Abstract

Abstract Film cooling is a critical gas turbine technology to reduce heat loads on the combustion chamber and the turbine vanes and blades. To improve film cooling performance, trenched cooling configurations where the holes are connected by a cross-stream slot in the surface have been developed. In this study, for the first time, we experimentally examine the influence of mainstream turbulence and large vortices on trenched film cooling flows. We apply an imaging technique based on thermographic phosphor particles seeded into the flow to measure 2D time-resolved gas temperature and velocity distributions in film cooling flows established in a closed-loop heated wind tunnel. Two trenched configurations (straight and an optimized zigzag design) are compared with ordinary effusion holes at momentum ratios (I=3.5,5.7, and 8.3) relevant to gas turbine combustors. Furthermore, two turbulence generation methods were used to create realistic mainstream turbulence levels (Tu=16.4% and 22.7%) and large vortices, so film cooling flows at typical wind tunnel turbulence (Tu=5.3%) can be compared with combustor-relevant conditions. By comparing the film position derived from the time-average temperature fields, the optimized trench performs best at low momentum ratios and turbulence levels but the performance rapidly drops when the momentum ratio rises or the turbulence level is increased. The straight trench performs best across all conditions studied and this configuration is therefore recommended for combustor liner cooling where main flow turbulence levels are high. In general, increased turbulence intensity reduces the effective length of the cooling film for all geometries. The straight trench, however, produces a more stable cooling film than typical effusion holes or the optimized trench configuration. Both phase-locked and time-resolved data indicate that, in the presence of a dominating frequency in the turbulent main flow field produced using a vortex generator, there are instances where the cooling films are strongly disturbed in the streamwise direction and hot gas is locally in contact with the surface.

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