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contributor authorZhang, Kaiyuan
contributor authorLi, Zhiyu
contributor authorShao, Weidong
contributor authorLi, Zhigang
contributor authorLi, Jun
date accessioned2025-08-20T09:38:48Z
date available2025-08-20T09:38:48Z
date copyright4/16/2025 12:00:00 AM
date issued2025
identifier issn1948-5085
identifier othertsea-24-1510.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4308614
description abstractTargeting the severe mainstream ingestion and non-uniform coolant leakage problems of the endwall slashface, a novel inclined slashface structure is proposed based on a typical perpendicular slashface. The flow characteristics within different slashfaces and turbine cascades as well as the interaction between endwall gap leakages are numerically analyzed. The endwall cooling and blade phantom cooling performance with different slashface designs are compared. The results show that the mainstream ingests at a high axial velocity near the slashface leading edge and ejects out before the normalized axial location z/Cax of 0.6, forming a curved ingestion region. The inclined slashface, especially for α = 60 deg, directly prevents the mainstream ingestion at low blowing ratio, and it nearly eliminates the ingestion at high blowing ratio. The inclined slashface is also able to diminish the ingestion region on the downstream part at high blowing ratio. The slashface leakage influences the phantom cooling effect near the blade trailing edge by modifying the separation vortex. When M = 0.5, the length of endwall coolant coverage between 0.35 < z/Cax < 0.65 shrinks at α = 75 deg, and the cooling effectiveness at z/Cax > 0.8 is increased by 8.1%. When M = 1.0, two inclined designs separately increase the cooling effectiveness of upstream and downstream endwalls by 5.5–16.7% by placing the coolant in the crossflow region of the separation vortex. When M = 1.5, the slashface leakage ameliorates the cooling performance degradation at α = 90 deg. The phantom cooling effectiveness with α = 90 deg is decreased by 11.5% compared with inclined slashface. In summary, the slashface inclination angles of 60 deg and 75 deg have obvious endwall cooling and phantom cooling advantages over 90 deg under high blowing ratios, while they only gain a less advantage on the downstream part endwall under low blowing ratio. This research can provide guidelines for the design of multiple gaps on the turbine endwall.
publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleNumerical Analysis of Leakage Flow and Film Cooling Characteristics of the Inclined Slashface on Gas Turbine Endwall
typeJournal Paper
journal volume17
journal issue7
journal titleJournal of Thermal Science and Engineering Applications
identifier doi10.1115/1.4068338
journal fristpage71005-1
journal lastpage71005-16
page16
treeJournal of Thermal Science and Engineering Applications:;2025:;volume( 017 ):;issue: 007
contenttypeFulltext


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