Abstract

Film cooling is an important technology in protecting the turbine blade of modern aero-engine and gas turbine. Besides the widely studied parameters including the cooling hole geometry and blowing ratio, film cooling effectiveness is also affected by the crossflow in the internal cooling channel, which causes off-design inflow directions of the cooling hole. In-hole counter-rotating vortex pair is observed which accounts for the effect of internal crossflow on the film cooling. The current paper numerically studies the effect of internal channel flow on the film cooling performance by comparing the results of three configurations. A theoretical model about the boundary layer deformation is proposed to explain the formation of in-hole vortices based on the vortex dynamics, and two comparative cases with slip and no-slip channel wall respectively are used to highlight the importance of internal channel flow boundary conditions. By comparing adiabatic film cooling effectiveness under varying blowing ratios and internal crossflow velocities, it is shown that internal crossflow plays an important role in film cooling performance. Enhanced cooling effectiveness can be obtained at internal co-flow conditions where in-hole vortices has the opposite direction with downstream kidney vortices. Due to the competitive effects of distorted velocity profile and in-hole vortices, an optimal velocity of internal crossflow can be found at given blowing ratio and the optimal velocity magnitude slightly increases with increasing blowing ratio.

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