Abstract

Investigations in cascade employ filleted blades to influence the near endwall secondary flows and total-pressure losses. The secondary flows aggravate the aerodynamic losses and endwall thermal stresses in the gas turbine passages. Investigations of different configurations of the slot-bleed flow from the endwall of cascade upstream show significant influences on the near endwall flows. In the present paper, the near endwall flow-field in a linear cascade employing filleted vanes and bleed flow from the upstream endwall slots is measured experimentally. Two fillet profiles are tested, one is larger than the other. The objectives are to quantify the combined effects of endwall fillet, fillet profiles, and film-cooling flow on the endwall region flow-field. The fillet covers the junction of vane and endwall upstream of the cascade throat region. The discontinuous bleed-slots near the cascade entrance provide the film-cooling flow on endwall and simulate the gaps between combustor/nozzle-vane discs or stator/rotor discs in the gas turbine. The inlet Reynolds number of 2.0E+05 is based on the chord length of vane profile. The density and temperature ratios of the coolant flow to mainstream are both about 1.0. The inlet blowing ratio of the film-cooling flow varies between 1.0 and 2.8. The flow-field is measured through the distributions of flow temperature, yaw angle, axial vorticity, and total-pressure losses along the vane passage. The effects on the flow-field are then presented by comparing the cases of filleted vanes with the cases of un-filleted vanes. The results of flow yaw angle and axial vorticity in the filleted passage are smaller than those in the passage without the fillet. The yaw angles responsible for the endwall secondary flows are the smallest for the smaller fillet (Fillet-2). The temperature field indicates the pitchwise distributions of the coolant on endwall specially near the pressure side are better when the smaller fillet is employed. Also, the weakened passage vortex of the endwall secondary flows in the filleted passage reduces the total-pressure losses. Although the total-pressure losses decrease at very high coolant mass flux with and without the fillet, the losses are always smaller for the filleted passage than for the un-filleted passage. The present investigation is beneficial for improving and optimizing the endwall film-cooling in the gas turbine passage.

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