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An Experimental Investigation of Showerhead Film Cooling Performance on a Turbine Blade
Author(s) -
Xing-dan Zhu,
Jingzhou Zhang,
Xiao-Ming Tan
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
procedia engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.32
H-Index - 74
ISSN - 1877-7058
DOI - 10.1016/j.proeng.2014.12.583
Subject(s) - blade (archaeology) , turbine blade , materials science , turbine , aerospace engineering , structural engineering , engineering , mechanical engineering , marine engineering
Experimental tests were performed to investigate the film cooling performance at the leading edge region of a turbine blade using the Infrared Radiation (IR) thermography technique. The test blades were enlarged by five times the natural size with three showerhead rows of radial-angle hole and one row of streamwise angle hole on pressure and suction side, respectively. Six different leading edge cooling geometries were designed by varying the radial angle from 35°to 90°. The effects of mainstream Reynolds number and coolant-to-mainstream blowing ratio were discussed. Results show that the blowing ratio has a marked influence on the cooling effectiveness with the existence of an optimum blowing ratio. High mainstream Reynolds number produces larger coolant flow rate and hence better cooling effectiveness. For x/C<0.15 on suction side close to the stagnation region and the overall pressure side, small radial angle improves the leading edge film cooling performance,whereas large radial angle facilitates the effectiveness downstream of x/C>0.15 on suction side. In current investigation, 45° showerhead radial angle relatively produces the least pressure loss and 75° or 90° gives the most aerodynamic loss that increases with the blowing ratio

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