Abstract
Time-resolved measurements of heat transfer on a fully cooled transonic turbine stage have been taken in a short duration turbine test facility which simulates full engine non-dimensional conditions. The time average of this data is compared to uncooled rotor data and cooled linear cascade measurements made on the same profile. The film cooling reduces the time-averaged heat transfer compared to the uncooled rotor on the btade suction surface by as much as 60%, but has relatively littte effect on the pressure surface. The suction surface rotor heat transfer is lower than that measured in the cascade. The results are similar over the central 3/4 of the span implying that the flow here is mainly two-dimensional. The film cooling is shown to be much less effective at high blowing ratios than at low ones. Timeresolved measurements reveal that the cooling, when effective, both reduced the d.c. level of heat transfer and changed the shape of the unsteady waveform. Unsteady blowing is shown to be a principal driver of film cooling fluctuations, and a linear model is shown to do a good job in predicting the unsteady heat transfer. The unsteadiness results in a 12% decrease in heat transfer on the suction surface and a 5% increase on the pressure surface.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Abhari, R. S., & Epstein, A. H. (1992). An experimental study of film cooling in a rotating transonic turbine. In ASME 1992 International Gas Turbine and Aeroengine Congress and Exposition, GT 1992 (Vol. 4). American Society of Mechanical Engineers. https://doi.org/10.1115/92-GT-201
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