Heat Transfer Coefficients on the Squealer Tip and Near-Tip Regions of a Gas Turbine Blade With Single or Double Squealer

Author:

Kwak Jae Su1,Ahn Jaeyong1,Han Je-Chin1,Lee C. Pang2,Bunker Ronald S.3,Boyle Robert4,Gaugler Raymond4

Affiliation:

1. Turbine Heat Transfer Laboratory, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-3123

2. GE Aircraft Engines, 1 Neumann Way, MD A406, Cincinnati, OH 45215-6301

3. GE Corporate R&D, K-1, ES-119, P.O. Box 8, Schenectady, NY 12301

4. NASA Research Center, 21000 Brookpark Road, MS 5-11, Cleveland, OH 44135

Abstract

Detailed heat transfer coefficient distributions on a gas turbine squealer tip blade were measured using a hue detection based transient liquid-crystals technique. The heat transfer coefficients on the shroud and near tip regions of the pressure and suction sides of a blade were also measured. Squealer rims were located along (a) the camber line, (b) the pressure side, (c) the suction side, (d) the pressure and suction sides, (e) the camber line and the pressure side, and (f) the camber line and the suction side, respectively. Tests were performed on a five-bladed linear cascade with a blow down facility. The Reynolds number based on the cascade exit velocity and the axial chord length of a blade was 1.1×106 and the overall pressure ratio was 1.2. Heat transfer measurements were taken at the three tip gap clearances of 1.0%, 1.5%, and 2.5% of blade span. Results show that the heat transfer coefficients on the blade tip and the shroud were significantly reduced by using a squealer tip blade. Results also showed that a different squealer geometry arrangement changed the leakage flow path and resulted in different heat transfer coefficient distributions. The suction side squealer tip provided the lowest heat transfer coefficient on the blade tip and near tip regions compared to the other squealer geometry arrangements.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering

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