634 research outputs found

    A review and analysis of boundary layer transition data for turbine application

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    A symposium on transition in turbines was held at the NASA Lewis Research Center. One recommendation of the working groups was the collection of existing transition data to provide standard cases against which models could be tested. A number of data sets from the open literature that include heat transfer data in apparently transitional boundary layers, with particular application to the turbine environment, were reviewed and analyzed to extract transition information from the heat transfer data. The data sets reviewed cover a wide range of flow conditions, from low speed, flat plate tests to full scale turbine airfoils operating at simulated turbine engine conditions. The results indicate that free stream turbulence and pressure gradient have strong, and opposite, effects on the location of the start of transition and on the length of the transition zone

    A computer program for the transient thermal analysis of an impingement cooled turbine blade

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    A computer program to calculate transient and steady state temperatures, pressures, and coolant flows in a cooled turbine blade or vane with an impingement insert is described. Input to the program includes a description of the blade geometry, coolant supply conditions, outside thermal boundary conditions and wheel speed. Coolant-side heat transfer coefficients are calculated internally in the program, with the user specifying the mode of heat transfer at each internal flow station. Program output includes the temperature at each node, the coolant pressures and flow rates, and the inside heat transfer coefficients. A sample problem is discussed

    Optical measurement of static temperature and hydroxyl radical profiles in a hydrogen-fueled supersonic combustor

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    Profiles of static temperature and hydroxyl radical concentration were measured in a two-dimensional supersonic combustor test section 22.8 cm downstream of hydrogen injection. A high-pressure gas generator supplied vitiated air to the test section at Mach 2.44, atmospheric pressure, and a total temperature of about 2240 K. Room-temperature hydrogen was injected through a 0.40-cm step slot at Mach 1 and matched pressure. The measurements utilized a noninterfering spectral line absorption technique in which narrow ultraviolet emission lines of the hydroxyl electronic transition are absorbed by the broader absorption lines in the combustion gas. Comparison of the measured temperature profiles with theoretical calculations showed good agreement

    Cyclic structural analysis of air-cooled gas turbine blades and vanes

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    The creep fatigue behavior of a fully impingement cooled blade for four cyclic cases was analyzed by using the Elas 55, finite element, nonlinear structural computer program. Expected cyclic lives were calculated by using the method of strainrange partitioning for reversed inelastic strains and time fractions for ratcheted tensile creep strains. Strainrange partitioning was also applied to previous results from a one dimensional cyclic analysis of a film impingement cooled vane. The analyses indicated that strainrange partitioning is more applicable to a constrained airfoil such as the film impingement cooled vane than to the relatively unconstrained fully impingement cooled airfoil

    Nonlinear, three-dimensional finite-element analysis of air-cooled gas turbine blades

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    Cyclic stress-strain states in cooled turbine blades were calculated for a simulated mission of an advanced-technology commercial aircraft engine. The MARC, nonlinear, finite-element computer program was used for the analysis of impingement-cooled airfoils, with and without leading-edge film cooling. Creep was the predominant damage mode (ignoring hot corrosion), particularly artund film-cooling holes. Radially angled holes exhibited less creep than holes with axes normal to the surface. Beam-theory analyses of all-impingement-cooled airfoils gave fair agreement with MARC results for initial creep

    Significance of thermal contact resistance in two-layer thermal-barrier-coated turbine vanes

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    The importance of thermal contact resistance between layers in heat transfer through two layer, plasma sprayed, thermal barrier coatings applied to turbine vanes was investigated. Results obtained with a system of NiCrAlY bond and yttria stabilized zirconia ceramic show that thermal contact resistance between layers is negligible. These results also verified other studies which showed that thermal contact resistance is negligible for a different coating system of NiCr bond calcia stabilized zirconia ceramic. The zirconia stabilized ceramic thermal conductivity data scatter presented in the literature is ?20 to -10 percent about a curve fit of the data. More accurate predictions of heat transfer and metal wall temperatures are obtained when the thermal conductivity values are used at the ?20 percent level

    Diffusive ignition and combustion in a wall jet

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    Hydrogen is injected from a downstream facing step in a wall into a high-temperature stream. Temperature and hydroxyl radical concentration are measured downstream of the injection plane by means of ultraviolet absorption spectroscopy. The experimental results are compared with theory which is based on a finite-difference solution of boundary-layer equations. Finite-rate kinetics equations are included in the analysis. The analytic predictions are also compared with previously obtained experimental results which are based on probe measurements. Comparison is made between calculated and observed ignition distances

    Comparison of visualized turbine endwall secondary flows and measured heat transfer patterns

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    Various flow visualization techniques were used to define the secondary flows near the endwall in a large heat transfer data. A comparison of the visualized flow patterns and the measured Stanton number distribution was made for cases where the inlet Reynolds number and exit Mach number were matched. Flows were visualized by using neutrally buoyant helium-filled soap bubbles, by using smoke from oil soaked cigars, and by a few techniques using permanent marker pen ink dots and synthetic wintergreen oil. Details of the horseshoe vortex and secondary flows can be directly compared with heat transfer distribution. Near the cascade entrance there is an obvious correlation between the two sets of data, but well into the passage the effect of secondary flow is not as obvious

    High-response on-line gas analysis system for hydrogen-reaction combustion products

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    The results of testing an on-line quadrupole gas analyzer system are reported. Gas samples were drawn from the exhaust of a hydrogen-oxygen-nitrogen rocket which simulated the flow composition and dynamics at the combustor exit of a supersonic combustion ramjet engine. System response time of less than 50 milliseconds was demonstrated, with analytical accuracy estimated to be + or - 5 percent. For more complex chemical systems with interfering atom patterns, analysis would be more difficult. A cooled-gas pyrometer probe was evaluated as a total temperature indicator and as the primary mass flow measuring element for the total sample flow rate

    Comparison of predicted and experimental external heat transfer around a film cooled cylinder in crossflow

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    Calculations were made of the film cooling provided by rows of holes around the circumference of a cylinder in crossflow and the results were compared to experimental data. The calculations and experimental data were for conditions that simulate most of those that are typical of air cooled turbine vane leading edges. Injection was from a single and multiple rows of holes located at different angular locations from the stagnation line. The holes in the rows were angled normal to the flow direction and at a 25 degree angle to the cylinder wall. The calculations and experimental data were for several constant values of blowing ratios for all rows and for different blowing ratios for each row, representing a simulation of a common coolant plenum supply to multiple rows of holes. The calculations were made using a finite difference boundary layer code, STAN5. Contrary to initial expectations that injection would trip the boundary layer flow into the turbulent regime, the results indicated that the high free stream acceleration apparently kept the flow laminar for holes in the first 45 degrees past stagnation. The trend in Stanton number reduction due to coolant injection was predicted with generally good agreement at the lower blowing rates, but for multile rows of holes, agreement was poor beyond the first row
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