This application is the U.S. National Stage of the International Application No. PCT/US2014/020555 filed Mar. 5, 2014, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
This invention is directed generally to turbine airfoils, and more particularly to cooling systems in hollow turbine vanes.
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 2,260 degrees Fahrenheit. Typical turbine combustor configurations expose turbine vane assemblies, as shown in
Typically, turbine vanes are formed from an airfoil having an inner diameter (ID) platform at an inboard end and having an outer diameter (OD) platform at the outboard end. The vane is ordinarily includes a leading edge and a trailing edge with inner aspects of most turbine vanes typically containing an intricate maze of cooling channels forming a cooling system. The cooling channels in a vane typically receive air from the compressor of the turbine engine and pass the air through the vane. The cooling channels often include multiple flow paths that are designed to maintain all aspects of the turbine vane at a relatively uniform temperature. Providing adequate cooling to turbine vanes having large cross-sectional flow areas at the ID and OD has proven challenging.
A cooling system for a turbine airfoil of a gas turbine engine, wherein the turbine airfoil has a bowed configuration is disclosed. The turbine airfoil may be configured such that the leading edge or trailing edge, or both, may have outer ends of the leading and trailing edges that are positioned further in an upstream direction than midsections. One or more cooling channels of the cooling system may have a larger cross-sectional area proximate to an end of the airfoil than at a midspan location. One or more cooling channels may have one or more corner blockers that extend chordwise in the cooling channel and extend from a corner toward a centerline axis, thereby reducing a cross-sectional area of the cooling channel. The corner blockers may be positioned within the cooling system to maintain the flow of cooling fluids through the airfoil within desired design parameters.
The turbine airfoil may be formed from a generally elongated hollow airfoil include an outer wall having a leading edge, a trailing edge, a pressure side, a suction side, an inner diameter platform at a first end of the airfoil and an outer diameter platform at a second end opposite to the first end, and a cooling system positioned within interior aspects of the generally elongated hollow airfoil. One or more cooling channels of the cooling system may have a larger cross-sectional area proximate to an end of the airfoil than at a midspan location. The cooling system may also include one or more corner blockers extending from a first end at a corner of an inner surface forming the at least one cooling channel toward a second end positioned closer to a midpoint of the at least one cooling channel in a spanwise extending direction and extending diagonally from a base at the inner surface to a tip positioned closer to a centerline axis of the at least one cooling channel.
One or more of the corner blockers may taper from the first end having a larger cross-sectional area to the second end having a smaller cross-sectional area positioned closer to the midpoint of the cooling channel. The base of the corner blocker may be in contact with the inner surface forming the cooling channel from a first end of the corner blocker to a second end of the at least one corner blocker. A cross-sectional area of the corner blocker within 25 percent of a length from the base to the tip from the tip may be larger than a cross-sectional area of the corner blocker within 25 percent of a length from the base to the tip from the base. In at least one embodiment, the corner blocker may have a rounded tip or other appropriate configuration.
In at least one embodiment, the cooling system may include two corner blockers, whereby a first corner blocker extends from a first corner on the suction side of the cooling channel and a second corner blocker extends from a second corner on the suction side of the cooling channel. The cooling system may also include two corner blockers, whereby a first corner blocker extends from a first corner on the suction side of the cooling channel and extends from a first internal rib extending from the pressure side to the suction side and a second corner blocker extends from a first corner on the pressure side of the cooling channel and extends from the first internal rib. The cooling system may also include four corner blockers, whereby a first corner blocker extends from a first corner on the suction side of the cooling channel, a second corner blocker extends from a second corner on the suction side of the cooling channel, a third corner blocker extends from a first corner on the pressure side of the cooling channel and a fourth corner blocker extends from a second corner on the pressure side of the cooling channel. One or more corner blockers may extend radially inward or radially outward. In particular, the first end of the corner blocker may be positioned at the outer diameter platform. The first end of the corner blocker may be positioned at the inner diameter platform. The cooling system may also include a leading edge cooling channel with an inlet at the outer diameter platform and an outlet at the inner diameter platform. The cooling channel of the cooling system may also include a mid-chord serpentine cooling channel extending from the outer diameter platform to the inner diameter platform with chordwise extending cooling channel legs.
The airfoil may have a bowed outer shape. In particular, the trailing edge of the airfoil may be positioned further in an upstream direction at an intersection of the trailing edge and the outer diameter platform and an intersection of the trailing edge and the inner diameter platform than a location between the inner diameter platform and the outer diameter platform. Similarly, the leading edge of the airfoil may be positioned further in an upstream direction at an intersection of the leading edge and the outer diameter platform and an intersection of the leading edge and the inner diameter platform than a location between the inner diameter platform and the outer diameter platform.
An advantage of the cooling system is that the cooling system works exceptionally well to cool bow shaped airfoils that typically have cooling channels having reduced volumes in the mid-span region as compared to portions of the cooling channel at the inboard or outboard ends outside of the mid-span regions.
Another advantage of the cooling system is that use of one or more corner blockers avoids a drastic reduction of channel flow Mach number, which may induce cooling flow diffusion or in some cases, may induce flow separation within the serpentine flow.
Still another advantage of the cooling system is that by incorporating one or more corner blockers into the inner or outer portions of the serpentine cooling channels, or both, where the serpentine channel flow area becomes too large to maintain the through flow channel Mach number, the diffusion problem for a low mass flux at the inner and outer diameter platforms can be eliminated.
Another advantage of the cooling system is that the arrangement of corner blockers described herein may eliminate the cooling flow mal-distribution commonly found in low mass flux flow channels and instead push the cooling air toward the inner side of the airfoil wall and boost the flow channel through flow velocity, thereby increasing the channel heat transfer enhancement.
Yet another advantage of the cooling system is that sizing of the corner blocker may be customized to achieve a constant cooling flow channel cross-sectional area within all or a portion of the cooling channel.
Another advantage of this invention is that the serpentine cooling channels yield higher cooling effectiveness levels than conventionally drilled radial hole cooling designs.
Still another advantage of this invention is that the triple pass serpentine cooling channels yields a lower and more uniform blade sectional mass average temperature for the blade lower span, which improves blade creep life capability.
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
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
A first leg 130 of the mid-chord serpentine cooling channel 112 may exhaust cooling fluid into an inboard turn 127. An inlet 132 of a second leg 134 of the mid-chord serpentine cooling channel 112 may be in communication with the inboard turn 127 such that the inboard turn 127 supplies cooling fluid to the second leg 134.
The leading edge cooling channel 106 may also include a leading edge impingement chamber 138 formed by one or more impingement plates 140 positioned within the leading edge cooling channel 106 to provide impingement cooling to an inner surface 142 of the outer wall 38 forming the leading edge 16. The impingement plate 140 may extend spanwise within the leading edge cooling channel 106. In at least one embodiment, the impingement plate 140 may extend spanwise from the inner diameter platform 44 to the outer diameter platform 48. The impingement plate 140 may include one or more impingement orifices 144. In at least one embodiment, the impingement plate 140 may include a plurality of impingement orifices 144 extending chordwise from the inner diameter platform 44 to the outer diameter platform 48.
In at least one embodiment, the cooling system 10 may include a triple pass mid-chord serpentine cooling channel 112 formed from first, second and third legs 130, 134, 146. The first leg 130 may include two corner blockers 30 extending from the inner diameter platform 44. A first corner blocker 80 may extends from a first corner 82 on the suction side 42 of the cooling channel 28 and may extend from a first internal rib 84 extending from the pressure side 40 to the suction side 42. A second corner blocker 86 may extend from a first corner 88 on the pressure side 40 of the cooling channel 28 and may extend from the first internal rib 84. The second leg 134 may include two corner blockers 30 extending from the inner diameter platform 44. A first corner blocker 72 may extend from a first corner 74 on the suction side 42 of the cooling channel 28. A second corner blocker 76 may extend from a second corner 78 on the suction side 42 of the second leg 134 of the cooling channel 28. The second leg 134 may also include four corner blockers 30 at the outer diameter platform 48. In particular, a first corner blocker 90 may extend from a first corner 92 on the suction side 42 of the third leg 146 of the cooling channel 28. A second corner blocker 94 may extend from a second corner 96 on the suction side 42 of the third leg 146 of the cooling channel 28. A third corner blocker 98 may extend from a first corner 100 on the pressure side 40 of the third leg 146 of the cooling channel 28. A fourth corner blocker 102 may extend from a second corner 104 on the pressure side 40 of the third leg 146 of the cooling channel 28. The first, second, third and fourth corner blockers 90, 94, 98 and 102 at the outer diameter platform 48 in the second leg 134 may each extend from base 64 to tip 66 toward the centerline axis 34. As such, first and fourth corner blockers 90, 102 may be aligned with each other, and second and third corner blockers 94, 98 may be aligned with each other. The third leg 146 may include two corner blockers 30 extending from the inner diameter platform 44. A first corner blocker 72 may extend from a first corner 74 on the suction side 42 of the cooling channel 28. A second corner blocker 76 may extend from a second corner 78 on the suction side 42 of the third leg 146 of the cooling channel 28.
The cooling system may also include one or more trip strips 158, as shown in
The airfoil 12 may have a bowed shape, as shown in
During use, cooling fluids may flow into the cooling system 10 from a cooling fluid supply source through the inlet 108 of the leading edge cooling channel 106. As least a portion of the cooling fluids may flow through the impingement plate 140 into the leading edge impingement chamber 138. The cooling fluids may flow through the leading edge cooling channel 106 and may be exhausted through the outlet 110 into the inboard impingement chamber 128. The cooling fluids may also enter the first leg 130 of the mid-chord serpentine cooling channel 112 at the outer diameter platform 48 and flow through to the inboard turn 127 and into the second leg 134 where the cooling fluids flow radially outward in the second leg 134. The cooling fluid may flow into the outboard turn 156 and into the third leg 146. The cooling fluid may flow radially inward to the inner diameter platform 44 and through the exhaust outlets 120 into the trailing edge cooling channel 122. The cooling fluids may contact the pin fins 150 and may be exhausted through the exhaust outlets 124 in the trailing edge 16.
For the triple pass mid-chord serpentine cooling channel 112, a cross-sectional area of the first leg 130 may contract moving the outer diameter platform 48 toward the mid-span region. As such, the cooling flow accelerates from the outer diameter platform 48 to the mid-span region, which yields a positive channel flow Mach number. A cross-sectional area of the first leg 130 expands moving from the mid-span region to the inner diameter platform 44. As such, the cooling flow decelerates from the mid-span region to the outer diameter platform 48, which yields a negative channel flow Mach number. For the second leg 134 of the mid-chord serpentine cooling channel 112, the channel flow Mach number will increase moving towards the mid-span region and then will decrease moving from the mid-span region to the outer diameter platform 48 due to flow contraction and then flow diffusion. In the second leg 134 between the mid-span region and the outer diameter platform 48, the Mach number may be reduce from 0.15 to 0.05 in a short distance. A negative Mach number of 0.10 is thus created for a short channel flow distance. This drastic reduction of channel flow Mach number may induce cooling flow diffusion or in some cases, will induce flow separation within the serpentine flow channel 112.
The diffusion problem for a low mass flux at the inner and outer diameter platforms 44, 48 can be resolved by incorporating one or more corner blockers 30 into the inner or outer portions of the serpentine cooling channels 112, or both, where the serpentine channel flow area becomes too large to maintain the through flow channel Mach number. As shown in
In at least one embodiment, as shown in
In at least one embodiment, the configuration of the cooling system 10 with corner blockers 30 may be constructed through the use of a pint parts manufacturing technique. Because the corner blockers 30 are not in the same direction parallel to the airfoil internal ribs, it is impossible to produce a ceramic core for this complicated cooling geometry disclosed herein via ceramic core die. With the print parts manufacturing technique, a ceramic core can be printed and then used to create the airfoil 12 with the cooling system 10 with corner blockers 30. Alternatively, the airfoil 12 with the cooling system 10 with corner blockers 30 can be printed from one or more metals.
The corner blockers 30 may be positioned at a different angle than the internal rib 84 within the cooling channel 28. There is no need to chamfer the internal rib 84 by three degrees to five degrees or line up the internal ribs 84 to be parallel to be able to pull a core die. The arrangement of corner blockers 30 described herein may eliminate the cooling flow mal-distribution commonly found in low mass flux flow channels and instead, push the cooling air toward the inner side of the airfoil wall and boost the flow channel through flow velocity, thereby increasing the channel heat transfer enhancement.
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/US2014/020555 | 3/5/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2015/134005 | 9/11/2015 | WO | A |
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PCT International Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Dec. 12, 2014 corresponding to PCT Application PCT/US2014/020555 filed Mar. 5, 2014. (11 pages). |
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20160362986 A1 | Dec 2016 | US |