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 airfoils. The airfoils include internal cooling systems for reducing the temperature of the airfoils. Airfoils have had internal inserts forming nearwall cooling channels. However, most inserts are formed from plain sheet metal with a plurality of impingement holes therein to provide impingement cooling on the pressure and suction sides of the airfoil. The upstream post impingement air pass downstream impingement jets and forms cross flow before exiting through film holes. The cross flow can bend the impinging jets away from the impingement target surface and reduce the cooling effectiveness. To reduce the amount of cross flow, the post impingement air has been vented out through exterior film holes. However, the greater the number of film cooling holes, the less efficient usage of cooling air is. The impingement holes consume cooling air pressure and often pose a problem at the leading edge, where showerhead holes experience high stagnation gas pressure on the external surface. Thus, a need for a more efficient internal cooling system for gas turbine airfoils exists.
An airfoil for a gas turbine engine in which the airfoil includes an internal cooling system with one or more internal cavities having an insert contained within an aft cooling cavity to form nearwall cooling channels having enhanced flow patterns is disclosed. The flow of cooling fluids in the nearwall cooling channels may be controlled via a plurality of cooling fluid flow controllers extending from the outer wall forming the generally hollow elongated airfoil. In addition, heat may be extracted in the midchord region via one or more heat dissipating ribs extending partially between an inner surface of the suction side and the insert. In at least one embodiment, the heat dissipating ribs may extend in a generally chordwise direction and be positioned from an inner diameter of the airfoil to an outer diameter of the airfoil between the cooling fluid flow controllers and a rib separating a forward cooling cavity from the aft cooling cavity. The heat dissipating ribs have been shown to increase the surface area by at least 60 percent, reduce localized hot spot outer wall temperature by up to 60 degrees Celsius while having a negligible impact on mass flow rate.
In at least one embodiment, the turbine airfoil for a gas turbine engine 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 inner endwall at a first end and an outer endwall at a second end that is generally on an opposite side of the generally elongated hollow airfoil from the first end. The turbine airfoil may also include a cooling system positioned within interior aspects of the generally elongated hollow airfoil. The cooling system may include one or more aft cooling cavities in which an insert is positioned that forms a pressure side nearwall cooling channel and a suction side nearwall cooling channel. A plurality of cooling fluid flow controllers may extend from an inner surface of the outer wall forming the suction side of the generally elongated hollow airfoil toward the insert. The cooling fluid flow controllers may form a plurality of alternating zigzag channels extending downstream toward the trailing edge. One or more heat dissipating ribs may extend partially between the inner surface of the suction side and the insert.
The heat dissipating rib may extend generally in a chordwise direction such as a direction from the leading edge to the trailing edge. The heat dissipating rib may be attached to an inner surface of the outer wall forming the suction side and may extend inwardly from the inner surface of the suction side. The heat dissipating rib may extend at least partially onto a rib dividing the aft cooling cavity from a forward cooling cavity. The rib may extend generally orthogonally from the inner surface of the outer wall forming the suction side. The heat dissipating rib may have a curved outer head cross-sectional profile taken orthogonal to a longitudinal axis of the heat dissipating rib. The heat dissipating rib may have a curved upstream end and a tapered downstream end. In at least one embodiment, the heat dissipating rib may have a pitch of between about 0.3 mm and 1.6 mm. The heat dissipating rib 152 may have an amplitude of between about 0.4 mm and about 3.2 mm.
In at least one embodiment, the cooling system may include one or more heat dissipating ribs formed from a plurality of heat dissipating ribs extending partially between the inner surface of the suction side and the insert. The plurality of heat dissipating ribs may be aligned with each other. The plurality of heat dissipating ribs may each be separated an equal distance from each other. The plurality of heat dissipating ribs may extend in a chordwise direction and may be positioned adjacent each other from an inner diameter of the airfoil to an outer diameter of the airfoil. A chordwise length of the heat dissipating ribs may reduce moving from the outer diameter of the airfoil to the inner diameter of the airfoil.
An advantage of the heat dissipating ribs in the midchord region of the aft cavity upstream from the cooling fluid flow controllers is that the heat dissipating ribs reduce localized hot spot outer wall temperature by up to 60 degrees Celsius.
Another advantage of the heat dissipating ribs in the midchord region of the aft cavity upstream from the cooling fluid flow controllers is that the heat dissipating ribs have a negligible impact on mass flow rate.
Yet another advantage of the heat dissipating ribs in the midchord region of the aft cavity upstream from the cooling fluid flow controllers is that the heat dissipating ribs may also have up to a 40 percent increase in heat flux for the mid chord region 150 containing the heat dissipating ribs 152.
Another advantage of the heat dissipating ribs in the midchord region of the aft cavity upstream from the cooling fluid flow controllers is that the heat dissipating ribs may increase the surface area by at least 60 percent.
Still another advantage of the internal cooling system is that the cooling fluid flow controllers significantly increase the exposed surface area within the cooling system for better cooling system performance.
Another advantage of the internal cooling system is that the insert having the bypass flow reducers directs cooling fluids towards the outer wall to increase cooling rather than using a higher number of impingement holes in the insert, which would only increase the problems associated with cross flow.
Yet another advantage of the internal cooling system is that the bypass flow reducers effectively force more high speed cooling air into the zigzag flow channels formed by the multiple rows of cooling fluids flow controllers adjacent to the hot exterior walls of 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, as shown in
The cooling fluid flow controllers 22 may be collected into spanwise extending rows 28. In at least one embodiment, the cooling fluid flow controllers 22 may be positioned within a pressure side nearwall cooling channel 48 and a suction side nearwall cooling channel 50 that are both in fluid communication with a trailing edge channel 30. The trailing edge channel 30 may also include cooling fluid flow controllers 22 extending between the outer walls 13, 12 forming the pressure and suction sides 36, 38, thereby increasing the effectiveness of the internal cooling system 14. The internal cooling system 14 may include one or more bypass flow reducers 31 extending from the insert 18 toward the outer wall 24 to direct the cooling fluids through the nearwall cooling channels 20 created by the cooling fluid flow controllers 22, thereby increasing the effectiveness of the internal cooling system 14.
In at least one embodiment, the internal cooling system 1, as shown in
A plurality of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 may be collected into a first spanwise extending row 64 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22. One or more of the cooling fluid flow controllers 22 forming the first spanwise extending row 64 may have cross-sectional areas formed by a pressure side 54 that is on an opposite side from a suction side 56, whereby the pressure and suction sides 54, 56 are coupled together via a leading edge 58 and trailing edge 60 on an opposite end of the cooling fluid flow controller 22 from the leading edge 58. A pressure side 54 of one cooling fluid flow controller 22 may be adjacent to a suction side 56 of an adjacent cooling fluid flow controller 22. In at least one embodiment, each of the cooling fluid flow controllers 22 within the first spanwise extending row 64 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 may be positioned similarly, such that a pressure side 54 of one cooling fluid flow controller 22 is adjacent to a suction side 56 of an adjacent cooling fluid flow controller 22, except for a cooling fluid flow controller 22 at an end of the first spanwise extending row 64 where there is no adjacent cooling fluid flow controller 22.
The internal cooling system 14 may also include a second spanwise extending row 66 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 positioned downstream from the first spanwise extending row 64 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22. The second spanwise extending row 66 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 may have one or more cooling fluid flow controllers 22 with a pressure side 54 on an opposite side of the cooling fluid flow controller 22 than in the first spanwise extending row of cooling fluid flow controllers 22, thereby causing cooling fluid flowing through the second spanwise extending row 66 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 to be directed downstream with a spanwise vector 68 that is opposite to a spanwise vector 70 imparted on the cooling fluid by the first spanwise extending row 64 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22. In at least one embodiment, each of the cooling fluid flow controllers 22 forming the second spanwise extending row 66 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 has a pressure side 54 on an opposite side of the cooling fluid flow controller 22 than in the first spanwise extending row 64 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22. The pressure side nearwall cooling channel 48 or the suction side nearwall cooling channel 50, or both, may include a repetitive pattern of first and second spanwise extending rows 94, 96 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 to form alternating zigzag channels 52 extending generally chordwise towards the trailing edge 34.
As shown in
In at least one embodiment, as shown in
The trailing edge channel 30 may include a plurality of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 extending from the outer wall 13 forming the pressure side 36 to the outer wall 12 forming the suction side 38, whereby the cooling fluid flow controllers 22 may form a plurality of alternating zigzag channels 52. The plurality of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 in the trailing edge channel 30 may be collected into a first spanwise extending row 94 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22. One or more of the cooling fluid flow controllers 22 forming the first spanwise extending row 94 within the trailing edge channel 30 may have cross-sectional areas formed by a pressure side 54 that is on an opposite side from a suction side 56, whereby the pressure and suction sides 54, 56 are coupled together via a leading edge 58 and a trailing edge 60 on an opposite end of the cooling fluid flow controller 22 from the leading edge 58. One or more of the cooling fluid flow controllers 22 within the first spanwise extending row 94 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 may include a pressure side 54 of one cooling fluid flow controller 22 is adjacent to a suction side 56 of an adjacent cooling fluid flow controller 22. In at least one embodiment, each of the cooling fluid flow controllers 22 within the first spanwise extending row 94 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 is positioned similarly, such that a pressure side 54 of one cooling fluid flow controller 22 is adjacent to a suction side 56 of an adjacent cooling fluid flow controller 22, except for a cooling fluid flow controller 22 at an end of the first spanwise extending row 94.
The trailing edge channel 30 may also include one or more second spanwise extending rows 96 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 positioned downstream from the first spanwise extending row 94 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22. The second spanwise extending row 96 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 may have one or more cooling fluid flow controllers 22 with a pressure side 54 on an opposite side of the cooling fluid flow controller 22 than in the first spanwise extending row 94 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22, thereby causing cooling fluid flowing through the second spanwise extending row 96 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 to be directed downstream with a spanwise vector 68 that is opposite to a spanwise vector 70 imparted on the cooling fluid by the first spanwise extending row 94 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22. The trailing edge channel 30 may include a repetitive pattern of first and second spanwise extending rows 94, 96 of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 to form alternating zigzag channels 52 extending generally chordwise towards the trailing edge 34.
The trailing edge channel 30 may include one or more rows of pin fins 102 extending from the outer wall 13 forming the pressure side 36 to the outer wall 12 forming the suction side 38 and downstream from the cooling fluid flow controllers 22. The pin fins 102 may have a generally circular cross-sectional area or other appropriate shape. The pin fins 102 may be positioned in one or more spanwise extending rows 104 of pin fins 102. In at least one embodiment, the pin fins 102 may have a minimum distance between each other or between an adjacent structure other than the outer walls 12, 13 of about 1.5 millimeters.
The aft insert 18 may include one or more pressure side exhaust outlets 112 on a side of the aft insert 18 positioned closest to the outer wall 13 forming the pressure side 36 of the airfoil 26. The pressure side exhaust outlet 112 may be positioned near a forward wall 116 of the aft insert 18. The pressure side exhaust outlets 112 may be aligned into spanwise extending rows 118. In at least one embodiment, the aft insert 18 may include a plurality of pressure side exhaust outlets 112 formed into two spanwise extending rows 118 on the side of the aft insert 18 positioned closest to the outer wall 13 forming the pressure side 36 of the airfoil 26. The pressure side exhaust outlets 112 supply cooling fluids to the pressure side nearwall cooling channel 48.
The aft insert 18 may include one or more suction side exhaust outlets 120 on a side of the aft insert 18 positioned closest to the outer wall 12 forming the suction side 38 of the airfoil 26. The suction side exhaust outlet 120 may be positioned near a forward wall 116 of the aft insert 18. The suction side exhaust outlets 120 may be aligned into spanwise extending rows 118. In at least one embodiment, the aft insert 18 may include a plurality of suction side exhaust outlets 120 formed into two spanwise extending rows 118 on the side of the aft insert 18 positioned closest to the outer wall 12 forming the suction side 36 of the airfoil 26. The suction side exhaust outlets 120 supply cooling fluids to the suction side nearwall cooling channel 50.
The cooling system 14 may also include one or more bypass flow reducers 31 extending from the aft insert 18 toward the outer wall 13 forming the pressure side 36 or the outer wall 12 forming the suction side 38, or both, to reduce flow of cooling fluids through the gap 110. In at least one embodiment, as shown in
The cooling system 14 may include one or more film cooling holes 136 in the outer wall 13 forming the pressure side 36. The film cooling hole 136 may exhaust cooling fluids from the pressure side nearwall cooling channel 48 near the rib 72 positioned between the forward and aft cooling cavities 74, 76. The film cooling holes 136 may be positioned in a spanwise extending row.
The forward cooling cavity 74 may include one or more forward inserts 124. The forward insert 124 may form a pressure side nearwall cooling channel 126 and a suction side nearwall cooling channel 128. The forward insert 124 may include a plurality of impingement orifices 130 extending through a pressure side 132 of the forward insert 124 and a suction side 134 of the forward insert 124. The impingement orifices 130 may have any appropriate configuration to enhance the cooling capacity of the forward insert 124 and internal cooling system 14. The leading edge 32 of the airfoil 26 may include a plurality of film cooling holes 136 that form a showerhead array of film cooling holes 136. The forward cooling cavity 74 may include an inlet 138 in connection with a fluid source that is outboard of the airfoil 26 and configured to feed cooling fluids to the inlet 138 and into the forward insert 124.
In at least one embodiment, the cooling system 14 may include one or more aft cooling cavities 76 in which an insert 18 is positioned that forms a pressure side nearwall cooling channel 48 and a suction side nearwall cooling channel 50. A plurality of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 may extend from an inner surface 144 of the outer wall 12 forming the suction side 38 of the generally elongated hollow airfoil 26 toward the insert 18. The cooling fluid flow controllers 22 may form a plurality of alternating zigzag channels 52 extending downstream toward the trailing edge 34. The cooling system 14 may include one or more heat dissipating ribs 152 extending partially between the inner surface 144 of the suction side 38 and the insert 18, as shown in
The heat dissipating rib 152 may extend generally in a chordwise direction such as a direction from the leading edge 32 to the trailing edge 34. The heat dissipating rib 152 may be attached to an inner surface 144 of the outer wall 12 forming the suction side 38 and may extend inwardly from the inner surface 144 of the suction side 38. The heat dissipating rib 152 may extend at least partially onto a rib 72 dividing the aft cooling cavity 76 from a forward cooling cavity 74. The rib 72 may extend generally orthogonally from the inner surface 144 of the outer wall 12 forming the suction side 38. In at least one embodiment, the heat dissipating rib 152 may have a curved outer head 156 cross-sectional profile taken orthogonal to a longitudinal axis 158 of the heat dissipating rib 152, as shown in
In at least one embodiment, the cooling system 14 may include a plurality of heat dissipating ribs 152 extending partially between the inner surface 144 of the suction side 38 and the insert 18. The plurality of heat dissipating ribs 152 are aligned with each other. The plurality of heat dissipating ribs 152 may each be separated an equal distance from each other. The plurality of heat dissipating ribs 152 may extend in a chordwise direction and may be positioned adjacent each other from an inner diameter 92 of the airfoil 26 to an outer diameter 98 of the airfoil 26. A chordwise length of the heat dissipating ribs 152 may reduce in length moving from the outer diameter 98 of the airfoil 26 to the inner diameter 92 of the airfoil 26.
During use, cooling fluids may be supplied from a compressor or other such cooling air source to the inner chamber 106 of the forward insert 124 of the internal cooling system 14. Cooling fluids may fill the forward insert 124 and generally flow spanwise in a radially inward direction throughout the forward insert 124. Cooling fluids are passed through the impingement orifices 130 into the pressure side nearwall cooling channel 126 and through the impingement orifices 130 into the suction side nearwall cooling channel 128. The cooling fluids flowing from the impingement holes 130 impinge against the outer wall 13 forming the pressure side 36 and the outer wall 12 forming the suction side 38, thereby cooling the outer walls 12, 13. A portion of the cooling fluids from the pressure side and suction side nearwall cooling channels 126, 128 are exhausted from the internal cooling system 14 via the plurality of film cooling holes 136 forming the showerhead and the other film cooling holes. The cooling fluids may also form film cooling on an outer surface of the outer walls 12, 13 via the film cooling holes 136 at the leading edge 32 that are configured to form a showerhead and the other film cooling holes in the outer walls 12, 13 forming the pressure and suction sides 36, 38.
Cooling fluids may be supplied to the aft insert 18 via the inlet 88. The cooling fluids may be supplied from a channel in communication with the forward insert 124 or from another source. Cooling fluids may fill the aft insert 18 and may generally flow spanwise throughout the aft insert 18. Cooling fluids are passed through the pressure side exhaust outlets 112 and into the pressure side nearwall cooling channel 48 and are passed through the suction side exhaust outlets 120 and into the suction side nearwall cooling channel 50. The cooling fluids flowing through the pressure side exhaust outlets 112 and into the pressure side nearwall cooling channel 48 impinge upon the outer wall 13 forming the pressure side 36. A portion of the cooling fluids may be exhausted through the film cooling orifices at an upstream end of the pressure side nearwall cooling channel 48 near the rib 72 form the upstream end of the pressure side nearwall cooling channel 48. The cooling fluids flowing through the suction side exhaust outlets 120 and into the suction side nearwall cooling channel 50 impinge upon the outer wall 12 forming the suction side 38. In particular, the cooling fluid strikes the heat dissipating ribs in the midchord region 150 upstream from the cooling fluid flow controllers 22. The heat dissipating ribs 152 have been shown to reduce localized hot spot outer wall temperature by up to 60 degrees Celsius while having a negligible impact on mass flow rate. The heat dissipating ribs 152 may also have a 40 percent increase in heat flux for the mid chord region 150 containing the heat dissipating ribs 152.
The cooling fluids in the pressure side nearwall cooling channel 48 on the pressure side 36 are directed toward an inner surface of the outer wall 13 forming the pressure side 36 by a first bypass flow reducer 31 where the cooling fluids flow through a first row of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 rather than flowing in between the small gap 110 between an end 111 of the cooling fluid flow controllers 22 and the aft insert 18. The bypass flow reducers 31 direct the cooling fluids towards the outer wall 13 forming the pressure side 36, thereby substantially reducing the flow of cooling fluids between the gap 110 created between the end 111 of the cooling fluid flow controllers 22 and the aft insert 18. The gap 110 may be about 0.3 millimeters in size due to assembly. Tighter tolerances on either side would aide flow and H/T characteristics, while increased clearances would negatively affect flow and NTT. In addition, the bypass flow reducers 31 may direct the cooling fluids towards the outer wall 13 forming the pressure side 36, which is most need of cooling due to its direct exposure to the combustor exhaust gases. The cooling fluids flow through successive rows of cooling fluid flow controllers 22 zigzagging back and forth and increasing in temperature moving toward the trailing edge 34 as the cooling fluids pick up heat from the outer wall 13 and the cooling fluid flow controllers 22. The cooling fluids entering the suction side nearwall cooling channel 50 may flow substantially in the same manner as the fluids in the pressure side nearwall cooling channel 48 described above, and thus, for brevity, are not further reiterated here.
The cooling fluids from the pressure side nearwall cooling channel 48 and the suction side nearwall cooling channel 50 may be exhausted into the trailing edge channel 30. In addition, cooling fluids from within the aft insert 18 may be exhausted directly into the trailing edge channel 30 via the refresher holes 84. As the cooling fluids enter the trailing edge channel 30, the cooling fluids pass through the first and second spanwise extending rows 94, 96, whereby the cooling fluids strike the cooling fluid flow controllers 22 and increase in temperature. The first and second spanwise extending rows 94, 96 of fluid flow controllers 22 also impart a zigzag motion to the cooling fluids. The cooling fluids may also flow past one or more rows of pin fins 102 and may be exhausted from the trailing edge exhaust orifices 140.
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.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2015/026287 | 4/17/2015 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/US2014/053978 | Apr 2014 | US |
Child | 15504407 | US | |
Parent | PCT/US2014/053968 | Apr 2014 | US |
Child | PCT/US2014/053978 | US |