This application is related to U.S. Regular Utility application Ser. No. 11/726,335 filed on Mar. 21, 2007 by Liang and entitled BOAS WITH MULTIPLE TRENCHED FILM COOLING SLOTS.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to a gas turbine engine, and more specifically to a turbine vane with film cooling holes on the vane endwall.
2. Description of the Related Art Including Information Disclosed Under 37 CFR 1.97 and 1.98
In a gas turbine engine, the turbine section includes a multiple stages of rotor blades and stator vanes to guide the hot gas stream through the turbine and convert the hot gas flow into mechanical energy by rotating the shaft. Since the engine efficiency can be increased by passing a higher hot gas flow through the turbine, it is an important design factor to make the airfoils (blades and vanes) from the highest resistant material that will withstand the high stresses and high temperatures. It is also an important design factor to provide effective cooling with a minimal amount of cooling air since the cooling air is pressurized air from the engine compressor that is wasted and therefore will also decrease the efficiency of the engine.
The stator vanes (sometimes referred to as guide vanes or nozzles) 11 include endwalls 12 on the inner and outer ends of the vanes that form hot gas flow paths through the vanes. The stator vanes require film cooling on the airfoil part and the endwall part to prevent thermal damage. Prior art vane endwall leading edge region is cooled with a double row of circular or shaped film cooling holes 13 as seen in
It is an object of the present invention to provide for a turbine vane endwall leading edge region with improved leading edge film cooling to reduce the endwall metal temperature and reduce the cooling flow requirement.
A turbine stator vane with an endwall leading edge film cooling design. The vane endwall includes a plurality of metering and diffusion submerged film cooling channels with a cascade surface construction for the vane endwall leading edge cooling. A row of diffusion slots are spaced around the vane endwall along the pressure side and the suction side and the leading edge of the endwall. Each diffusion slot is supplied with cooling air through a plurality of metering holes that meter the cooling air flow into the slot and also produce impingement cooling. the individual metering and diffusion slots can be designed based on the local external heat load to achieve a desired local metal temperature.
The present invention is a turbine stator vane with an endwall having a row of film cooling slots extending from the trailing edge and around both the pressure and suction sides of the airfoil and around the leading edge region of the endwall to provide a more effective cooling for the vane endwall.
The endwall 12 includes a row of the film cooling slots that open onto the surface of the endwall in the arrangement shown in
Each film diffusion channel 22 is connected to a single metering hole 23 on the upstream end of the channel 22. The metering holes are connected to the pressurized cooling air supply for the vane.
The submerged film cooling channels comprise of a metering cooling flow entrance section with a submerged diffusion exit channel. The multiple metering and diffusion submerged cooling slot 21 is constructed in small module formation. Individual modules are designed based on the airfoil gas side pressure distribution in both the streamwise and circumferential directions. Also, 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 are constructed in an inline (or staggered) array along the endwall leading edge section. With this film cooling slot arrangement of the present invention, the usage of film cooling air for a given inlet gas temperature and pressure profile is maximized.
In operation, cooling air is provided by the vane cooling air supply manifold. Cooling air is metered at the entrance of the multiple metering diffusion submerged film cooling channel is closely matched and oriented to the hot gas working fluid conditions prior to being discharged from the submerged channels (if the embodiment with the submerged channels is used). Since the endwall surface is in the cascade formation, the film cooling exit channel submerged from the airfoil surface which provides proper cooling flow spacing for the discharged cooling air will minimize the shear mixing between the discharged film cooling air and the hot gas working fluid. This enhances the cooling effectiveness within the film cooling channel and reduces the film cooling air exit momentum. Coolant penetration into the gas path is minimized, yielding good buildup of the coolant sub-boundary layer next to the endwall leading edge surface, and a better film coverage in streamwise and circumferential directions for the endwall leading edge region is achieved. Also, the cascade surface is covered by the exit film which thus generates additional coverage area for the endwall leading edge region. The combination effects of additional convection cooling plus multi-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.
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