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1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to a gas turbine engine, and more specifically to an air cooled turbine airfoil with trailing edge cooling.
2. Description of the Related Art Including Information Disclosed Under 37 CFR 1.97 and 1.98
A gas turbine engine includes a turbine section with one or more stages of stator vanes and rotor blades that react with a hot gas flow from a combustor to produce mechanical work and, in the case of an industrial gas turbine engine, drive an electric generator. It is known in the art that the engine efficiency can be increased by passing a higher temperature gas flow into the turbine. However, the turbine inlet temperature is limited by the material properties of the first stage airfoils and the amount of cooling provided for these airfoils.
Turbine airfoils are cooled by passing bleed off air from the compressor and through an internal cooling air passage within the airfoil. The cooling air from the compressor used for airfoil cooling is discharged from the airfoil without producing any useful work. Thus, the engine efficiency is reduced because the work used to compress the air used for airfoil cooling is lost. Therefore, it is also desirable to make use of a minimal amount of compressed air from the compressor used for airfoil cooling.
An airfoil is exposed to different temperatures due to the shape and the flow pattern across the airfoil. The hot gas flow strikes the leading edge of the airfoil and then flows around to the pressure side and the suction side. The trailing edge of the airfoil is the thinnest portion of the airfoil and is also exposed to some of the highest temperatures. Because of this, it is difficult to design for a cooling circuit for the trailing edge region. In the prior art, the trailing edge region of an airfoil is cooled by passing cooling air through channels that include pin fins to increase the heat transfer rate.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a turbine airfoil with a trailing edge cooling circuit that has an improved cooling effectiveness over that of the prior art.
It is another objective of the present invention to provide for a turbine airfoil with a reduced trailing edge metal temperature so that a reduced cooling air flow is required for the airfoil.
The above objectives and more are achieved with turbine airfoil of the present invention in which a new trailing edge region cooling circuit can be used in a prior art airfoil. The trailing edge cooling circuit includes multiple mini-serpentine cooling passages that extend along the trailing edge of the airfoil and connect with a radial extending cooling air supply channel formed adjacent to the trailing edge region. Each individual module can be designed based on the airfoil local external heat load to achieve a desired local metal temperature. The multiple mini-serpentine flow modules can be designed as a three-pass parallel flow serpentine network or a four or five-pass serpentine flow network.
The trailing edge cooling circuit of the present invention is shown in a turbine rotor blade but could also be used in a turbine stator vane.
The zigzag paths formed by the arrangement of ribs within each module forms a serpentine flow path in which the cooling air flows upward in the blade radial direction and then turns 180 degrees and flows downward, repeating this number of times until the cooling air is discharged into the diffusion slot 15. The ribs extend generally in a radial direction of the blade and form legs of the serpentine flow channel in which the legs flow in a radial upward direction and a radial downward direction. As the cooling air flows toward the T/E, the cooling air will hit a section of a rib and produce impingement cooling. The cooling air that flows upward will strike the rib separating that serpentine flow path from an adjacent serpentine flow path to produce impingement cooling. Since the ribs extend in the serpentine flow path and across the walls of the airfoil, heat from the hot metal surface will be conducted into the ribs and transmitted to the cooling air flow from the impingement cooling.
The ribs that form the serpentine flow cooling channels within the trailing edge region of the airfoil can be formed by casting when the blade is cast, or can be formed by machining the ribs into two half sections that can then be bonded together to form the single piece blade. Also, the blade can be cast with one side of the T/E region formed with the cast blade in which the other side of the T/E region is left open. The T/E cooling circuit with the ribs can then be closed by bonding an airfoil surface to the ribs and form the remaining section of the blade. In this procedure, the ribs can be cast along with the T/E section, or the ribs can be machined.
Major design features and advantages of the T/E cooling circuit of the present invention over the prior art trailing edge cooling design as described below. The multiple mini-serpentine flow path cooling channels are formed by an overlap of multiple mini ribs positioned at staggered array and perpendicular to the cooling flow along the cooling flow channel. Cooling air flows axially perpendicular to the airfoil span. This is different from the prior art serpentine flow cooled rotor blade in which the serpentine channel is perpendicular to the engine centerline and the cooling air flows radial inward and outward along the blade span. The spent cooling air from an upward flowing channel will return heated air back down to the blade root section in this prior art design.
For the multiple mini-serpentine flow channels, as the cooling air flows toward the blade T/E exit holes or slots, the cooling air will impinge onto the partition ribs and therefore create a very high rate of internal heat transfer coefficient. In addition, as the cooling air turns in the mini-serpentine flow channels, cooling air changes momentum to produce an increase in the heat transfer coefficient. The combination effects create a high cooling effectiveness for the multiple turns in the mini-serpentine flow channels for a blade cooling design.
The multiple mini-serpentine flow channels can be designed to tailor the airfoil external heat load by means of varying the channel height as well as the cross sectional flow area at the middle of the turn for each module. A change in rib spacing and/or rib height will also impact the cooling flow mass flux which will alter the internal heat transfer coefficient and metal temperature along the flow path.
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