This invention is directed generally to gas turbine engines, and more particularly to internal cooling systems for airfoils in gas turbine engines
Typically, gas turbine engines include a compressor for compressing air, a combustor for mixing the compressed air with fuel and igniting the mixture, and a turbine blade assembly for producing power. Combustors often operate at high temperatures that may exceed 2,500 degrees Fahrenheit Typical turbine combustor configurations expose turbine vane and blade assemblies to high temperatures As a result, turbine vanes and blades must be made of materials capable of withstanding such high temperatures, or must include cooling features to enable the component to survive in an environment which exceeds the capability of the material Turbine engines typically include a plurality of rows of stationary turbine vanes extending radially inward from a shell and include a plurality of rows of rotatable turbine blades attached to a rotor assembly for turning the rotor
Typically, the turbine vanes are exposed to high temperature combustor gases that heat the airfoil. The airfoils include internal cooling systems for reducing the temperature of the airfoils. While there exist many configurations of cooling systems, there exists a need for improved cooling of gas turbine airfoils.
An airfoil for a gas turbine engine in which the airfoil includes an internal cooling system formed from one or more midchord cooling channels with a corrugated insert positioned therein and creating nearwall leading edge, pressure side and suction side nearwall cooling channels is disclosed. The corrugated insert may be formed from a wall that oscillates in a repeating pattern between peaks and valleys, such that the peaks are closer to an inner surface of an outer wall forming a generally elongated hollow airfoil of the airfoil. The corrugated insert may work in concert with the rows of partition walls to create periodic impingement on the inner surface of the outer wall, specifically the surfaces leading from the valleys to the peaks moving toward a trailing edge of the generally elongated hollow airfoil direct the fluids toward the outer wall. Such cooling system may provide adequate cooling for use in environments in which few, if any, cooling holes are desired, such as in crude oil engine applications
The turbine airfoil may be formed from a generally elongated hollow airfoil formed from an outer wall, and having a leading edge, a trailing edge, a pressure side, a suction side, and a cooling system positioned within interior aspects of the generally elongated hollow airfoil The cooling system may include one or more midchord cooling channels with one or more corrugated inserts positioned therein and creating a leading edge nearwall cooling channel between the leading edge and the corrugated insert, a suction side nearwall cooling channel between the suction side and the corrugated insert and a pressure side nearwall cooling channel between the pressure side and the corrugated insert. The corrugated insert may be formed from a wall that oscillates in a repeating pattern between peaks and valleys, such that the peaks are closer to an inner surface of the outer wall forming the generally elongated hollow airfoil. A plurality of rows of partition walls may extend from the inner surface forming the outer wall and into the midchord cooling channel. The partition walls may include gaps therein, and the rows of partition walls may be generally aligned with a direction of cooling fluid flow from the leading edge chordwise toward the trailing edge. At least a portion of the peaks in the corrugated insert extending radially outward may be aligned with the gaps within at least a portion of at least one partition wall.
In at least one embodiment, one or more partition walls may include gaps therein that extend for a portion of or in a repeating pattern for an entire length of the at least one partition wall In one embodiment, one or more partition walls may be linear In another embodiment, each of the partition walls may be linear and each of the partition walls may be parallel with each other. In yet another embodiment, one or more partition walls may be formed from first and second subpartition walls, whereby the second subpartition wall may be offset laterally from first subpartition wall, and the first and second subpartition walls may be staggered in an alternating manner moving downstream in a direction from the leading edge toward the trailing edge. In another embodiment, each partition wall may be formed from a first and second subpartition walls, whereby the second subpartition wall may be offset laterally from first subpartition wall, and the first and second subpartition walls may be staggered in an alternating manner moving in a direction from the leading edge toward the trailing edge. A second subpartition wall may be positioned along an axis that is equidistant from a first subpartition wall within a same partition wall as the second subpartition wall and from a first subpartition wall within an adjacent partition wall
The turbine airfoil may also include a plurality of miniribs extending from the inner surface forming the outer wall and extending between adjacent partition walls. The miniribs may be nonparallel with the partition walls and may be shorter in height extending from the inner surface than adjacent partition ribs. In at least one embodiment, the plurality of miniribs may be aligned with each other and may be orthogonal to the adjacent partition walls
The cooling system may also include one or more trailing edge cooling channels positioned between the midchord cooling channel and the trailing edge of the generally elongated hollow airfoil. The trailing edge cooling channel may include a plurality of pin fins extending from the outer wall forming the pressure side to the suction side and forming zigzag cooling flow channels within the trailing edge cooling channel At least a portion of the pin fins may have cross-sectional areas with a leading edge and a trailing edge that is positioned on a downstream corner and separated from the leading edge by a concave side surface and a convex side surface. At least one of the zigzag cooling flow channels may be formed from a plurality of pin fins aligned such that the concave and convex side surfaces alternate moving towards the trailing edge. In at least one embodiment, a first upstream pin fin may have a cross-sectional area formed from an upstream section and a downstream section. The upstream section may be generally linear with a constant width, and the downstream section may be generally linear with a tapered width that reduces in width moving towards the trailing edge. The upstream and downstream sections may be nonlinear and nonorthogonal with each other.
During use, cooling fluids are supplied from a compressor or other such source to the inner aspect of the corrugated insert of the internal cooling system Cooling fluids are passed through the inlets into the leading edge nearwall cooling channel where the fluids separate with a portion flowing into the pressure side nearwall cooling channel and a portion flowing into the suction side nearwall cooling channel. The peaks and valleys of the corrugated insert create periodic impingement on the inner surface of the outer wall The partition walls also direct the cooling fluids towards the trailing edge, and in at least come embodiments, create a nonlinear flow path toward the trailing edge to increase convection of heat from the outer wall to the cooling fluid The cooling fluid may be exhausted through film cooling holes at downstream ends of the pressure and suction side nearwall cooling channels.
Cooling fluids may also be passed to the trailing edge cooling channel via one or more trailing edge supply channels The cooling fluids may be metered through metering holes into the trailing edge cooling channel. The cooling fluids may flow into the zigzag cooling flow channels where the pin fins direct the cooling fluids in a nonlinear motion to the trailing edge, where the cooling fluids are exhausted. The cooling fluids in the trailing edge cooling channel receive heat from the outer wall forming the pressure and suction sides and from the pin fins.
An advantage of the internal cooling system is that the corrugated insert creates periodic impingement and sufficient cooling fluid mixing to cool the airfoil
These and other embodiments are described in more detail below
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and form a part of the specification, illustrate embodiments of the presently disclosed invention and, together with the description, disclose the principles of the invention
As shown in
In at least one embodiment, the turbine airfoil 10 may be formed from a generally elongated hollow airfoil 34 formed from an outer wall 32, and having a leading edge 44, a trailing edge 42, a pressure side 46, a suction side 48, and the internal cooling system 14 positioned within interior aspects of the generally elongated hollow airfoil 34 In one embodiment, the turbine airfoil 10 may be a stationary vane, as shown in
The turbine airfoil 10 may also include a plurality of rows 36 of partition walls 38 extending from the inner surface 50 forming the outer wall 32 and into the midchord cooling channel 16 On or more partition walls 38 may include gaps 52 therein. The gaps 52 maybe shorter in length than the individual sections of the partition walls 38. The rows 36 of partition walls 38 may be generally aligned with a direction 54 of cooling fluid flow from the leading edge 44 chordwise toward the trailing edge 42. In at least one embodiment, the partition walls 38 may be orthogonal with the leading edge 44 In at least one embodiment, the partition walls 38 may be orthogonal with the leading edge 44 or the trailing edge 42, or both At least a portion of the peaks 28 in the corrugated insert 18 extending radially outward may be aligned with the gaps 52 within at least a portion of at least one partition wall 38 Such alignment of the gaps 52 with the peaks 28 creates periodic impingement upon the impingement surfaces 40 and partial lateral, spanwise movement and mixing of the cooling fluids In particular, the corrugated insert 18 functions in concert with the rows 36 of partition walls 38 to create periodic impingement on the corrugated insert 18, specifically on those surfaces 40 leading from the valleys 30 to the peaks 28 moving toward the trailing edge 42.
As shown in
In at least one embodiment, as shown in
In another embodiment, as shown in
The cooling system 14 may also include one or more miniribs 68, as shown in
The cooling system 14 may also include one or more trailing edge cooling channels 70, as shown in
During use, cooling fluids may be supplied from a compressor or other such source to the inner aspect of the corrugated insert 18 of the internal cooling system 14. Cooling fluids are passed through the inlets 56 into the leading edge nearwall cooling channel 20 where the fluids separate with a portion flowing into the pressure side nearwall cooling channel 22 and a portion flowing into the suction side nearwall cooling channel 24. The peaks 28 and valleys 30 of the corrugated insert 18 create periodic impingement on the inner surface 50 of the outer wall 32. The partition walls 38 also direct the cooling fluids towards the trailing edge 42, and in at least some embodiments, create a nonlinear flow path toward the trailing edge to increase convection of heat from the outer wall to the cooling fluid. The cooling fluid may be exhausted through film cooling holes 92 at downstream ends of the pressure and suction side nearwall cooling channels 22, 24.
Cooling fluids may also be passed to the trailing edge cooling channel 70 via one or more trailing edge supply channels 94. The cooling fluids may be metered through metering holes 96 into the trailing edge cooling channel 70. The cooling fluids may flow into the zigzag cooling flow channels 74 where the pin fins 72 direct the cooling fluids in a nonlinear, back and forth motion to the trailing edge 42, where the cooling fluids are exhausted. The cooling fluids in the trailing edge cooling channel 70 receive heat from the outer wall 32 forming the pressure and suction sides 46, 48 and from the pin fins 72
The foregoing is provided for purposes of illustrating, explaining, and describing embodiments of this invention. Modifications and adaptations to these embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art and may be made without departing from the scope or spirit of this invention.