Home  | Legals | Sitemap | KIT

Experimental and Numerical Investigation of Flow Field and Downstream Surface Temperatures of Cylindrical and Diffuser Shaped Film Cooling Holes

Experimental and Numerical Investigation of Flow Field and Downstream Surface Temperatures of Cylindrical and Diffuser Shaped Film Cooling Holes
Chair:

ASME Turbo Expo 2011
Power for Land, Sea and Air
Paper GT2011-45106
accepted for publication in 'Journal of Turbomachinery' 2012

 

Place:

Vancouver, Canada

Date:

June 6-10, 2011

Author:

Heneka, C.
Ladisch, H.
Schulz, A.
Bauer, H.-J.
Auf dem Kampe,T.
Völker,S.
Sämel,T.

Abstract

An experimental and numerical study of the flow field and the downstream film cooling performance of cylindrical and diffuser shaped cooling holes is presented.
The measurements were conducted on a flat plate with a single cooling hole with coolant ejected from a plenum. The flow field was investigated by means of 3D-PIV as well as 3DLDV measurements, the downstream film cooling effectiveness by means of infrared thermography. Cylindrical and diffuser holes without lateral inclination have been examined, varying blowing ratio and density ratio as well as freestream turbulence levels. 3D-CFD simulations have been performed and validated along with the experimental efforts.
The results, presented in terms of contour plots of the three normalized velocity components as well as adiabatic film cooling effectiveness, clearly show the flow structure of the film cooling jets and the differences brought about by the variation of hole geometry and flow parameters. The quantitative agreement between experiment and CFD was reasonable, with better agreement for cylindrical holes than for diffuser holes.