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    Effects of Localized Non-Gaussian Roughness on High-Pressure Turbine Aerothermal Performance: Convective Heat Transfer, Skin Friction, and the Reynolds’ Analogy

    Source: Journal of Turbomachinery:;2024:;volume( 147 ):;issue: 005::page 51017-1
    Author:
    Jelly, Thomas O.
    ,
    Nardini, Massimiliano
    ,
    Sandberg, Richard D.
    ,
    Vitt, Paul
    ,
    Sluyter, Greg
    DOI: 10.1115/1.4067354
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: Compressible direct numerical simulations are conducted to investigate how surface roughness affects the aerothermal performance of a high-pressure turbine vane operating at an exit Reynolds number of 0.59 ×106 and exit Mach number of 0.92. The roughness under investigation here was synthesized with non-Gaussian statistical properties and an amplitude that varies over its chord length, representative of what truly occurs on an in-service vane. Particular attention is directed toward how systematically changing the axial extent of leading edge roughness affects convective heat transfer (Nusselt and Stanton numbers) and aerodynamic drag (skin friction coefficient) on the pressure and suction surfaces. The results of this investigation demonstrate that moving the larger amplitude roughness further along the suction surface can alter the blade boundary layer state. In fact, toward the trailing edge of one of the rough vanes investigated here, the local skin friction coefficient increases by a factor of 22 compared to smooth-vane levels, whereas the local Nusselt number increases by a factor 6. The disproportionate rise of drag compared to heat transfer is explored in further detail by quantifying the Reynolds’ analogy and by calculating the fractional contributions of pressure drag and viscous drag to the total drag force. The effect of varying the inlet turbulence intensity and integral length scale for a fixed roughness topography is also investigated, and the Reynolds number scaling of heat transfer and drag is examined in the context of the Chilton–Colburn analogy.
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      Effects of Localized Non-Gaussian Roughness on High-Pressure Turbine Aerothermal Performance: Convective Heat Transfer, Skin Friction, and the Reynolds’ Analogy

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4305144
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    contributor authorJelly, Thomas O.
    contributor authorNardini, Massimiliano
    contributor authorSandberg, Richard D.
    contributor authorVitt, Paul
    contributor authorSluyter, Greg
    date accessioned2025-04-21T09:56:06Z
    date available2025-04-21T09:56:06Z
    date copyright12/20/2024 12:00:00 AM
    date issued2024
    identifier issn0889-504X
    identifier otherturbo_147_5_051017.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4305144
    description abstractCompressible direct numerical simulations are conducted to investigate how surface roughness affects the aerothermal performance of a high-pressure turbine vane operating at an exit Reynolds number of 0.59 ×106 and exit Mach number of 0.92. The roughness under investigation here was synthesized with non-Gaussian statistical properties and an amplitude that varies over its chord length, representative of what truly occurs on an in-service vane. Particular attention is directed toward how systematically changing the axial extent of leading edge roughness affects convective heat transfer (Nusselt and Stanton numbers) and aerodynamic drag (skin friction coefficient) on the pressure and suction surfaces. The results of this investigation demonstrate that moving the larger amplitude roughness further along the suction surface can alter the blade boundary layer state. In fact, toward the trailing edge of one of the rough vanes investigated here, the local skin friction coefficient increases by a factor of 22 compared to smooth-vane levels, whereas the local Nusselt number increases by a factor 6. The disproportionate rise of drag compared to heat transfer is explored in further detail by quantifying the Reynolds’ analogy and by calculating the fractional contributions of pressure drag and viscous drag to the total drag force. The effect of varying the inlet turbulence intensity and integral length scale for a fixed roughness topography is also investigated, and the Reynolds number scaling of heat transfer and drag is examined in the context of the Chilton–Colburn analogy.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleEffects of Localized Non-Gaussian Roughness on High-Pressure Turbine Aerothermal Performance: Convective Heat Transfer, Skin Friction, and the Reynolds’ Analogy
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume147
    journal issue5
    journal titleJournal of Turbomachinery
    identifier doi10.1115/1.4067354
    journal fristpage51017-1
    journal lastpage51017-12
    page12
    treeJournal of Turbomachinery:;2024:;volume( 147 ):;issue: 005
    contenttypeFulltext
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