Aerospace (Jun 2025)

Film Cooling Performance and Superposition Method of an Actual Turbine Vane at High Freestream Turbulence

  • Peng Chu,
  • Yongfeng Sui,
  • Bin Dai,
  • Jibing Lan,
  • Wenyang Shao,
  • Binbin Xue,
  • Xiliang Xu,
  • Zhenping Feng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace12060533
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 6
p. 533

Abstract

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This study aims to enhance the understanding of film cooling performance in an actual turbine vane by investigating influencing factors and developing more precise numerical prediction methods. Pressure sensitive paint (PSP) testing and Reynolds-Averaged Navier–Stokes (RANS) simulations were conducted. The findings indicate that the current design blowing ratio of S1 holes (0.89) is too high, resulting in poor film cooling effectiveness. However, the blowing ratios of P3 (0.78) and P4 (0.69) holes are relatively low, suggesting that increasing the coolant flow could improve the film cooling effectiveness. It is not recommended to design an excessively low blowing ratio on the suction surface, as this can lead to poor wall adherence downstream of the film holes. A slight increase in turbulence intensity enhances the film covering effect, particularly on the suction surface. Additionally, a novel superposition method for multirow fan-shaped film cooling holes on an actual turbine vane is proposed, exhibiting better agreement with experimental data. Compared with experimental results, the numerical predictions tend to underestimate the film cooling effectiveness with the examined k-ε-based viscosity turbulence models and Reynolds stress turbulence models, while the SST demonstrates relatively higher accuracy owing to its hybrid k-ω/k-ε formulation that better resolves near-wall physics and separation flows characteristic of turbine cooling configurations. This study contributes to the advancement of turbine vane thermal analysis and design in engineering applications.

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