This invention relates to the internal cooling of components in an engine, especially a gas turbine engine. More particularly, though not exclusively, the invention relates to improvements in the flow characteristics of cooling air fed into such engine components by modifying the geometry of the cooling air feed arrangement.
In gas turbine engines the performance of the basic engine cycle, whether measured in terms of efficiency or specific output, is improved by increasing the turbine gas temperature. It is therefore desirable to operate the turbine at the highest possible temperature. For any engine cycle compression ratio or bypass ratio, increasing the turbine entry gas temperature will always produce more specific thrust (e.g. engine thrust per unit of air mass flow). However as turbine entry temperatures increase, the lifespan of an uncooled turbine falls, necessitating the development of better materials and the introduction of internal air cooling for many of its components.
In modern gas turbine engines the high pressure (HP) turbine gas temperatures are now much hotter than the melting point of the turbine blade materials commonly used, which therefore necessitates efficient cooling of the HP turbine components. In some engine designs the intermediate pressure (IP) and low pressure (LP) turbines are also cooled. During its passage through the turbine the mean temperature of the gas stream decreases as power is extracted. Therefore the need to cool the static and rotary parts of the engine structure decreases as the gas moves from the HP stage(s) through the IP and LP stages towards the exit nozzle.
Internal convection and external films are the primary methods of cooling the gas-path components, for example aerofoils, platforms, shrouds and shroud segments. HP turbine nozzle guide vanes (NGVs) in particular consume the greatest amount of cooling air in high temperature engines. Typical NGVs comprise forward and rear cavities for passage of cooling air therethrough. HP turbine blades typically use about half of the NGV flow, whereas the IP and LP stages downstream of the HP turbine use progressively less cooling air.
The HPT blades 4 and NGVs 2 are cooled by using high pressure (HP) air from the compressor that has by-passed the combustor and is therefore relatively cool compared with the gas temperature. Typical cooling air temperatures are in the range of from about 800 to about 1000 K. Gas temperatures can be in excess of about 2100 K.
The cooling air from the compressor that is used to cool the hot turbine components is not used fully to extract work from the turbine. Extracting coolant flow therefore has an adverse effect on the engine operating efficiency. It is thus important to use this cooling air as effectively as possible.
In modern engines the ever increasing gas temperature level combined with a drive towards flatter combustion radial profiles (in the interests of reduced combustor emissions) have resulted in an increase in local gas temperatures experienced by the NGV aerofoils and their platforms. However, the increased coolant flow levels required to accommodate these changes in local gas temperature have a detrimental effect on the local feed pressure supplying the internal cooling holes of the NGV aerofoils 3. In order to maintain a safe backflow pressure margin, higher pressure drop levels across the combustor are becoming a necessity.
The last ˜10 years has seen a significant rise in the inlet gas temperature and overall engine pressure ratio in newer engine designs, and this has brought a new raft of problems in the turbine section of the engine. The turbine life is typically limited by the lives of the hot section aerofoil components. The HPT NGVs are subject to the hottest gas temperatures and thus consume the highest quantity of cooling flow in order to ensure mechanical integrity.
A leading edge (L/E) region of each NGV aerofoil is also subject to the highest local levels of external heat transfer coefficients, and therefore the L/E region requires special treatment in terms of convective cooling levels. The most commonly employed arrangement involves the provision of plural rows of very steeply inclined cooling holes, located very close together, such as at 20 in
The coolant air flow levels passing through these showerhead holes dictate the rate of heat removal from the L/E region. However the pressure ratio across these cooling holes is not very high, and therefore under some engine conditions there is a danger of hot gas ingestion into at least the forward cooling cavity of the NGV. If this occurs then the consequences can be disastrous, owing to the resulting failure to provide the necessary cooling. The most likely location where this situation may occur is at the entrance to the forward NGV cooling chamber that feeds the showerhead cooling holes. This is because the flow level at the entrance is at a maximum value compared with the flow area of the feed passage. Consequently the flow velocity, or Mach number, of the coolant air flow is at its highest value in this region and thus the corresponding static feed pressure is at its lowest value. Hence the local pressure ratio across the showerhead cooling holes is also at its lowest level. In order to guarantee that no hot gas is ingested, the “backflow margin” is generally set to a value in the range of about 1.5 to about 2.0%, depending on the confidence levels associated with the pressure data and the familiarity of the cooling geometry. The backflow margin is defined as:
backflow margin=(Pstatic feed−P40)/P40×100%,
where Pstatic feed is the pressure of the coolant air flow entering the NGV forward cooling chamber and P40 is the pressure of the hot gas flow exiting the combustor.
The cooling holes located on either side of an aerofoil stagnation point are most at risk. The stagnation point tends to move around due to unsteadiness of the flow, and therefore a stagnation region is created where the local static feed pressure of the coolant air flow is equal to the total gas flow pressure Pt40.
In order to ensure that the static feed pressure never falls too low, the leading edge feed passage is generally divided into two separate feed chambers and these have separate coolant air supplies: one fed from the outboard side and the other fed from the inboard side. In addition the respective entrances to these feed passages are generally shaped like the mouth of a bell (i.e. “bell-mouthed”) in order to keep the entrance losses to a minimum.
This design shown in
These known designs of NGV aerofoil cooling arrangements all suffer from various problems, shortcomings or limitations. For example:
Dual-end feed forward cooling chambers have proved beneficial to some extent in keeping the inlet velocity (Mach no.) down to relatively low levels, but these improvements have already been offset by the increased flow demands, so any further improvement based on such features is limited.
It is thus a primary object of the present invention to ameliorate or at least partially solve at least some of the shortcomings of the above prior art cooling arrangements and to provide an improved design of engine component in which a desired pressure margin between the feed pressure of the cooling air entering the key parts of the component and the pressure of the gas-path is more readily and assuredly maintainable.
Aspects of the present invention relate to an internally-cooled engine component, an insert for use or when used in forming (or operating or using) the component, an engine including the component, and a method of cooling an engine component.
In a first aspect the present invention provides a gas turbine engine component (2) having at least one internal cooling chamber (103F) for passage therethrough of cooling air, the said chamber (103F) including a leading edge portion (80) and at least one inlet portion (90) via which cooling air may enter the chamber (103F) from a feed source (130a, 130b),
In other words, the partitioning element may alternatively be defined as being configured such that the cooling air velocity in the sub-chamber is less than the equivalent cooling air velocity in the inlet portion in the absence of the partitioning element under the same cooling air feed conditions.
The term leading edge as used herein relates to the direction of flow of work fluid through the gas turbine engine, the leading edge being the first edge of the component with which the sorking fluid comes into contact. A leading edge portion is a portion of a wall which defines the leading edge.
The “inlet portion” refers to a space into which cooling air from a feed source is first received into the chamber. It is bounded by walls of the chamber and ends in a plane where the walls end. The partitioning element extends into the inlet portion and may extend through the inlet portion into either or both of the remainder of the chamber cavity and a space just outside the chamber cavity.
In some embodiments of the invention the leading edge portion of the component may comprise a showerhead portion, the sub-chamber defined by the partitioning element being adjacent the showerhead portion. Thus in such embodiments the leading edge portion, adjacent to which is defined the sub-chamber by the partitioning element, may comprise a plurality of cooling through-holes formed in a leading edge wall of the component for passage of cooling air from the cooling chamber to the exterior of the leading edge portion.
In many embodiments of the invention the gas turbine engine component may be a component having an aerofoil shape or configuration.
In preferred embodiments the component may be a nozzle guide vane (NGV).
In some embodiments the cooling chamber having the partitioning element provided in the inlet portion thereof may be a forward chamber of a component comprising forward and rearward cooling chambers, each of the forward and rearward chambers being supplied from at least one cooling air feed source.
In some of the preceding embodiments the forward cooling chamber may be supplied from a plurality of feed sources, preferably a pair of an outboard feed source and an inboard feed source.
In practical embodiments of the invention the partitioning element may be provided in at least an inlet region of at least one cooling chamber of the component, which at least one cooling chamber is located adjacent the leading edge portion of the component, so that the partitioning element defines the said sub-chamber such that the sub-chamber is located adjacent, preferably contacting or being at least partially bound by, the leading edge portion, and in at least the inlet portion of the cooling chamber.
In some embodiments at least a portion, especially an axially outer portion (“axially” being as defined by the longitudinal axis of the cooling chamber(s) of the component, which in the case of the preferred NGV's corresponds to a general radial direction of the engine perpendicular to the engine's longitudinal axis), of the partitioning element may extend into an inlet feed passage via which cooling air enters the inlet portion of the cooling chamber from the feed source, in addition to the partitioning element being located in the inlet portion itself. A distance by which such a partitioning element may extend into such an inlet feed passage may vary, e.g. depending on the geometry of the overall arrangement. However, preferably any distance by which the partitioning element extends into the inlet feed passage is such that the formation of the characteristic sub-chamber adjacent the leading edge portion is optimised so as to produce the required lowering of the cooling air velocity in the sub-chamber compared with that of the cooling air in the remainder of the inlet portion. It may be possible for any distance by which the partitioning element extends into the inlet feed passage to be selected or adjusted to tailor the geometry of the arrangement such that the relative lowering of the cooling air velocity in the sub-chamber is to an optimum value or level.
Alternatively or additionally to any extension of the partitioning element into an inlet feed passage, in some embodiments at least a portion, especially an axially inner portion, of the partitioning element may extend into the main volume of the cooling chamber by any suitable or desired distance, in addition to it being located in the inlet portion itself of the chamber. A distance by which such a partitioning element may extend into such a main volume of the cooling chamber may vary, e.g. depending on the geometry of the overall arrangement. However, preferably any distance by which the partitioning element extends into the main volume of the cooling chamber is such that the formation of the characteristic sub-chamber adjacent the leading edge portion is optimised so as to produce the required lowering of the cooling air velocity in the sub-chamber compared with that of the cooling air in the remainder of the inlet portion. It may be possible for any distance by which the partitioning element extends into the main volume of the cooling chamber to be selected or adjusted to tailor the geometry of the arrangement such that the relative lowering of the cooling air velocity in the sub-chamber is to an optimum value or level. Also, it may be possible for the partitioning element to extend into the main volume of the cooling chamber by a distance such that it defines the said sub-chamber so that the sub-chamber incorporates the early pressure surface cooling holes in addition to the showerhead holes (in those embodiments that contain same).
In practical embodiments the partitioning element may be provided in at least the inlet portion of the cooling chamber by virtue of being mounted therein by any suitable means. For example, the partitioning element may be manufactured as a discrete element and subsequently mounted in the component at the desired location, e.g. by welding or other suitable attachment or bonding technique, to one or more sidewalls of the component. Alternatively the partitioning element may be formed integrally with the side walls of the component, e.g. by virtue of it being cast as an integral internal wall portion of the overall component wall structural arrangement during the overall (preferably) investment casting thereof. In many embodiments therefore, the partitioning element may be of the same material (e.g. the same metal or alloy) as the side walls of the component, especially that/those sidewall(s) to which it is preferably attached. Alternatively it may be of a different metal or other material.
In some embodiments the partitioning element may be mounted in the inlet portion of the cooling chamber by virtue of being mounted therein and attached to an inner side wall of the component itself. However, in other embodiments, in particular those in which the cooling chamber contains an insert tube comprising impingement holes therein for feeding cooling air to the leading edge portion of the component, the partitioning element may instead be mounted in the insert tube and attached to an inner side wall of the insert tube.
In embodiments the partitioning element may have any suitable height (measured in an axial direction corresponding to or parallel to the axial direction of the component, i.e. the length direction of the leading edge portion thereof, which in the case of the preferred NGV's corresponds to a general radial direction of the engine perpendicular to the engine's longitudinal axis), which may vary, for example depending on the extent to which the partitioning element extends into an inlet feed passage and/or into a main volume of the cooling chamber, and/or depending on the optimum geometry of the overall arrangement.
In embodiments the partitioning element may have any suitable width (measured in a transverse direction perpendicular to the aforementioned axial direction of the component, i.e. perpendicular or normal to the length direction of the leading edge portion thereof), which may vary, for example depending on the desired width of the sub-chamber to be defined thereby and/or the optimum geometry of the overall arrangement.
In some embodiments if desired or necessary the partitioning element may be sealed at one of its axial ends (“axial” here again being as defined by the longitudinal axis of the cooling chamber(s) of the component, which in the case of the preferred NGV's corresponds to a general radial direction of the engine perpendicular to the engine's longitudinal axis), preferably that opposite to the end at which cooling air enters the sub-chamber it defines, or alternatively it may be at least partially open at that one axial end in order to allow cooling air flow to leak back into the forward cooling chamber.
In embodiments of the invention the partitioning element may be of any suitable shape and/or configuration, provided it acts to reduce the cooling air velocity in the sub-chamber it defines in comparison with that in the remainder of the inlet portion or the cooling chamber itself.
In some embodiments the partitioning element may be in the form of a body, plate, wall, member or element having a cross-section or a face (especially a face which faces or is adjacentmost the leading edge portion of the component) of the desired or appropriate shape and/or configuration.
In some embodiments the partitioning element, or the cross-section or face thereof, may be non-flat. For example, it may be smoothly curved or arcuate in one or more orthogonal directions. Alternatively it may comprise two or more substantially flat sections angled (e.g. smoothly or sharply angled) with respect to each other in one or more orthogonal directions.
In some embodiments the partitioning element, or the cross-section or face thereof, may be concave in one or more orthogonal directions.
In some embodiments the partitioning element, or the cross-section or face thereof, may be part-cylindrical, e.g. of the shape of a segment of a cylinder (e.g. a circular or a non-circular or any other cross-sectioned cylinder) in one or more orthogonal directions.
In some embodiments the partitioning element, or the cross-section or face thereof, may be scoop-shaped.
Thus in some embodiments the partitioning element, or the cross-section or face thereof, may have a relatively simple shape in one or more orthogonal directions such as a planar, part-cylindrical, part-polygonal, part-spherical, part-parabolic or part-hyperbolic curve. Alternatively, in other embodiments the partitioning element, or the cross-section or face thereof, may have a more complex shape in one or more orthogonal directions derived from any combination of two or more of any of the aforesaid curves, shapes or mathematical functions.
In some embodiments the partitioning element may even comprise a plurality of sections or portions, each of which may have a shape or configuration which is independently selected from any one or more of the above-defined shapes, configurations, curves or mathematical functions or any combination thereof.
In some embodiments it may be possible for the partitioning element to be shaped and/or configured so that it directs the airflow impinging on it in one or more particular directions which may be desirable from a cooling optimisation standpoint. For instance, by aligning the airflow in the defined sub-chamber, adjacent the aerofoil leading edge portion, with the showerhead holes (where provided) fed by this sub-chamber, the dynamic head of pressure may also be used to boost the effective feed pressure of the airflow actually effecting the cooling.
In some embodiments a single partitioning element may be provided in the inlet portion of the cooling chamber, whereby a single sub-chamber is defined adjacent the leading edge portion thereof.
In other embodiments a plurality of partitioning elements may be provided in at least the inlet portion of the or any one given cooling chamber, such that a plurality of sub-chambers are defined therewithin, at least one (and preferably all) of which sub-chambers is/are located adjacent the leading edge portion.
In embodiments in which the or a given cooling chamber adjacent the leading edge portion is fed with cooling air from a plurality of feed sources, and thus has a plurality of inlet portions, it is possible for each of the inlet portions to be provided with a respective one of a plurality of partitioning elements, which may be substantially the same or different from each other in shape and/or configuration.
In embodiments where the component comprises a plurality of partitioning elements, whether in a single given cooling chamber or in respective ones of a plurality of cooling chambers, each partitioning element may have a shape and/or configuration which may be substantially the same or different from at least one or more of the others.
The present invention may be applied to a wide variety of engine components, e.g. NGVs (including both NGVs with or without showerhead cooling), aerofoils, turbine blades or any internally cooled component having a leading edge portion requiring particularly efficient cooling characteristics. Particular examples of NGV arrangements to which embodiments of the invention may be applied are described in detail further below in the context of preferred embodiments.
In a second aspect of the present invention there is provided a partitioning element for use, or when used, in forming (or operating or using) a component of a gas turbine engine, wherein the partitioning element is as defined above in relation to the component of the first aspect of the invention or any embodiment thereof.
Thus, according to this second aspect of the invention there is provided a partitioning element for use or when used in a gas turbine engine component, the component having at least one internal cooling chamber for passage therethrough of cooling air, the said chamber including a leading edge portion and at least one inlet portion via which cooling air may enter the chamber from a feed source, the partitioning element being providable in at least the chamber inlet portion of the component so as to define within at least the inlet portion a sub-chamber adjacent the leading edge portion,
In a third aspect of the present invention there is provided a gas turbine engine including one or more internally cooled components, the or each component being a component according to the first aspect of the invention or any embodiment thereof.
In a fourth aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of cooling a leading edge portion (80) of a component (2) of a gas turbine engine, the component (2) having at least one internal cooling chamber (103F) for passage therethrough of cooling air, the said chamber (103F) including a leading edge portion (80) and at least one inlet portion (90) via which cooling air may enter the chamber from a feed source (130a, 130b),
By implementation of the present invention various advantages may be attainable in comparison with operating a corresponding internally cooled engine component which does not include the characteristic partitioning element(s) as defined above. In particular the maintenance of a desired or optimum backflow pressure margin between the feed pressure of the cooling air entering the relevant cooling chamber(s) adjacent the leading edge of the component and the pressure of the gas-path is more readily and assuredly maintainable within a desired range or limits. Not only may this lead to improved cooling of the leading edge portion of the component, but as an important consequence of this it may further lead to one or more other advantages, including:
Any of the above advantages, either singly or in any combination, may lead to overall improved efficiency and performance of the engine, which may for instance manifest itself ultimately in reduced specific fuel consumption, as well as perhaps other benefits.
The above and possibly further benefits and advantages to be had from implementation of the present invention or embodiments thereof will be further apparent from the detailed description of some embodiments that follows hereinbelow.
Within the scope of this application it is expressly envisaged that the various aspects, embodiments, examples and alternatives, and in particular the individual features thereof, set out in the preceding paragraphs, in the claims and/or in the following description and drawings, may be taken independently or in any combination. For example features described in connection with one embodiment are applicable to all embodiments, unless such features are incompatible.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described in detail, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In the detailed description which follows, reference numerals referring to like or corresponding parts or features in the various embodiments are designated as such using essentially the same reference numerals but appropriately incremented by 100 going from one embodiment to the next.
In comparison with known designs of NGVs and other gas turbine engine components which utilise internal cooling schemes, in developing the present invention the inventors recognised that there may be substantial benefits to be had if the pressure drop across the combustor of the engine (P30-P40) were to be reduced relative to current levels.
As shown in
Pt=Ps+½ρv2
and therefore:
Ps=Pt<½ρv2,
vtotal=[Wc/AρCd]total,
and
v↓Ps↑,
where: Ps=static pressure, Pt=total pressure, ρ=fluid (i.e. air) density, v=local velocity, Cd=discharge coefficient, Wc=coolant mass flow, and A (or Aflow)=flow area.
Since in the arrangement of
Vlocal=[Wc/AρCd]total.
In order to keep the local velocity v at the cooling chamber inlet portion or entrance low, the local “mass flow per unit area” [(Wc/Aflow)local] needs to be kept at a low level.
If the safe backflow pressure margin is such that:
Pressure Margin=((Ps local−P40)P40)×100%,
and which is typically in the range of from 1.5 (or about 1.5) to about 2.0%, and is allowed to drop significantly below these values, then there is an increased risk of hot gas ingestion into the cooling chamber 3F, which can and often will have catastrophic consequences.
Similarly, having a pressure margin significantly above about 2.0% may not be beneficial from a leakage and engine efficiency viewpoint, and may also increase the gas temperature at a design thrust level, which may therefore exacerbate the situation.
In accordance with the present invention in its broadest aspects therefore, the present inventors have identified a simple change to the cooling air feed geometry that improves the local backflow pressure margin without increasing the pressure drop across the combustor or increasing the size or shape or cross-sectional area of the aerofoil locally. This is achieved by introducing the above-defined partitioning element into the inlet portion of the cooling chamber via which the cooling air is fed thereinto from the respective feed source.
In its simplest form, a first embodiment of the invention is shown in
In the arrangement of this first embodiment as illustrated in
Ps1 feed=Pt−½ρvc12
and
vc1=[Wc1/A1ρCd1].
Hence if:
Wc1/A1 is less than Wc total/Atotal,
then:
vtotal>Vc1
and therefore:
Ps1 feed>Ps total feed
and
v1=[Wc/AρCd]1<vtotal=[Wc/AρCd]total,
where the various subscripts represent the following:
In general if the value of [feed area of the sub-chamber 150/number of holes it supplies] is greater than the value of [total feed area/number of hole it supplies], then the static feed pressure will rise above that with a single feed chamber into the NGV interior chamber.
As shown in
The local backflow pressure margin across the showerhead portion of the NGV will thus be increased as a consequence of the change in geometry arising from the presence of the partitioning element 100. This increase can be beneficial in several ways. For example, it may enable there to be a reduced pressure drop across the combustor. Alternatively or additionally it may be used to increase the pressure drop across an impingement baffle plate or wall located or mounted within the cooling chamber 103F to improve the “back-face” impingement heat transfer. Further alternatively or additionally, it may be used simply to achieve the desired pressure margin across the showerhead portion without the need for increasing the local aerofoil shape. Any or all of these benefits may lead to improved efficiency of the gas turbine (or other) engine, which ultimately may manifest itself in improved specific fuel consumption (SFC), among possibly other benefits.
Because the forward sub-chambers 250a, 250b each have a respective partitioning element 200a, 200b incorporated into both the inboard and outboard feed systems, the showerhead cooling holes 220 close to the entrances to the chamber 203F are supplied by air that passes through the respective forward sub-chambers 250a, 250b adjacent the leading edge of the aerofoil. Similarly, the showerhead cooling holes 220 closer to the mid-span locations are fed from the respective rearward sub-chambers 260a, 260b also defined within the forward cooling chamber 203F by the respective partitioning elements 200a, 200b.
In order to optimise the geometry of the arrangement it may be necessary or advantageous to locate each respective partitioning element 200a, 200b in a position where the local feed pressure in each respective forward sub-chamber 250a, 250b is identical at the first cooling hole 220 supplied by these sub-chambers 250a, 250b.
Note also that the curved shape of the respective partitioning elements 200a, 200b is designed to reduce the inlet Cd (discharge coefficient) or losses at the respective entrances to the respective forward sub-chambers 250a, 250b. However, this may not be mandatory.
Located at the outboard and inboard entrances to the insert tube 385a adjacent the leading edge are respective ones of a pair of partitioning elements 300a, 300b. These partitioning elements 300a, 300b take the form of curved, scoop-shaped sheet metal elements which are attached to the forward insert tube 385a by laser welded joints 390, which may help to reduce separation of the critical air flows and may improve any inlet pressure losses. In operation a proportion of coolant air passes into the respective forward sub-chambers 350a, 350b adjacent the leading edge, each of which feeds a respective proportion of the showerhead cooling holes 320 close to the insert tube entrance, while the remainder of the cooling air flows 330b, 332b feeds the larger rearward sub-chamber 360a, 360b within the insert tube 385a. By balancing the flow per unit area of each forward sub-chamber 350a, 350b with each other and with that of the rearward sub-chambers 360a, 360b, the respective backflow pressure margins may be balanced and thus the scheme optimised.
The pressure-side cavity has a cast-in, preferably planar, baffle plate arrangement 570 to prevent blow-through from occurring which may reduce the local static pressure to dangerously low levels. In order to improve the “backflow pressure margin” a pair of partitioning elements 500a, 500b according to the invention are located at the respective entrances (outboard and inboard) to the forward cooling chamber 503F, adjacent the leading edge portion thereof. Each partitioning element 500a, 500b is similarly shaped to that in other embodiments described above, in particular the embodiment of
As will already be apparent at least in part from the foregoing description, embodiments of the present invention may give rise to any one or more of several advantages over the prior art. For example:
Any one or more of the above improvements may ultimately improve the efficiency of the engine (e.g. gas turbine engine) and thus ultimately may improve the engine's SFC (specific fuel consumption).
Moreover, the potential benefits of reducing the combustor pressure drop may be potentially very significant. A typical modern civil aircraft gas turbine engine combustor may have a pressure drop across it in the range of from about 2.3 to 2.7%, where:
Combustor Pressure Drop={(P30−P40)/P30}×100[%].
Typical exchange rates suggest that a 1% change in percentage pressure drop is equivalent to 0.25 to 0.33% SFC.
Whilst the described embodiments relate to the specific case of a nozzle guide vane, the skilled person will appreciate the inventive concept may also be applied to other components. For example (but without limitation) a turbine blade, a shroud or a hub which suffers the problems addressed by the invention.
Whilst the specific embodiments relate to a vane having a forward and rearward channel, the invention is equally applicable to vanes having a single cooling chamber or a plurality of cooling chambers which is greater than 2.
It is to be understood that the above description of embodiments and aspects of the invention has been by way of non-limiting examples only, and various modifications may be made from what has been specifically described and illustrated whilst remaining within the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
Throughout the description and claims of this specification, the words “comprise” and “contain” and variations of the words, for example “comprising” and “comprises”, mean “including but not limited to”, and are not intended to (and do not) exclude other moieties, additives, components, integers or steps.
Throughout the description and claims of this specification, the singular encompasses the plural unless the context otherwise requires. In particular, where the indefinite article is used, the specification is to be understood as contemplating plurality as well as singularity, unless the context requires otherwise.
Furthermore, features, integers, components, elements, characteristics or properties described in conjunction with a particular aspect, embodiment or example of the invention are to be understood to be applicable to any other aspect, embodiment or example described herein, unless incompatible therewith.
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