooling augmentation features. As the temperature of the cooling air increases, the temperature gradient between the cooling medium and the side walls 22,24 can be reduced. To counteract this affect, the cooling augmentation features in the mid-chord region adjacent the trailing edge C can be enhanced to provide greater cooling augmentation than the cooling augmentation features in the mid-chord region adjacent the leading edge B. When the cooling augmentation features are pins 26, this can be achieved by the reduction of pin size, increasing pin number and/or closer spacing of the pins 26, as shown in
The pressure side wall cooling passage 23 and the suction side wall cooling passage 25 can be configured to ensure that, for example, different cooling air flowrates pass through each passage 23,25 so that in an exemplary embodiment, the flowrates compensate for the different heat loads between the two sides of the airfoil. In the exemplary embodiment shown in
The resulting effect of having cooling flows through the side wall cooling passages 23,25 disproportionately to the relative heat load is that the overall cooling effectiveness in the mid-chord region B-C can be reduced and the exit temperature of cooling air from each of the side wall cooling passages 23,25 is not the same. The benefit of this can be realised in the cooling of the trailing edge region D.
As shown in
The trailing edge region D can be a relatively highly stressed region, and it is therefore desirable to provide effective cooling of this region D. One way to achieve this can be to increase the cooling air rate in this region. However, in a sequential cooling arrangement of the exemplary embodiments this may not be possible. An alternative includes reducing cooling effectiveness in the mid-chord region B-C. As a result of reduced cooling effectiveness in the mid-chord region B-C, cooling air temperature supplied to the trailing edge region D is lowered, thus increasing the cooling air temperature driving force so by enabling the cooling air in the trailing edge region D to remove more heat and so effect an increase in cooling effectiveness in this region D without the need to provide supplementary cooling air. The overall result is that the features of the exemplary embodiment shown in
The airfoil cooling passage 21 can be further directly connected, at an end radially distal from the first endwall 10, to a second endwall cooling passage 31. The connection enables sequential cooling of the first endwall 10 and the second endwall 30. Directly connected, in the context of this specification means without intermediate.
This arrangement of sequential cooling combined with the features shown in
Although the disclosure has been herein shown and described in what is conceived to be the most practical exemplary embodiments, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the present disclosure can be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. The presently disclosed embodiments are therefore considered in all respects to be illustrative and not restricted.
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European Search Report for EP 09160581.6 dated Nov. 4, 2009. |
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20110008177 A1 | Jan 2011 | US |