Experimental Evaluation of Thermal and Mass Transfer Techniques to Measure Adiabatic Effectiveness With Various Coolant to Freestream Property Ratios

Author:

Wiese Connor J.1,Rutledge James L.2,Polanka Marc D.3

Affiliation:

1. Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH 45433

2. Air Force Institute of Technology, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH 45433 e-mail:

3. Air Force Institute of Technology, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH 45433

Abstract

Experimentally evaluating gas turbine cooling schemes is generally prohibitive at engine conditions. Thus, researchers conduct film cooling experiments near room temperature and attempt to scale the results to engine conditions. An increasingly popular method of evaluating adiabatic effectiveness employs pressure sensitive paint (PSP) and the heat–mass transfer analogy. The suitability of mass transfer methods as a substitute for thermal methods is of interest in the present work. Much scaling work has been dedicated to the influence of the coolant-to-freestream density ratio (DR), but other fluid properties also differ between experimental and engine conditions. Most notably in the context of an examination of the ability of PSP to serve as a proxy for thermal methods are the properties that directly influence thermal transport. That is, even with an adiabatic wall, there is still heat transfer between the freestream flow and the coolant plume, and the mass transfer analogy would not be expected to account for the specific heat or thermal conductivity distributions within the flow. Using various coolant gases (air, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, and argon) and comparing with thermal experiments, the efficacy of the PSP method as a direct substitute for thermal measurements was evaluated on a cylindrical leading edge model with compound coolant injection. The results thus allow examination of how the two methods respond to different property variations. Overall, the PSP technique was found to overpredict the adiabatic effectiveness when compared to the results obtained from infrared (IR) thermography, but still reveals valuable information regarding the coolant flow.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering

Reference21 articles.

1. Effects of Density Ratio on the Hydrodynamics of Film Cooling;ASME J. Turbomach.,1990

2. Thole, K. A., Sinha, A. K., Bogard, D. G., and Crawford, M. E., 1992, “Mean Temperature Measurements of Jets With a Crossflow for Gas Turbine Film Cooling Application,” Third International Symposium on Transport Phenomena and Dynamics of Rotating Machinery (ISROMAC), Honolulu, HI, Apr. 1–4, pp. 69–85.http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1992rmtp.proc...69T

3. Film Cooling Downstream of a Single Row of Holes With Variable Density Ratio;ASME J. Turbomach.,1991

4. Computational Fluid Dynamics Evaluations of Unconventional Film Cooling Scaling Parameters on a Simulated Turbine Blade Leading Edge;ASME J. Turbomach.,2014

5. Scaling of Film Cooling Performance From Ambient to Engine Temperatures;ASME J. Turbomach.,2015

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