Abstract

Recent advances in gas turbine film cooling technology such as round film cooling holes embedded in craters or trenches, and shaped film cooling holes are of interest due to a marked improvement in the effectiveness of film cooling jets. Typically, shaped film cooling holes have higher manufacturing cost, while film cooling holes embedded in craters/trenches etched in thermal barrier coatings (TBC) are seen as a cost-effective alternative. In a recent numerical study Kalghatgi and Acharya (2015, “Improved Film Cooling Effectiveness With a Round Film Cooling Hole Embedded in Contoured Crater,” ASME J. Turbomach., 137(10), p. 101006) reported a novel crater shape to generate anti-counter rotating vortex pair (CRVP) beneath the film cooling jet and showed a significant improvement in film cooling performance. In the present paper, a comprehensive study of flow dynamics is presented to gain insight into the unsteady flow physics of film cooling jet issued from a round hole embedded in the contoured crater. As a baseline case, a round film cooling hole with a 35 deg inclined short delivery tube (l/D = 1.75) is used as from a previous study with freestream Reynolds number based on jet diameter set to ReD = 16,000 and density ratio of coolant to freestream fluid of ρj/ρo = 2.0. These flow conditions are used for the cases of film cooling jet embedded in contoured crater. The results are presented for two crater depths: (i) shallow crater with 0.2D depth and (ii) deep crater with 0.75D depth. First- and second-order flow statistics are presented for all the cases, including the experimental data for baseline case from the literature. Time-averaged and instantaneous flow structures are visualized to reveal the mechanisms of anti-CRVP and attenuating CRVP. The dynamics of flow structures studied using single-point spectral analysis in the shear layer and modal analysis of three-dimensional flow field shows a loss of coherency and increased time scales of shear layer structures as the crater depth is increased, primarily due to attenuating of CRVP in the downstream vicinity of the crater. The modal analysis confirmed reduced magnitude of temperature fluctuations (hot spots) on the cooling wall compared with baseline round film cooling hole. Finally, a 2–5% additional pressure loss due to the crater is reported over the existing ≈7% loss in pressure for baseline case.

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