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1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to gas turbine engine, and more specifically to a stator vane with cooling of the vane endwall and fillet region.
2. Description of the Related Art including information disclosed under 37 CFR 1.97 and 1.98
A gas turbine engine, such as a large frame heavy duty industrial gas turbine (IGT) engine, includes a turbine with one or more rows of stator vanes and rotor blades that react with a hot gas stream from a combustor to produce mechanical work. The stator vanes guide the hot gas stream into the adjacent and downstream row of rotor blades. The first stage vanes and blades are exposed to the highest gas stream temperatures and therefore require the most amount of cooling.
A horseshoe vortex flow problem occurs on the vane endwall in the leading edge region from a combination of hot flow core gas radial velocity and static pressure gradient forces that build up at the intersection of the airfoil leading edge and the endwall. As the hot flow core gas enters the turbine with a radial velocity and static pressure profiles, the higher radial velocity or static pressure core gas as an upper span height of the hot flow path decelerates to zero at the surface of the radial boundary wall of the flow path and creates a region of stagnant flow at an interface of the airfoil and the endwall region.
As shown in
In the prior art stator vane, film cooling air is injected at discrete location along the horseshoe vortex region 15 (horseshoe because it is shaped like a horseshoe around the leading edge on the endwall, see
A high heat transfer coefficient and high gas temperature region as well as the high thermal gradient problems associated with the vane endwall leading edge cooling can be achieved using the new and effective cooling geometry of the present invention into the prior art vane endwall cooling design. The vane includes a multiple metering and diffusion submerged cooling slot construction for the vane endwall leading edge cooling in which the submerged cooling slots extend along both sides of the vane airfoil.
The submerged metering diffusion and impingement cooling slots include a metering cooling flow entrance section in conjunction with submerged diffusion exit slots. A fan shaped slot with two different directions of diffusion is disposed in the endwall along the airfoil leading edge and endwall intersection location. The fan shaped slots are constructed with the airfoil leading edge diameter extended below the boundary wall. The fan shaped slot depth is gradually reduced as the slot wraps around the leading edge diameter in the chordwise direction as well as away from the airfoil leading edge zone. This forms a 3-Dimensional shaped diffusion slot. Since the size of the horseshoe vortex is a strong function of the airfoil leading edge diameter, the fan shaped slot depth and width geometry will be determined based on each individual turbine vane airfoil leading edge diameter as well as the turbine inlet conditions.
The multiple metering diffusion submerged cooling slot is constructed in a single or small modular formation. Individual modules are designed based on the airfoil gas side pressure distribution in the streamwise direction. In addition, each individual module can be designed based on the airfoil local external heat load to achieve a desired local metal temperature. These individual small modules can be constructed as one metering hole with one diffusion slot or two metering holes in conjunction with larger diffusion slot geometry along the endwall leading edge section.
Within the fan shaped diffusion slot, film cooling flow is discharged in a direction aligned with the hot gas flow passing over the slot. Since the fan shaped diffusion slot is formed below the vane fillet and at an increased chordwise spreading length to diffuse or slow down the secondary hot gas flow, it forms an improved film layer for the injected cooling air from the diffusion slots. Besides than film cooling slots at the bottom of the vane fillet region, multiple rows of showerhead film cooling holes pointed at the endwall direction are used around the airfoil leading edge periphery to inject the film cooling air to form a film sub-layer for the baffle airfoil leading edge from the downward draft of the hot core gas stream.
A turbine stator vane has an airfoil section that extends between an inner endwall and an outer endwall to form a flow path for a hot gas stream. A fillet region forms a curved transition between the airfoil and the endwalls that wraps around the airfoil leading edge and extends along the pressure side (P/S) and suction side (S/S) of the airfoil toward the trailing edge of the airfoil. To prevent the over-temperature problems of the prior art around the horseshoe region of the endwalls in the leading edge region, the present invention includes a row of metering diffusion and impingement cooling slots that are formed below the fillet and wrap around the leading edge of the airfoil and extend along both sides of the airfoil to discharge a film layer of cooling air onto the endwall surfaces.
In operation, cooling air is provided by the vane cooling air supply manifold. Cooling air is metered through the metering holes at the entrance section of the multiple metering diffusion submerged film cooling slot. The cooling air is impinged onto the back side of the vane leading edge fillet first and then diffused into the diffusion chamber prior to being discharged from the submerged exit slot 23. An amount of cooling air fed into each cooling slot is sized to closely match the hot gas flow conditions around the vane. The exit for the film cooling slot is submerged from the airfoil fillet surface and provides proper cooling flow spacing for the discharged cooling air versus the down draft hot gas flow to minimize any shear mixing between the discharged film cooling air and the hot gas flow which enhances the cooling effectiveness for the endwall leading edge region. Also, the cooling air is metered and diffused in and along the submerged slot which reduces the film cooling air exit momentum. Coolant penetration into the gas path is therefore minimized, yielding a good build-up of the coolant sub-boundary layer next to the endwall leading edge surface. A better film coverage in the streamwise and chordwise directions for the endwall leading edge region is achieved.
In addition, the exit portion of the multiple metering diffusion submerged cooling slot is constructed with multiple flow surfaces and therefore generates additional convection area for the endwall leading edge region. The combination effects of additional convection cooling plus multiple diffusion film cooling at very high film coverage yields a very high cooling effectiveness and a uniform wall temperature for the vane endwall leading edge region.
Major design features and advantages of the stator vane with the metering diffusion and impingement cooling slots along the fillet over the prior art stator vane with film cooling holes are described below. The fan shaped metering diffusion and impingement cooling slot design provides an improved cooling along the horseshoe vortex region and improved film formation relative to the prior art discrete film cooling hole design.
Film cooling holes on the root of the airfoil leading edge provides convection and film cooling for the airfoil leading edge as well as a baffle of the downdraft hot gas core air for the leading edge fillet region. In combination with the film cooling air discharged from the fan shaped metering diffusion slot provides a double layer of film cooling air for the vane horseshoe vortex region.
The cooling air is retained within the diffusion slot longer and diluted with the hot core gas air. This film cooling air is then discharged out the fan shaped film cooling slot to provide for large film coverage on the endwall surface.
Multiple metering diffusion and impingement cooling slots increase the uniformity of the film cooling and insulates the endwall from the passing hot core gas and thus establishes a durable film cooling at the horseshoe vortex region.
The multiple metering diffusion film cooling slots minimize cooling loses or degradation of the film layer and therefore provides a more effective film cooling for film development and maintenance.
The submerged metering diffusion slot creates additional local volume for the expansion of the downdraft hot core gas air, slows down the secondary flow as well as the velocity and pressure gradients, and thus weakens the horseshoe vortex and minimizes the high heat transfer coefficient created due to the horseshoe vortex.
The multiple metering and impingement diffusion film cooling slots extends the cooling air continuously and back side impingement cooling along the interface of the airfoil leading edge versus endwall location and therefore minimizes thermally induced stress by eliminating the discrete cooling holes which are separated by the non-cooled area characteristic of the prior art cooling design.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
7097417 | Liang | Aug 2006 | B2 |
7621718 | Liang | Nov 2009 | B1 |