Abstract

Increases in power density and thermal efficiency of a highly efficient gas turbine engine motivate an ever-mounting turbine entry temperature. The combined metallurgical and cooling advancements ensure the structural integrity of a gas turbine rotor blade that spins at high rotor speeds in a gas stream with temperatures above the melting point of the blade material. The cooling performances promoted by a variety of heat transfer enhancement methods typical of the coolant channels of the leading edge, the mid-chord region, and the trailing edge of a gas turbine rotor blade are reviewed. The manifested rotational effects on the aerothermal performances of impinging jets and swirl chambers for leading-edge cooling, multi-pass ribbed, dimpled, and/or wavy channels over the mid-chord region, as well as pin fin and latticework narrow ducts in the trailing edge of a gas turbine rotor blade, are summarized and cross-examined. Research orientations for future cooling studies aimed at preventing the development of hot spots in a gas turbine rotor blade are recommended.

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