Abstract

Local convective heat transfer coefficients to a number of modern gas turbine blade sections have been measured under a wide range of mainstream conditions, from notionally steady flows to highly perturbed turbulent flows. The paper discusses the results and, through a detailed analysis of the pertinent boundary layer flow parameters and their relation to the observed experimental results, tests criteria for the occurrence of transition from laminar to turbulent boundary layers, a factor which all the data from this work confirm as critical in predicting the quantitative effects of mainstream turbulence on heat transfer rates. Artificially induced mainstream turbulence, which is endemic in the flows in a real turbine, enhances significantly the heat transfer rates, especially to the leading edge regions and on the pressure surface, particularly when the acceleration is tending to suppress transition. The results presented here confirm existing criteria for laminarisation and the applicability of some of those available for predicting laminar-turbulent transition. The observations also demonstrate how surface geometry can influence the stability of the flows, and the uncertainties which remain in assessing the effect of Goertler vortices and their role in the convective heat transfer process.

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