Analysis of the effect of intermittency in a high-pressure turbine blade

High-pressure turbine blades are subject to large thermomechanical loads that may threaten their mechanical integrity. The prediction of the heat transfer on the blade surface, crucial to ensure its durability, thus requires an accurate description of the flow physics around the blade to be reliable...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inPhysics of fluids (1994) Vol. 32; no. 9
Main Authors Dupuy, D., Gicquel, L., Odier, N., Duchaine, F., Arts, T.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Melville American Institute of Physics 01.09.2020
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Summary:High-pressure turbine blades are subject to large thermomechanical loads that may threaten their mechanical integrity. The prediction of the heat transfer on the blade surface, crucial to ensure its durability, thus requires an accurate description of the flow physics around the blade to be reliable. In an effort to better qualify the use of computational fluid dynamics in this design context as well as the need for an improved understanding of the flow physics, this paper investigates a transonic highly loaded linear turbine blade cascade that has been found difficult to predict in the literature using large-eddy simulations. Indeed, the configuration results in shocks and acoustic waves on the suction side of the blade, features that are commonly encountered in high-pressure turbines. Turbulent spots are observed on the suction-side boundary layer with an inlet turbulence intensity of 6%. The turbulent spots are shown to have a complex and highly unsteady effect on the shock/boundary-layer interaction, disrupting flow detachment and creating laminar spots downstream of the shock. To address these transient flow phenomena, conditional averages based on the intermittency level are introduced to show that accurate heat transfer predictions require an accurate prediction of the rate of turbulent-spot production. The analysis then focuses on the effect of intermittency on the turbulent kinetic energy exchanges in the near-wall region as the turbulent kinetic energy balance must be addressed in Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes models.
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ISSN:1070-6631
1089-7666
DOI:10.1063/5.0018679