The present disclosure relates to sequential liners for gas turbine combustors, and in particular to convective cooling holes in sequential liners.
In gas turbine can combustors, a sequential liner with impingement cooling is used. When a set of gas turbine can combustors are arranged around the turbine, the cans can be close together, and the proximity of adjacent cans to one another can hinder cooling air ingress to the impingement cooling holes. It has been appreciated that improvements can be made to ameliorate this issue.
According to a first aspect of the invention, a sequential liner for a gas turbine combustor is provided, comprising a sequential liner outer wall spaced apart from a sequential liner inner wall to define a sequential liner cooling channel between the sequential liner outer wall and the sequential liner inner wall, the sequential liner outer wall comprising a first face, a first adjacent face and a second adjacent face, the first and second adjacent faces each being adjacent to the first face, the first face of the sequential liner outer wall comprising a first convective cooling hole adjacent to the first adjacent face and a second convective cooling hole adjacent to the second adjacent face, each convective cooling hole being arranged to direct a convective cooling flow into the sequential liner cooling channel adjacent to each adjacent face.
Feeding of impingement systems on the sequential liner sidewalls can be difficult due to the high velocities in between two neighbouring sequential liners (with associated low pressure to feed the cooling system), and the short distance to the neighbouring sequential liner may also result in unstable feeding of the cooling system (cooling pulsations). Changing the position of the cooling air ingress to a location that can have a higher static pressure drop can provide a higher driving pressure drop for the cooling system.
Impingement cooling also requires a certain cooling channel height, which significantly affects the size of the non-flowed area between two sequential liners at the turbine interface. It may be possible to decrease the channel height in the area being convectively cooled, as convective cooling can be much more compact. This can allow the cans within the sequential liners to be placed closer together, which can provide space for more cans.
Due to the more uniform temperature field that can be provided with convective (convection) cooling compared to impingement cooling, the deformation of the part and the loads on the part can be more evenly distributed which can also be beneficial for lifetime.
In one embodiment, the sequential liner comprises at least one rib between the sequential liner inner wall and the sequential liner outer wall of the first adjacent face for directing the convective cooling flow. A rib or ribs can help direct the cooling flow. Adding a rib can also have the advantage that it helps to increase the stiffness of the sequential liner sidewalls and can therefore help improve the creep resistance and HCF (high-cycle fatigue) lifetime of the part. The rib structure can also improve heat conduction of the sequential liner inner and outer walls.
In one embodiment, the at least one rib extends across part of the distance between the sequential liner outer wall and the sequential liner inner wall. In one embodiment, at least one of the one or more ribs is substantially parallel to a gas turbine combustor hot gas flow. In one embodiment, the sequential liner comprises a plurality of ribs, wherein each rib has a downstream end and an upstream end relative to the flow of cooling air, and wherein the upstream ends of the ribs are further apart from one another than the downstream ends of the ribs. In one embodiment, one or more of the ribs are curved. In one embodiment, at least one first convective cooling hole comprises at least two separate holes adjacent to one another. In one embodiment, the longest distance across at least one of the first convective cooling holes is at least twice the length of the shortest distance across said convective cooling hole. Preferably, the first convective cooling hole and the second convective cooling hole are the same. These embodiments can help direct the cooling flow.
In one embodiment, the sequential liner comprises a plurality of impingement cooling holes in the sequential liner outer wall. This can help with sequential liner inner wall cooling.
In one embodiment, the plurality of impingement cooling holes are smaller than the convective cooling holes.
According to a second aspect of the invention, a gas turbine comprising the sequential liner as described above is provided.
According to a third aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of cooling a sequential liner for a gas turbine combustor comprising a sequential liner outer wall spaced apart from a sequential liner inner wall to define a sequential liner cooling channel between the sequential liner outer wall and the sequential liner inner wall, the sequential liner outer wall comprising a first face, a first adjacent face and a second adjacent face, the first and second adjacent faces each being adjacent to the first face, the first face of the sequential liner outer wall comprising a first convective cooling hole adjacent to the first adjacent face and a second convective cooling hole adjacent to the second adjacent face, each convective cooling hole being arranged to direct a convective cooling flow into the sequential liner cooling channel adjacent to each adjacent face, the method comprising: feeding cooling air through the convective cooling holes into the sequential liner cooling channel; and convectively cooling the sequential liner inner wall with the cooling air.
According to a fourth aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of retrofitting a gas turbine comprising a sequential liner with a sequential liner outer wall spaced apart from a sequential liner inner wall to define a sequential liner cooling channel between the sequential liner outer wall and the sequential liner inner wall, the method comprising: removing the sequential liner outer wall; and adding a new sequential liner outer wall, the sequential liner outer wall comprising a first face, a first adjacent face and a second adjacent face, the first and second adjacent faces each being adjacent to the first face, the first face of the sequential liner outer wall comprising a first convective cooling hole adjacent to the first adjacent face and a second convective cooling hole adjacent to the second adjacent face, each convective cooling hole being arranged to direct a convective cooling flow into the sequential liner cooling channel adjacent to each adjacent face.
In one embodiment, the method comprises the step of attaching at least one rib to the sequential liner inner wall before adding a new sequential liner outer wall.
An embodiment of the invention will now be described by way of example only and with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
A sequential liner 10 is shown in
In some cases, a similar effect to that shown in
In a method of cooling using a sequential liner as described above, cooling air is fed in through convective cooling holes 18. The cooling air then passes through the sequential liner cooling channel, normally initially in a direction largely parallel to a plane perpendicular to the sequential liner longitudinal axis, before turning to pass up through the sequential liner cooling channel (generally in a direction opposite to the hot gas flow direction 34) to the cooling air exit (not shown).
In a method of retrofitting a gas turbine comprising a sequential liner with a sequential liner outer wall and a sequential liner inner wall, the sequential liner outer wall is first removed, followed by the addition of a new sequential liner outer wall as described above. If necessary, the method may additionally comprise the step of attaching at least one rib to the sequential liner inner wall before adding a new sequential liner outer wall as described elsewhere in this application.
The sequential liner 10 can be used on a can combustor or a cannular combustor, for example.
The convective cooling holes 18 may be oval in shape as shown in the Figures, or they may alternatively be rectangular, diamond, or another regular or irregular shape. Preferably, the convective cooling holes extend further in the sequential liner longitudinal axis direction than in the plane perpendicular to the sequential liner longitudinal axis. Preferably, the convective cooling holes are longer in the sequential liner longitudinal axis direction than in the plane perpendicular to the sequential liner longitudinal axis, with the longest distance across the convective cooling holes preferably being at least twice, most preferably three times, the length of the shortest distance across the convective cooling holes.
In
The impingement cooling holes 20 may have scoops on the outside of the outer wall to direct air into the sequential liner cooling channel. In the examples shown, an area of side faces 16 adjacent to the convective cooling holes 20 does not have impingement cooling holes as it is convectively cooled, but in some embodiments impingement cooling holes may also be provided in this area, and there may be less impingement cooling holes than in areas without convective cooling. Areas without impingement cooling holes are typically the areas closest to adjacent sequential liners (see
The convective cooling holes 18 are arranged to direct a convective cooling flow into the sequential liner cooling channel adjacent to each adjacent face. As shown in
Various properties and dimensions of the ribs can be modified, and some of these will now be described. Most of these properties and dimensions are not exclusive to one another, and can be mixed together in a wide variety of different ways. In
The ribs may be applied to the outer and/or inner wall by CMT (cold metal transfer), brazing or conventional welding, for example. Laser metal forming could also be used in the case of a non-weldable metal being used.
The ribs may extend across the sequential liner cooling channel to a lesser extent than that shown in
In
In
In the embodiment shown in
In the examples described herein, cooling air is used to provide a cooling fluid flow, but other cooling fluids may also be used.
Various modifications to the embodiments described are possible and will occur to those skilled in the art without departing from the invention which is defined by the following claims.
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