Surface infrared thermography, hotwire anemometry, and thermocouple surveys were performed on two new film cooling hole geometries: spiral/rifled holes and fluidic sweeping holes. The spiral holes attempt to induce large-scale vorticity to the film cooling jet as it exits the hole to prevent the formation of the kidney shaped vortices commonly associated with film cooling jets. The fluidic sweeping hole uses a passive in-hole geometry to induce jet sweeping at frequencies that scale with blowing ratios. The spiral hole performance is compared to that of round holes with and without compound angles. The fluidic hole is of the diffusion class of holes and is therefore compared to a 777 hole and Square holes. A patent-pending spiral hole design showed the highest potential of the non-diffusion type hole configurations. Velocity contours and flow temperature were acquired at discreet cross-sections of the downstream flow field. The passive fluidic sweeping hole shows the most uniform cooling distribution but suffers from low span-averaged effectiveness levels due to enhanced mixing. The data was taken at a Reynolds number of 11,000 based on hole diameter and freestream velocity. Infrared thermography was taken for blowing ratios of 1.0, 1.5, 2.0, and 2.5 at a density ratio of 1.05. The flow inside the fluidic sweeping hole was studied using 3D unsteady RANS.
Skip Nav Destination
ASME Turbo Expo 2015: Turbine Technical Conference and Exposition
June 15–19, 2015
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Conference Sponsors:
- International Gas Turbine Institute
ISBN:
978-0-7918-5672-7
PROCEEDINGS PAPER
Investigation of Spiral and Sweeping Holes
Douglas Thurman,
Douglas Thurman
US Army Research Laboratory, Cleveland, OH
Search for other works by this author on:
Philip Poinsatte,
Philip Poinsatte
NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, OH
Search for other works by this author on:
Ali Ameri,
Ali Ameri
The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH
Search for other works by this author on:
Dennis Culley,
Dennis Culley
NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, OH
Search for other works by this author on:
Surya Raghu,
Surya Raghu
Advanced Fluidics LLC, Columbia, MD
Search for other works by this author on:
Vikram Shyam
Vikram Shyam
NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, OH
Search for other works by this author on:
Douglas Thurman
US Army Research Laboratory, Cleveland, OH
Philip Poinsatte
NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, OH
Ali Ameri
The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH
Dennis Culley
NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, OH
Surya Raghu
Advanced Fluidics LLC, Columbia, MD
Vikram Shyam
NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, OH
Paper No:
GT2015-43808, V05BT12A044; 14 pages
Published Online:
August 12, 2015
Citation
Thurman, D, Poinsatte, P, Ameri, A, Culley, D, Raghu, S, & Shyam, V. "Investigation of Spiral and Sweeping Holes." Proceedings of the ASME Turbo Expo 2015: Turbine Technical Conference and Exposition. Volume 5B: Heat Transfer. Montreal, Quebec, Canada. June 15–19, 2015. V05BT12A044. ASME. https://doi.org/10.1115/GT2015-43808
Download citation file:
27
Views
Related Proceedings Papers
Related Articles
Investigation of Spiral and Sweeping Holes
J. Turbomach (September,2016)
Double-Jet Ejection of Cooling Air for Improved Film Cooling
J. Turbomach (October,2007)
Effects of Swirl Velocities From Fan Assemblies Mounted on Lifting Surfaces
J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power (March,2011)
Related Chapters
Control and Operational Performance
Closed-Cycle Gas Turbines: Operating Experience and Future Potential
The Design and Implement of Remote Inclinometer for Power Towers Based on MXA2500G/GSM
International Conference on Mechanical and Electrical Technology, 3rd, (ICMET-China 2011), Volumes 1–3
Introduction and Definitions
Handbook on Stiffness & Damping in Mechanical Design