Experimental Study of Impact of In-Service Deterioration on Thermal Performance of High-Pressure Nozzle Guide VanesSource: Journal of Turbomachinery:;2022:;volume( 145 ):;issue: 002::page 21014-1DOI: 10.1115/1.4055864Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
Abstract: In this paper, we analyze the impact of in-service deterioration on the overall thermal performance (metal effectiveness) of heavily cooled high-pressure nozzle guide vanes of a design typical of large civil jet engines. We study 15 deteriorated parts (increased surface roughness, thermal barrier coating spallation and sintering, damaged film cooling holes, and trailing edge burn-back) from operational engines and compare their thermal performance to that of equivalent new parts. A companion paper focuses on the aerodynamic impact of in-service deterioration. Overall cooling effectiveness measurements were performed in the Engine Component AeroThermal (ECAT) Facility at the University of Oxford, at engine-representative conditions of Mach number, Reynolds number, coolant-to-mainstream pressure ratio, and turbulence intensity. We characterize the degradation of overall cooling effectiveness with service time. This is an important result for whole-life modeling. Changes in overall cooling effectiveness were greatest on the pressure surface and early suction surface of the parts. Area-averaged differences in overall cooling effectiveness of −1.83% and −10.41% were measured on the pressure surfaces of mid-life and end-of-life vanes, respectively. In the analysis, we attempt to decouple the contributions from independent deterioration effects and compare the philosophy of this top-down approach to the bottom-up approach in which effects are studied in isolation and then superposed in modeling.
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contributor author | Michaud, Mathias | |
contributor author | Chowdhury, Nafiz H. K. | |
contributor author | Povey, Thomas | |
date accessioned | 2023-08-16T18:09:04Z | |
date available | 2023-08-16T18:09:04Z | |
date copyright | 11/7/2022 12:00:00 AM | |
date issued | 2022 | |
identifier issn | 0889-504X | |
identifier other | turbo_145_2_021014.pdf | |
identifier uri | http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4291509 | |
description abstract | In this paper, we analyze the impact of in-service deterioration on the overall thermal performance (metal effectiveness) of heavily cooled high-pressure nozzle guide vanes of a design typical of large civil jet engines. We study 15 deteriorated parts (increased surface roughness, thermal barrier coating spallation and sintering, damaged film cooling holes, and trailing edge burn-back) from operational engines and compare their thermal performance to that of equivalent new parts. A companion paper focuses on the aerodynamic impact of in-service deterioration. Overall cooling effectiveness measurements were performed in the Engine Component AeroThermal (ECAT) Facility at the University of Oxford, at engine-representative conditions of Mach number, Reynolds number, coolant-to-mainstream pressure ratio, and turbulence intensity. We characterize the degradation of overall cooling effectiveness with service time. This is an important result for whole-life modeling. Changes in overall cooling effectiveness were greatest on the pressure surface and early suction surface of the parts. Area-averaged differences in overall cooling effectiveness of −1.83% and −10.41% were measured on the pressure surfaces of mid-life and end-of-life vanes, respectively. In the analysis, we attempt to decouple the contributions from independent deterioration effects and compare the philosophy of this top-down approach to the bottom-up approach in which effects are studied in isolation and then superposed in modeling. | |
publisher | The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) | |
title | Experimental Study of Impact of In-Service Deterioration on Thermal Performance of High-Pressure Nozzle Guide Vanes | |
type | Journal Paper | |
journal volume | 145 | |
journal issue | 2 | |
journal title | Journal of Turbomachinery | |
identifier doi | 10.1115/1.4055864 | |
journal fristpage | 21014-1 | |
journal lastpage | 21014-13 | |
page | 13 | |
tree | Journal of Turbomachinery:;2022:;volume( 145 ):;issue: 002 | |
contenttype | Fulltext |