The invention relates to plasma-induced flow control of film cooling flows by plasma actuators.
Film cooling is a method of cooling a surface by maintaining a thin layer of cooling fluid adjacent to the surface, which separates a hot gas flow from the surface. Gas turbine engines use film cooling on components such as combustors, turbine shrouds, and turbine vanes and blades. Such components have walls with a first surface in a hot gas flow path and an opposite second surface not exposed to the hot gas. A cooling fluid such as air is supplied to the second surface at a pressure greater than the hot gas. Holes in the component walls cause the cooling fluid to pass through the holes to the first surface, and spread over it generally along streamlines of the hot gas flow. This forms a cool boundary layer or “film” on the first surface.
Optimizing the effectiveness of cooling film has been a long-standing concern in gas turbine design. The more evenly the film spreads over the heated surface, and the closer it can be kept to the surface, the more efficient and effective it is.
Dielectric barrier plasma generators have been used to control gas flows in boundary layers for various reasons. Such generators induce a directed flow in a neutral gas via momentum transfer from plasma moving between an exposed electrode and an insulated electrode. US patent publication 2008/0131265 describes modifying a film cooling flow downstream of film cooling holes using plasma generators. The present inventors devised improvements to this technique as described herein.
The invention is explained in the following description in view of the drawings that show:
The inventors recognized that film cooling can be improved by creating a body force in the coolant gas that urges the coolant flow to turn tightly around the inlet edge and/or outlet edge of the hole, thus reducing separation of the coolant flow from the inside surface of the film cooling hole and/or from the hot surface of the component wall. This can be done by generating a directed plasma around at least a portion of the inlet edge and/or the outlet edge of the film cooling hole using a plasma electrode inside the hole cooperating with an electrode outside it. Exemplary devices are described herein that control a coolant gas flow around the inlet and/or outlet edges of a film cooling hole in a component wall.
Turbine vanes often have central chambers that receive cooling air from the radially outer plenum 30 and/or inner plenum 28. The outer walls of the vanes may be perforated with film cooling holes, allowing some or all of the cooling air to escape and spread over the outer surfaces of the vanes to provide film cooling. Similarly, the inner and/or outer platforms 24, 26 may have film cooling holes. Such technology is well known, and is not detailed here.
The insulated electrodes 61 and 62 may or may not receive the same power parameters as each other. If they use the same parameters, a single control line 73 may supply both electrodes 61, 62. Alternately, separate control lines 73, 74 as shown may supply electrode 61 with a different voltage than electrode 63, for example a higher voltage may be provided to electrode 62 than electrode 61, and/or these electrodes may be powered with different periodic voltage cycles.
For example, electrode 61 may cycle on and off, or may alternate in polarity. In the “on” cycle, it generates plasma with electrode 60, and attracts the resulting positive ions toward a middle portion of the inside surface 47 of the hole 46. This provides a wall-hugging influence on the coolant envelope 52. In the “off” cycle of electrode 61, the positive ions are released, and continue downstream to be attracted by electrode 62. Alternately, instead of an “off” cycle, a positive polarity cycle of lower amplitude and/or duration than the negative cycle may be provided to electrode 61 to expel the positive ions a short distance from the dielectric surface.
Cycle frequencies, voltages, and duration parameters for the electrodes can be calculated from studies of plasma generators in the literature, such that when the ions reach the middle portion of the hole, electrode 61 is switched “off” or is cycled to positive polarity. Exemplary literature includes US patent publication 2009/0196765, and U.S. Pat. No. 7,380,756, both of which are incorporated by reference herein. Electrode 60 quickly absorbs the electrons, since they move faster than the positive ions, and since electrode 60 is exposed. This leaves the positive ions stranded to continue flowing downstream until influenced by electrode 62. Electric power control circuits that provide specified voltage amplitudes and waveforms are known, and are not detailed here.
In the embodiment of
A “downstream angle” may be defined as an angle centered on the geometric center 59 of the exit edge 58 of the hole 46, and facing downstream from said center. This definition does not limit an electrode to any particular shape, such as the shown arcuate shape. An electrode may be any shape while still spanning a given downstream angle. A “directly downstream area” may be defined as a downstream projection of the exit edge 58 of the hole, as shown by boundaries B. All electrodes may at least cover the downstream area B.
As shown, the exit edge 58 may be configured with electrodes as previously described. Alternately, not shown, the exit edge 58 may be configured similarly to the entry edge 57 of
The dielectric 65 may be made of a refractory ceramic such as AL2O3 or others known in the art. The electrodes and conductors may be made of a high-temperature electrically conductive material such as iridium, platinum, yttrium, carbon fiber, graphite, tungsten, tungsten carbide, or others, and may be formed and assembled by techniques known in the art.
The term “or” herein, unless otherwise specified means “inclusive or”, which is a common meaning of this term, and is the same as “and/or”.
While various embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described herein, it will be obvious that such embodiments are provided by way of example only. Numerous variations, changes and substitutions may be made without departing from the invention herein. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention be limited only by the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
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