This application claims priority from European Patent Application No. 16207606.1 filed on Dec. 30, 2016, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates to a gas turbine with secondary air system.
As it is known, in a gas turbine hot gas that flow through expansion or turbine sections may reach temperatures even higher than 1500° C. Cooling of turbine regions which are subject to high temperature, such as turbine vanes and blades and stator heat shields, is often required and is usually achieved by directing a flow of relatively cold air from a compressor section toward the turbine section through a so-called secondary air system (SAS).
In a secondary air system of a gas turbine, air is typically transferred from compressor bleeds to the turbine sections through external pipes, which are limited in number (e.g. two or four), essentially for reasons of cost and space. Cooling air from external piping is then fed to one or more annular cavities surrounding the turbine rotor and defined between an inner casing and an outer casing of the gas turbine. More specifically, in some cases the annular cavities may be formed by a Turbine Vane Carrier (TVC) and a Turbine Housing (TH).
Cooling air leaving the feeding pipes is directed radially inward and directly impinges on the inner casing at respective locations. This leads to a significant flow non-uniformity and uneven temperature distribution in a circumferential direction around the inner casing, because heat transfer coefficient is much higher at direct impingement regions and drops away therefrom. In turn, on account of the temperature distribution, different parts of the inner casing are subjected to different thermal expansion in use and the inner casing may deform in an oval manner. Deformation of the inner casing requires wider clearances between mutually facing static and rotating parts to prevent contact during operation. Wider clearances, however, may result in a loss of efficiency because a greater fraction of the hot gas flow may leak through clearances and does not interact with streamlined portions of turbine vanes and blades.
It is an aim of the present invention to provide a gas turbine which allows overcoming or at least attenuating the limitations described.
According to the present invention, there is provided a gas turbine comprising:
a compressor section and a turbine section extending along an axis;
an outer casing and an inner casing, delimiting an annular cavity between one another in the turbine section;
a cooling circuit, configured to direct a cooling fluid flow from the compressor section to the annular cavity of the turbine section through cooling inlets in the outer casing; and
baffles arranged in the annular cavity between respective cooling inlets and the inner casing and configured to intercept at least part of the cooling fluid flow fed through the respective cooling inlets and to prevent the intercepted cooling fluid flow from directly impinging on the inner casing.
Reducing or completely avoiding direct impingement of cooling fluid on the inner casing leads to more uniform distribution of temperature in a circumferential direction along the inner casing. In fact, baffles deflect the cooling fluid flow and may either create turbulence or a rotary flow around the inner casing. In both cases, irregular heat exchange with the inner casing is avoided and temperature distribution is made more uniform. Thermal expansion is thus approximately the same in all sections of the inner casing and deformation of the latter is prevented.
Also velocity and pressure distribution of the cooling fluid flow are made more uniform, thus improving supply of cooling fluid through the inner casing wall to turbine vanes and blades and to the internal surface of the inner casing itself.
According to an aspect of the invention, each baffle is separated from the inner casing by a free space.
The cooling fluid is steered by the baffle plates by vortices at the edges of the baffles or by deflection and can provide effective cooling action around the whole inner casing, including regions between the baffles and the inner casing.
According to an aspect of the invention, the annular cavity has a height defined by a radial distance between the outer casing and the inner casing and the baffles are located between 20% and 80% of the height of the annular cavity.
According to an aspect of the invention, the baffles extend in a circumferential direction over an angle between 15° and 65°.
According to an aspect of the invention, the annular cavity has a first axial length and the baffles have a second axial length which is between 10% and 100% of the first axial length.
According to an aspect of the invention, the baffles are oriented to form an angle between 90°±45° with a direction of the cooling fluid flow entering the annular cavity through the cooling inlets.
According to an aspect of the invention, the baffles are arranged symmetrically with respect to the corresponding cooling inlet in the outer casing.
The positioning of the baffles can be thus optimized to make temperature distribution as even as possible along the inner casing.
According to an aspect of the invention, the baffles are arranged to split respective impinging jets of cooling fluid into flow portions deflected in opposite circumferential directions.
Before reaching the inner casing, the speed of the cooling fluid flow is smoothed by interaction with the baffles and by interaction of flow portion with opposite direction. With respect to an arrangement with no baffles, the cooling fluid flow is thus steered and slowed down before providing its cooling action to the inner casing, especially in regions between the baffles and the inner casing. As a result, the speed of the cooling fluid is more uniform at the surface of the inner casing and the cooling effect is more homogeneous.
According to an aspect of the invention, the baffles are arranged to deflect the whole cooling fluid flow in a common circumferential direction.
Thus, the cooling fluid flow takes a rotary component. Direct impingement on the inner casing is in any case prevented and velocity conditions are well balanced all around the inner casing.
According to an aspect of the invention, the baffles are in the form of curved plates having a curvature in a plane perpendicular to the axis and having each a convex surface and a concave surface.
According to an aspect of the invention, the baffles are oriented such that the cooling fluid flow impinges on the convex surfaces of the baffles.
According to an aspect of the invention, the baffles are oriented such that the cooling fluid flow impinges on the concave surfaces of the baffles.
According to an aspect of the invention, the annular cavity is axially delimited by annular walls and the baffles are supported by at least one of the annular walls.
According to an aspect of the invention, the baffles extend from one of the annular walls to the other of the annular walls and is supported by both the annular walls.
The present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, which show some non-limitative embodiment thereof, in which:
The compressor section 2 of the gas turbine assembly 1 provides a compressed airflow, which is added with fuel and burned in the combustor assembly 3. A fraction of the airflow processed in the compressor section 2 is directed by the secondary air system 7 to the turbine section 5 for the purpose of cooling and defines a cooling fluid flow F. The secondary air system 7 comprises extraction pipes 8 and supply pipes 9. The extraction pipes 8 are coupled to an intermediate stage of the compressor assembly 2 and receive the cooling fluid flow F, which is then supplied to the turbine section 5 for the purpose of cooling through the supply pipes 9. In the embodiment of
As illustrated in
The supply pipes 9 of the secondary air system 7 are fluidly coupled with at least one of the annular cavities 13 through respective cooling inlets 17 in the outer casing 10. Thus, the annular cavity 13 forms a cooling plenum and supplies the cooling fluid to inner stator portions of the turbine section (e.g. turbine vanes, not shown, or inner surface of the turbine vane carrier) through cooling passages 18 in the inner casing 11.
Baffles 20 are arranged in the annular cavity 13 between respective cooling inlets 17 and the inner casing 11. In one embodiment, the baffles 20 are in the form of curved plates with a curvature in a plane perpendicular to the axis A and have each a convex surface and a concave surface. The baffles 20 are configured to intercept at least part of the cooling fluid flow F fed through the respective cooling inlets 17 and to prevent the intercepted cooling fluid flow F from directly impinging on the inner casing. “Directly impinging” is herein understood as meaning that the cooling fluid flow F reaches the inner casing 11 from the cooling inlets 17 along a substantially radial direction without interaction with other components between the cooling inlets 17 and the inner casing 11 or at most with interaction with the annular walls 15. According to the embodiments described, therefore, at least for a portion of the cooling fluid flow F there is no direct impingement because of the presence of the baffles 20.
The baffles 20 are arranged in the annular cavity 13 with a free space between the baffles 20 and the inner casing 11. The radial location between the outer casing 10 and the inner casing 11, the size in the circumferential direction and the angle with respect to the direction of the cooling fluid flow F arriving from the respective cooling inlets 17 may be selected for the baffles 20 according to the needs. Examples of suitable ranges may be as follows.
The baffles 20 may be located between 20% and 80% of a height H of the annular cavity 13, the height H of the annular cavity 13 being defined by a radial distance between the outer casing 10 and the inner casing 11.
The baffles 20 may extend in a circumferential direction over an angle between 15° and 65° .
The baffles 20 may have an axial length L between 10% and 100% of an axial length L′ of the annular cavity 13, which is defined by an axial distance between the annular walls 15 of the annular cavity 13.
The baffles 20 may be oriented to form an impinging angle (between 90°±45° with a direction of the cooling fluid flow F entering the annular cavity 13 through the cooling inlets 17. The impinging angle (of a baffle 20 is defined as the angle between the direction of a cooling fluid flow F impinging on the baffle 20 at an impingement location and a plane tangent to the baffle 20 at the impingement location.
In the embodiment of
In the embodiment of
Direct impingement of the cooling fluid flow F on the inner casing 11 is prevented by the baffles 20. The cooling fluid impinges on the baffles 20 and is deflected substantially circumferentially. Pressure gradients, vortices at the edges of the baffle 20 and interaction of portions of cooling fluid deflected by adjacent baffles 20 in opposite directions cause the radial speed component of the cooling fluid flow F to drop and the cooling fluid to be directed also in the space between the baffles 20 and the inner casing 11, thus providing uniform cooling effect also in this regions.
In one embodiment (
In one embodiment, illustrated in
Also in the embodiment shown in
In another embodiment, shown in
In the embodiment of
Another embodiment of the invention is illustrated in
Finally, it is evident that the described transition duct may be subject to modifications and variations, without departing from the scope of the present invention, as defined in the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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16207606.1 | Dec 2016 | EP | regional |