This patent application relates to the contemporaneously filed patent application entitled VORTEX COOLING FOR TURBINE BLADES by the same inventor and commonly assigned to Florida Turbine Technologies, Inc., inasmuch as both inventions relate to cooled turbine blades and both inventions can be utilized together. This application is incorporated herein by reference.
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This invention relates to air cooled turbines for gas turbine engines and particularly to cooling of the leading edge of the turbine blade.
This invention constitutes an improvement over U.S. Pat. No. 5,486,093 granted to Auxier et al on Jan. 23, 1996 entitled LEADING EDGE COOLING OF TURBINE AIRFOILS. This patent teaches the use of helix shaped cooing passages in the leading edge of the turbine blade so as to enhance convective efficiency of the cooling air and to improve discharge of the film cooling air by orienting the discharge angle so that the discharging air is delivered more closely to the pressure and suction surfaces. The helix holes place the coolant closer to the outer surface of the blade to more effectively reduce the average conductive length of the passage so as to improve the convective efficiency. Also higher heat transfer coefficients are produced on the outer diameter of helix holes improving the capacity of the heat sink. This patent is incorporated herein by reference.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,180,373 granted to Moore et al on Dec. 25, 1979 and entitled TURBINE BLADE, U.S. Pat. No. 5,356,265 granted to Kercher on Oct. 18, 1994 entitled CHORDED BIFURCATED TURBINE BLADE, U.S. Pat. No. 5,967,752 granted to Lee et al on Oct. 19, 1999, and U.S. Pat. No. 5,538,394 granted to Inomata et al on Jul. 23, 1996 exemplify traditional techniques for cooling the airfoil leading edge. In the teachings of these patents, the airfoil leading edge is cooled with backside impingement in conjunction with showerhead film cooling. Showerhead film cooling holes formed in rows spanning the leading edge along the radial and chord-wise axis are fed coolant from a common mid-chord cavity so as to direct impingement air on the back wall of the leading edge and feed the film cooling holes. The coolant discharges from the blade at various pressures of the engine working medium that is adjacent the discharge of the film cooling hole. As a result of this cooling approach, cooling flow distribution and pressure ratio across the showerhead film holes for the pressure side and suction side is predetermined by mid-chord cavity pressure. This condition is more clearly shown in
In addition, the conventional film cooling holes pass straight through the airfoil wall at a constant diameter and exit at an angle to the exterior surface. Some of the coolant is subsequently injected directly into the mainstream causing turbulence, coolant dilution and loss of downstream film cooling effectiveness. Furthermore, film cooling hole breakout on the airfoil surface may induce stress problems. For further details of the operation of shower head cooling for turbine blades reference should be made to U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,180,373, 5,356,265, 5,967,752 and 5,538,394, supra, all of which are incorporated herein by reference.
This invention not only serves to alleviate the problems noted in the above paragraph, but provides cooling with a lesser amount of cooling air which improves the efficiency of the turbine an adds to the performanc of the engine. In accordance with this invention, the leading edge is cooled by film cooling by first diffusing the coolant before being discharged out of the blade. The diffusion is accomplished by controlling the pressure ratio across the film cooling hole by first passing the coolant through a first restriction and then a second restriction to obtain the desired pressure and then discharging the coolant into an elongated chamber formed on the outer surface of the leading edge. The restrictions are located upstream of a plenum chamber where the coolant is diffused and ultimately into an elongated chamber or pocket formed on the exterior wall of the leading edge. These chambers are arranged in an array of parallel spaced columns and rows thereof extend along the leading edge and may be aligned in the chord-wise direction or stepped radially. These pockets have a twofold purpose, namely 1) they provide an insulation blanket of cooled air to cool the surface of the leading edge and 2) they remove the metal surface of the leading edge and hence the path of heat conductivity is lessened.
An object of this invention is to provide for a turbine of a gas turbine engine improved cooling of the leading edge.
A feature of this invention is the provision of diffusion means extending between the mid-chord cavity that feeds coolant to the leading edge where the diffusion means includes a first metering orifice causing a pressure drop and a first plenum and a second metering orifice causing an additional pressure drop and a second plenum which is an elongated slot or groove formed on the surface of the leading edge. An array of a plurality of grooves extend and spaced longitudinally and extend and spaced chord-wise and are parallel in the longitudinal direction and may be aligned or stepped in the chord-wise direction.
Another feature of this invention is the provision of grooves formed in columns and rows in the leading edge of a turbine and controlling the flow into the grooves by first passing the coolant through a first restriction and plenum and then through a second restriction before flowing into the grooves and sizing the restrictions and plenums in each of the columns to maintain a controlled air flow along the chord-wise direction of the leading edge so that the airflow is generally constant. The dimensions of each of the grooves, plenums and restrictions can be selected so that the air flow to each section of the leading edge in both the longitudinal and chord-wise directions matches the localized heat at each of these sections of the airfoil.
The foregoing and other features of the present invention will become more apparent from the following description and accompanying drawings.
These figures merely serve to further clarify and illustrate the present invention and are not intended to limit the scope thereof.
While this invention is being described showing a particular configured turbine blade as being the preferred embodiment, as one skilled in this art will appreciate, the principals of this invention can be applied to any other turbine blade that requires internal cooling and could be applied to vanes as well.
Reference is now being made to
The details of the invention are best seen in
In operation, cooling air is supplied through the cavity 34 and metered through the row of metering orifices 44 to impinge onto the airfoil leading edge backside and diffuse the cooling air in the plenum chamber 46. This cooling air is then further metered by virtue of the row of metering orifices 48 and diffused into the groove 30. Groove 30 essentially forms a continuous slot.
From the foregoing it is apparent that the flow from the cavity 34 to the groove 30 is diffused by virtue of the pressure drops across metering orifices 44 and 48 and the volume of plenum chamber 46 and groove 30. Not only is the coolant diffused so that it defines an efficacious film of cooling air at the leading edge surface, the sizes of the metering orifices and plenums can be dimensioned so that the airflow spanning the chord-wise direction can be adjusted so that the airflow adjacent to the suction side equals the airflow adjacent to the pressure side. Because of the double usage of cooling air in small individual diffusion portions (plenum 46 and groove 30), this arrangement serves to enhance the airfoil leading edge internal convection capability. This was discussed in the earlier paragraph and is demonstrated by the graph depicted in
What has been shown by this invention is a leading edge cooling system where the usage of cooling air is maximized for a given airfoil inlet gas temperatures and pressures. In addition the coolant is metered twice in each small individual plenum and groove allowing the cooling air to diffuse uniformly into a continuous groove and reduce the cooling air exit momentum. Coolant penetration into the engine fluid working fluid is minimized, yielding good build-up of the coolant sub-boundary layer next to the airfoil surface, resulting in better cooling coverage in the chord-wise and the longitudinal directions. Because this cooling technique utilizes the continuous slot design rather than individual film holes on the airfoil surface, stress concentrations are minimized and a reduction of airfoil total heat load into the airfoil leading edge region is realized. Tailoring the dimension of each of the diffusion passages spanning the chord-wise direction allows the designer to provide a more uniform airflow along this surface. Additionally, the designer can by virtue of this invention size each of the orifices, plenums and grooves so that the airflow adjacent each segment of the airfoil matches the localized heat load, thus, maximizing the usage of airflow and enhancing the performance of the engine.
Although this invention has been shown and described with respect to detailed embodiments thereof, it will be appreciated and understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and detail thereof may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the claimed invention.
This application claims benefit of a prior filed now abandoned U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 60/454,121, filed on Mar. 12, 2003, entitled MULTI-METERING DIFFUSION COOLING TECHNIQUE by George Liang.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6210112 | Tabbita et al. | Apr 2001 | B1 |
20020018717 | Dailey | Feb 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050265838 A1 | Dec 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60454121 | Mar 2003 | US |