摘要

An investigation to characterize the effect rainment in a confined jet impingement arrangement is presented. The investigated configuration shows an impingement-cooled turbine blade passage and holds two staggered rows of inclined impingement jets. In order to distinctly promote thermal entrainment phenomena, the jets were heated separately. A steady-state liquid crystal technique was used to obtain near-wall fluid temperature distributions for the impingement surfaces under adiabatic conditions. Additionally, flow field measurements were undertaken using particle image velocimetry (PIV). Furthermore, compressible Reynolds-averaged Navier Stokes (RANS) simulations carried out with ANSYS CFX using Menter's shear stress transport (SST) turbulence model accompany the experiments. Distributions of effectiveness, velocity, and turbulent kinetic energy detail the complexity of the aerothermal situation. The study was conducted for a jet Reynolds number range from 10,000 to 4.5,000. The experimental and numerical results are generally in good agreement. Nevertheless, the simulations predict flow features in particular regions of the geometry that are not as prominent in the experiments. These affect the effectiveness distributions, locally. The investigations reveal that the effectiveness is independent of the temperature difference between the heated and cold jet as well as the jet Reynolds number.

  • 出版日期2016-4

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