Abstract

Combined heat and power (CHP) applications have significant environmental and economic benefits that are consistent with the goals of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). One area that is currently being studied includes the potential benefits of CHP turbine operation at higher turbine inlet temperatures. Internal cooling concepts enabled by additive manufacturing (AM) are of primary interest. The effectiveness of internal cooling is hindered by many factors such as velocity distribution of the cooling air to the hot surface considering impingement cooling. To simulate cooling air exiting from a series of orifices for internal cooling in an airfoil, a straight smooth wall tubing with multiple side discharging orifices is used and compared to additively manufactured tubing (Ti6Al4V Grade 23) with orifice size and spacing as well as inner and outer diameters identical to the smooth wall tubing. Similar to flow discharging form perforated pipes, the flow discharged from individual orifices along the tubes in this study is found to be nonuniformly distributed, and the horizontal (axial direction) momentum can be observed from the experimental data. Discharge velocities have been measured with two-dimensional (2D) particle imaging velocimetry (PIV) and single element hot wire anemometry. Numerical analysis has also been conducted to predict the velocity distributions along the orifices in the smooth wall and additive manufacturing (AM) tubing, which are inherited with surface roughness. Numerical and measured results in this study are compared, presented, and discussed.

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