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US3806276A - Cooled turbine blade - Google Patents

Cooled turbine blade Download PDF

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Publication number
US3806276A
US3806276A US00284716A US28471672A US3806276A US 3806276 A US3806276 A US 3806276A US 00284716 A US00284716 A US 00284716A US 28471672 A US28471672 A US 28471672A US 3806276 A US3806276 A US 3806276A
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Prior art keywords
liner
airfoil
wall
blade
cooling gas
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US00284716A
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R Aspinwall
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Motors Liquidation Co
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General Motors Corp
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F01MACHINES OR ENGINES IN GENERAL; ENGINE PLANTS IN GENERAL; STEAM ENGINES
    • F01DNON-POSITIVE DISPLACEMENT MACHINES OR ENGINES, e.g. STEAM TURBINES
    • F01D5/00Blades; Blade-carrying members; Heating, heat-insulating, cooling or antivibration means on the blades or the members
    • F01D5/12Blades
    • F01D5/14Form or construction
    • F01D5/18Hollow blades, i.e. blades with cooling or heating channels or cavities; Heating, heat-insulating or cooling means on blades
    • F01D5/187Convection cooling
    • F01D5/188Convection cooling with an insert in the blade cavity to guide the cooling fluid, e.g. forming a separation wall
    • F01D5/189Convection cooling with an insert in the blade cavity to guide the cooling fluid, e.g. forming a separation wall the insert having a tubular cross-section, e.g. airfoil shape
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F05INDEXING SCHEMES RELATING TO ENGINES OR PUMPS IN VARIOUS SUBCLASSES OF CLASSES F01-F04
    • F05DINDEXING SCHEME FOR ASPECTS RELATING TO NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES OR ENGINES, GAS-TURBINES OR JET-PROPULSION PLANTS
    • F05D2260/00Function
    • F05D2260/20Heat transfer, e.g. cooling
    • F05D2260/201Heat transfer, e.g. cooling by impingement of a fluid

Definitions

  • ABSTRACT Filed; 8- 30, 1972 A turbine blade is cooled internally by air discharged 21 A L N z 284 716 through perforations in a liner toward the interior of PP 7 the blade wall.
  • the liner is spaced from the blade wall 1 by ribs on the wall extending spanwise of the blade.
  • [L8, Cl. 416/97, 415/1 15 The ribs increase in height toward the blade tip 50 that [51 Till. Cl. F01d 5/18 panwise-extending diverging passages for disgharge 0f Field 0f sell'ch /9 the cooling gas at the tip of the blade are provided.
  • the liner is of. a relatively high conductivity material such as a cuprous nickel alloy.
  • the exterior of the References Cited liner is artificially roughened to increase the absorptiv- UNITED STATES PATENTS ity of the liner to radiated heat.
  • the blade has a base 2,787,441 4/1957 Bartlett 416/92 which the liner extends as to'conduc 2,873,944 2/1959 Wiese et a1.
  • cooling'be as effective as possible so as to minimize loss of power or efficiency due to the provision of cooling air or other medium for cooling the blades.
  • My invention is directed to improved structure for internally cooling a turbine blade orvane of a nonporous wall type.
  • the preferred structure of my invention involves a liner from which cooling air is spouted through small perforations toward the wall of the blade,
  • the liner being spaced from the blade wall by ribs extending inward from the 1W3.
  • the liner ismade of a material of-relativelyhigh conductivity suchas cuprous nickel material and thus has greater than usual ability to conductsome heat out of the airfoil into the blade base.
  • transfer of heat by radiation from the blade wall to the liner is improvedby providing a roughsu rface on the liner to increase the thermal absorptivity of .the liner.
  • the principal objects of my invention areto. provide improved means for coolingflow-directing members forhigh temperature machines, to provide a cooled blade which is of simple and readily fabricated structure, and to provide a system having maximum effectivenessfor cooling a blade by internal convection and radiation, as distinguishedfrom transpiration cooling.
  • FIG. 1 is an elevation view of aturbine blade.
  • The'base 6 comprises a hollow stalk 7 and a dovetail or serrated root 8 adapted for mounting in a turbine rotor structure.
  • the hollow blade 3 is defined by a wall 9 and is illustrated as having a suitable cambe'red airfoil configuration, having a leading edge 10, a trailing edge 11, a convex face 12, and aconcave face 14.
  • the blade wall defines an internal chamber 15 of generally airfoil shape, and the tip of the blade at 16 is open.
  • the blade stalk 7 defines anentrance 18 for cooling gas, ordinarily compressor discharge air in a gas turbine engine.
  • a hollow sheet metal liner 19, the surface of which maybe considered to be parallel ina roughway to thewall 9, is disposed within the chamber 15.
  • the upper end of the liner is closed by a junction between the two side walls of the liner at 20.
  • the base end of the liner may be disposed in slots 22 in the wall of the stalk and suitably fixed there. This is beneficial to conduction of heat from the liner into the blade stalk. Since the stalk first receives the cooling gas and is not in direct contactwith the hot FIG. 2 is a much enlarged transverse section of the,
  • FIG. 3 is a somewhat enlarged longitudinal section of the blade taken in the in FIG. 2.
  • FIG.4 is a greatly enlarged fragmentary view of a plane indicated by the line 3-3 portion of the blade wall and liner taken in a plane exbase 6.
  • the platforms of adjacent blades define oneboundary of thehot motive'fluid path through a cascade of blades.
  • the platform isolates the base 6 from motive fluid, it is normally much cooler than the blade wall 9.
  • the interior of the blade wall 9 bears generally parallel ribs 23 which extend into contact with the blade liner and which, as will be apparent from FIG. 3, increase in height toward the tip of the blade.”As a result, spanwise-extending passages 24 defined between the blade wall9 and the liner 19 and] bounded by the ribs 23 increase in depth and-area towards the tip of the blade to maintain a more or less constant velocity of flow along the passages as the volume of flow increases. Cooling air which enters the opening 18 in the open blade base end of the liner is discharged through a multiplicity'of small perforations or spouting holes 26 distributed along each passage 24.
  • the liner I9 is bonded to the ribs 23 by brazing, diffusion bondin'g, or other suitable process, as indicated at the points27 in FIG.
  • the liner onthe other hand, is artificially roughened to provide higher heat absorptivity as shown more clearly in FIGS. 4 and 6.
  • this roughening is in the form of contiguous parallel V-grooves 30 preferably of about included angles. This roughness may be produced by etching or by machining or by a process of, rolling the sheet as de sired.
  • the relatively smooth surface of the blade wall gives it a gray body characteristic, whereas the rough surface of the liner gives it more of a black body characteristic.
  • the relatively higher absorptivity of the liner and the relatively higher emissivity of the wall improve the liner.
  • the transfer of heat from the wall by radiation to the liner isimproved.
  • the liner of course, is cooled by the cooling air flowing within the liner and through the holes 26 through the liner as well as by the air flowing through the passages 24 which air, of course, receives most of its heat from the wall 9.
  • the blade may be considered to have a chord of about l inches, with a rib every 50 mils (a mil being a thousandth of an inch), the ribs being 10 mils wide, and the air holes 26 about 6 mils in diameter.
  • the distance from the liner to the blade wall increases from about 12 mils to about 40 mils from base to tip of the blade, the blade wall is about 40 mils thick, and the liner is about 10 mils thick.
  • the ridges or grooves 30 on the liner are about 3 mils deep.
  • the blade 2 may be cast integrally in one piece, following, for example, the techniques described in Mc- Cormick US. Pat. No. 3,192,578, July 6, 1965, or the airfoil and base may becast separately and joined by a welding or diffusion bonding operation. Or, if desired, the structuremay be cast in two parts which are then bonded together as illustrated generally in FIG. 6.
  • the blade 34 of FIG. 6 is made of two parts 35 and 36, each defining one side of the blade or airfoil 38, of the platform 39, of the stalk 40, and of the root 42. These are united along a joining surface 43 which ordinarily, in practice, might approximately follow the mean camber line of the blade.
  • the ribbed interior of the blade and other details are not indicated in FIG. 6.
  • An internally-cooled flow-directing member for a turbomachine comprising, in combination, a hollow airfoil having an external wall defining an internal chamber, a liner disposed in the airfoil and spaced from liner between the ribs, the inner surface of the wall having a relatively smooth finish forhigh heat emissivity and the outer surface of the liner having a relatively rough finish for high heat absorptivity, and the liner being made of a material of relatively high coefficient of thermal conductivity as compared to the airfoil.
  • An internally-cooled flow-directing member for a turbomachine comprising, in combination, a hollow airfoil having 'an external wall defining an internal chamber, a liner disposed in the airfoil and spaced from the wall, the liner'having an inlet for a cooling gas and defining distributed perforations for discharge of the gas toward the wall, the airfoil defining an outlet for the cooling gas, the wall bearing internal ribs extending spanwise of the airfoil and bonded to the liner, the inner surface of the wall having a relatively smooth finish for high heat emissivity and the outer surface of the liner having a relatively rough finish for high heat absorptivity, the liner being made of a material of relatively high coefficient of thermal conductivity as compared to the airfoil.
  • An internally-cooled flow-directing member for a turbomachine comprising, in combination, a hollow airfoil having an external .wall defining an internal chamber, a liner disposed in the airfoil and spaced from the wall, the liner having an inlet for a cooling gas and defining distributed perforations for discharge of the gas toward the wall, the airfoil defining an outlet for the cooling gas, the inner surface of the wall having a relativelysmooth finish for high heat emissivity and the outer surface of the liner having a relatively rough, finish for high heat absorptivity, the liner being made of a material of relatively high coefficient of thermal conductivity as compared to the airfoil; the airfoil having a base isolated from the flow passing by the airfoil and including an inlet for the cooling gas, the liner extending into the base.
  • An internally-cooled flow-directing member for a turbomachine comprising, in combination, a hollow airfoil having an external wall defining an internal chamber, a liner disposed in the airfoil and spaced from the wall, the liner having an inlet for a cooling gas and defining distributed perforations for discharge of the gas toward the wall, the airfoil defining an outlet for the cooling gas at the tip of the airfoil, the wall bearing internal ribs extending spanwise of the airfoil and engaging the liner, the ribs increasing in height toward the airfoil tip so that cooling gas passages diverging toward the airfoil tip are defined by the wall and liner between the ribs, the inner surface of the wall having a relatively smooth finish for high heat emissivity and the outer surface of the liner having a relatively rough finish for high heat absorptivity, the liner being made of a material of relatively high coefficient of thermal conductivity as compared to the airfoil; the airfoil having a base isolated from

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Turbine Rotor Nozzle Sealing (AREA)

Abstract

A turbine blade is cooled internally by air discharged through perforations in a liner toward the interior of the blade wall. The liner is spaced from the blade wall by ribs on the wall extending spanwise of the blade. The ribs increase in height toward the blade tip so that spanwise-extending diverging passages for discharge of the cooling gas at the tip of the blade are provided. The liner is of a relatively high conductivity material such as a cuprous nickel alloy. The exterior of the liner is artificially roughened to increase the absorptivity of the liner to radiated heat. The blade has a base into which the liner extends so as to conduct some of the heat through the liner into the base, which is relatively isolated from the hot motive fluid to which the blade is subjected.

Description

United States Patent ["191 McCormick 416/96 Aspinwall Apr. 23, 1974 COOLED TURBINE BLADE Primary ExaminerEverette A. Powell, Jr. [75] Inventor: Robert H. Aspinwall, Zionsville, Ind. Attorney Agent or firm-Paul Fltzpamck [73] Assignee: General Motors Corporation,
Detroit, Mich. [57] ABSTRACT Filed; 8- 30, 1972 A turbine blade is cooled internally by air discharged 21 A L N z 284 716 through perforations in a liner toward the interior of PP 7 the blade wall. The liner is spaced from the blade wall 1 by ribs on the wall extending spanwise of the blade. [52] [L8, Cl. 416/97, 415/1 15 The ribs increase in height toward the blade tip 50 that [51 Till. Cl. F01d 5/18 panwise-extending diverging passages for disgharge 0f Field 0f sell'ch /9 the cooling gas at the tip of the blade are provided.
415/115, 116 The liner is of. a relatively high conductivity material such as a cuprous nickel alloy. The exterior of the References Cited liner is artificially roughened to increase the absorptiv- UNITED STATES PATENTS ity of the liner to radiated heat. The blade has a base 2,787,441 4/1957 Bartlett 416/92 which the liner extends as to'conduc 2,873,944 2/1959 Wiese et a1. 416/92 the heat through h liner into the base, which is rela- 2,894,719 7/1959 Foster 416/92 tively isolated from the hot motive fluid to which the 3,032,314 5/1962 Davidml 416/96 X blade iS subjected. 1 3,314,650 4/1967 4 Claims, 6 Drawing Figures improved means for cooling such blades, to increase themaximum temperature level of the engine in which they are employed. The reason for high temperature levels is greater efficiency and a lighter weight and more compact power plant.
It is important that cooling'be as effective as possible so as to minimize loss of power or efficiency due to the provision of cooling air or other medium for cooling the blades.
My invention is directed to improved structure for internally cooling a turbine blade orvane of a nonporous wall type. The preferred structure of my invention involves a liner from which cooling air is spouted through small perforations toward the wall of the blade,
the liner being spaced from the blade wall by ribs extending inward from the 1W3. Such structures are known. According to my invention, however, the liner ismade of a material of-relativelyhigh conductivity suchas cuprous nickel material and thus has greater than usual ability to conductsome heat out of the airfoil into the blade base. Also, transfer of heat by radiation from the blade wall to the liner is improvedby providing a roughsu rface on the liner to increase the thermal absorptivity of .the liner.
The principal objects of my invention areto. provide improved means for coolingflow-directing members forhigh temperature machines, to provide a cooled blade which is of simple and readily fabricated structure, and to provide a system having maximum effectivenessfor cooling a blade by internal convection and radiation, as distinguishedfrom transpiration cooling.
The nature of my invention and its advantages will be clear to those skilled in the art from the succeeding detailed description of preferred embodiments of the invention and theaccompanying drawings thereof.
FIG. 1 is an elevation view of aturbine blade.
direct contact with the motive fluid. The'base 6 comprises a hollow stalk 7 and a dovetail or serrated root 8 adapted for mounting in a turbine rotor structure. Referring particularly to FIG. 2, the hollow blade 3 is defined by a wall 9 and is illustrated as having a suitable cambe'red airfoil configuration, having a leading edge 10, a trailing edge 11, a convex face 12, and aconcave face 14. The blade wall defines an internal chamber 15 of generally airfoil shape, and the tip of the blade at 16 is open. The blade stalk 7 defines anentrance 18 for cooling gas, ordinarily compressor discharge air in a gas turbine engine. A hollow sheet metal liner 19, the surface of which maybe considered to be parallel ina roughway to thewall 9, is disposed within the chamber 15.
As illustrated in FIG. 3, the upper end of the liner is closed by a junction between the two side walls of the liner at 20. The base end of the liner may be disposed in slots 22 in the wall of the stalk and suitably fixed there. This is beneficial to conduction of heat from the liner into the blade stalk. Since the stalk first receives the cooling gas and is not in direct contactwith the hot FIG. 2 is a much enlarged transverse section of the,
blade taken on the plane indicated by'the line-22 in' FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a somewhat enlarged longitudinal section of the blade taken in the in FIG. 2.
FIG.4 is a greatly enlarged fragmentary view of a plane indicated by the line 3-3 portion of the blade wall and liner taken in a plane exbase 6. The platforms of adjacent blades define oneboundary of thehot motive'fluid path through a cascade of blades. The platform isolates the base 6 from motive fluid, it is normally much cooler than the blade wall 9.
The interior of the blade wall 9 bears generally parallel ribs 23 which extend into contact with the blade liner and which, as will be apparent from FIG. 3, increase in height toward the tip of the blade."As a result, spanwise-extending passages 24 defined between the blade wall9 and the liner 19 and] bounded by the ribs 23 increase in depth and-area towards the tip of the blade to maintain a more or less constant velocity of flow along the passages as the volume of flow increases. Cooling air which enters the opening 18 in the open blade base end of the liner is discharged through a multiplicity'of small perforations or spouting holes 26 distributed along each passage 24. The liner I9 is bonded to the ribs 23 by brazing, diffusion bondin'g, or other suitable process, as indicated at the points27 in FIG.
a cuprous nickelalloy having relatively high thermal conductivity.
The interior of the blade wall and the ribs 23 ordinarily are left with a relatively smooth finish such as results from the manufacture. The liner, onthe other hand, is artificially roughened to provide higher heat absorptivity as shown more clearly in FIGS. 4 and 6. Preferably, this roughening is in the form of contiguous parallel V-grooves 30 preferably of about included angles. This roughness may be produced by etching or by machining or by a process of, rolling the sheet as de sired. The relatively smooth surface of the blade wall gives it a gray body characteristic, whereas the rough surface of the liner gives it more of a black body characteristic. The relatively higher absorptivity of the liner and the relatively higher emissivity of the wall improve the liner. This is not the major means for removal of 'which'may be l,0O F. hotter than the cooling air in the interior of the liner. The inner surface of the blade wall is substantially cooler than its outer surface, the ribs cooler yet, and the liner 19 still cooler. Because of the high heat transmitting characteristics of the liner, it is more effectivein transmitting heat from the ribs to the cooling air, providing additional .effective surface for convection cooling. In the bonded joint there is good transfer of heat from the ribs to the liner. Since the liner is a good heat conductor, it also is instrumental in conducting heat toward the base of the blade into the area which is remote from the motive fluid stream above the platform 4. Also, because of the greater absorptivity of the ridged or roughened surface of the liner, the transfer of heat from the wall by radiation to the liner isimproved. The liner, of course, is cooled by the cooling air flowing within the liner and through the holes 26 through the liner as well as by the air flowing through the passages 24 which air, of course, receives most of its heat from the wall 9.
It may be helpful to give an example of preferred dimensional values in a blade as described above. The blade may be considered to have a chord of about l inches, with a rib every 50 mils (a mil being a thousandth of an inch), the ribs being 10 mils wide, and the air holes 26 about 6 mils in diameter. The distance from the liner to the blade wall increases from about 12 mils to about 40 mils from base to tip of the blade, the blade wall is about 40 mils thick, and the liner is about 10 mils thick. The ridges or grooves 30 on the liner are about 3 mils deep. Such dimensions are subject to change, of course, depending upon the nature of the particular installation and exercise of engineering analysis.
The blade 2 may be cast integrally in one piece, following, for example, the techniques described in Mc- Cormick US. Pat. No. 3,192,578, July 6, 1965, or the airfoil and base may becast separately and joined by a welding or diffusion bonding operation. Or, if desired, the structuremay be cast in two parts which are then bonded together as illustrated generally in FIG. 6. The blade 34 of FIG. 6 is made of two parts 35 and 36, each defining one side of the blade or airfoil 38, of the platform 39, of the stalk 40, and of the root 42. These are united along a joining surface 43 which ordinarily, in practice, might approximately follow the mean camber line of the blade. The ribbed interior of the blade and other details are not indicated in FIG. 6.
It should be apparent to those skilled in the art that I have conceived a significant improvement in the principles of internal cooling of blades, giving greater efficiency in the use of cooling air and greater uniformity of temperature throughout the blade. 7
The description of preferred embodiments ofthe invention for the purpose of explaining the principles thereof is not to be considered as limiting or restricting the invention, since many modifications may be made by the exercise of skill in the art.
I claim:
1. An internally-cooled flow-directing member for a turbomachine comprising, in combination, a hollow airfoil having an external wall defining an internal chamber, a liner disposed in the airfoil and spaced from liner between the ribs, the inner surface of the wall having a relatively smooth finish forhigh heat emissivity and the outer surface of the liner having a relatively rough finish for high heat absorptivity, and the liner being made of a material of relatively high coefficient of thermal conductivity as compared to the airfoil.
2. An internally-cooled flow-directing member for a turbomachine comprising, in combination, a hollow airfoil having 'an external wall defining an internal chamber, a liner disposed in the airfoil and spaced from the wall, the liner'having an inlet for a cooling gas and defining distributed perforations for discharge of the gas toward the wall, the airfoil defining an outlet for the cooling gas, the wall bearing internal ribs extending spanwise of the airfoil and bonded to the liner, the inner surface of the wall having a relatively smooth finish for high heat emissivity and the outer surface of the liner having a relatively rough finish for high heat absorptivity, the liner being made of a material of relatively high coefficient of thermal conductivity as compared to the airfoil.
3. An internally-cooled flow-directing member for a turbomachine comprising, in combination, a hollow airfoil having an external .wall defining an internal chamber, a liner disposed in the airfoil and spaced from the wall, the liner having an inlet for a cooling gas and defining distributed perforations for discharge of the gas toward the wall, the airfoil defining an outlet for the cooling gas, the inner surface of the wall having a relativelysmooth finish for high heat emissivity and the outer surface of the liner having a relatively rough, finish for high heat absorptivity, the liner being made of a material of relatively high coefficient of thermal conductivity as compared to the airfoil; the airfoil having a base isolated from the flow passing by the airfoil and including an inlet for the cooling gas, the liner extending into the base.
4. An internally-cooled flow-directing member for a turbomachine comprising, in combination, a hollow airfoil having an external wall defining an internal chamber, a liner disposed in the airfoil and spaced from the wall, the liner having an inlet for a cooling gas and defining distributed perforations for discharge of the gas toward the wall, the airfoil defining an outlet for the cooling gas at the tip of the airfoil, the wall bearing internal ribs extending spanwise of the airfoil and engaging the liner, the ribs increasing in height toward the airfoil tip so that cooling gas passages diverging toward the airfoil tip are defined by the wall and liner between the ribs, the inner surface of the wall having a relatively smooth finish for high heat emissivity and the outer surface of the liner having a relatively rough finish for high heat absorptivity, the liner being made of a material of relatively high coefficient of thermal conductivity as compared to the airfoil; the airfoil having a base isolated from the flow passing the airfoil and including an inlet for the cooling gas, the liner extending into the base.
* a: a 1k

Claims (4)

1. An internally-cooled flow-directing member for a turbomachine comprising, in combination, a hollow airfoil having an external wall defining an internal chamber, a liner disposed in the airfoil and spaced from the wall, the member having an inlet for a cooling gas at one end of the airfoil and an outlet for the cooling gas at the other end of the airfoil, the wall bearing internal ribs extending spanwise of the airfoIl and engaging the liner, the ribs increasing in height toward the cooling gas outlet so that cooling gas passages diverging toward the airfoil outlet are defined by the wall and liner between the ribs, the inner surface of the wall having a relatively smooth finish for high heat emissivity and the outer surface of the liner having a relatively rough finish for high heat absorptivity, and the liner being made of a material of relatively high coefficient of thermal conductivity as compared to the airfoil.
2. An internally-cooled flow-directing member for a turbomachine comprising, in combination, a hollow airfoil having an external wall defining an internal chamber, a liner disposed in the airfoil and spaced from the wall, the liner having an inlet for a cooling gas and defining distributed perforations for discharge of the gas toward the wall, the airfoil defining an outlet for the cooling gas, the wall bearing internal ribs extending spanwise of the airfoil and bonded to the liner, the inner surface of the wall having a relatively smooth finish for high heat emissivity and the outer surface of the liner having a relatively rough finish for high heat absorptivity, the liner being made of a material of relatively high coefficient of thermal conductivity as compared to the airfoil.
3. An internally-cooled flow-directing member for a turbomachine comprising, in combination, a hollow airfoil having an external wall defining an internal chamber, a liner disposed in the airfoil and spaced from the wall, the liner having an inlet for a cooling gas and defining distributed perforations for discharge of the gas toward the wall, the airfoil defining an outlet for the cooling gas, the inner surface of the wall having a relatively smooth finish for high heat emissivity and the outer surface of the liner having a relatively rough finish for high heat absorptivity, the liner being made of a material of relatively high coefficient of thermal conductivity as compared to the airfoil; the airfoil having a base isolated from the flow passing by the airfoil and including an inlet for the cooling gas, the liner extending into the base.
4. An internally-cooled flow-directing member for a turbomachine comprising, in combination, a hollow airfoil having an external wall defining an internal chamber, a liner disposed in the airfoil and spaced from the wall, the liner having an inlet for a cooling gas and defining distributed perforations for discharge of the gas toward the wall, the airfoil defining an outlet for the cooling gas at the tip of the airfoil, the wall bearing internal ribs extending spanwise of the airfoil and engaging the liner, the ribs increasing in height toward the airfoil tip so that cooling gas passages diverging toward the airfoil tip are defined by the wall and liner between the ribs, the inner surface of the wall having a relatively smooth finish for high heat emissivity and the outer surface of the liner having a relatively rough finish for high heat absorptivity, the liner being made of a material of relatively high coefficient of thermal conductivity as compared to the airfoil; the airfoil having a base isolated from the flow passing the airfoil and including an inlet for the cooling gas, the liner extending into the base.
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Cited By (56)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
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US3902820A (en) * 1973-07-02 1975-09-02 Westinghouse Electric Corp Fluid cooled turbine rotor blade
US3930748A (en) * 1972-08-02 1976-01-06 Rolls-Royce (1971) Limited Hollow cooled vane or blade for a gas turbine engine
US4064300A (en) * 1975-07-16 1977-12-20 Rolls-Royce Limited Laminated materials
US4086021A (en) * 1976-01-19 1978-04-25 Stal-Laval Turbin Ab Cooled guide vane
US4105364A (en) * 1975-12-20 1978-08-08 Rolls-Royce Limited Vane for a gas turbine engine having means for impingement cooling thereof
US4118146A (en) * 1976-08-11 1978-10-03 United Technologies Corporation Coolable wall
US4315406A (en) * 1979-05-01 1982-02-16 Rolls-Royce Limited Perforate laminated material and combustion chambers made therefrom
FR2524059A1 (en) * 1982-03-26 1983-09-30 Mtu Muenchen Gmbh AXIAL TURBINE BLADE FOR GAS TURBINE DRIVE CONTROLS, ESPECIALLY COOLING OF AUBES
EP0203431A1 (en) * 1985-05-14 1986-12-03 General Electric Company Impingement cooled transition duct
US4859141A (en) * 1986-09-03 1989-08-22 Mtu-Motoren-Und Turbinen-Union Muenchen Gmbh Metallic hollow component with a metallic insert, especially turbine blade with cooling insert
US4946346A (en) * 1987-09-25 1990-08-07 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Gas turbine vane
US5030060A (en) * 1988-10-20 1991-07-09 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Method and apparatus for cooling high temperature ceramic turbine blade portions
US5203873A (en) * 1991-08-29 1993-04-20 General Electric Company Turbine blade impingement baffle
US5297937A (en) * 1991-08-23 1994-03-29 Mitsubishi Jukogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Hollow fan moving blade
US5328331A (en) * 1993-06-28 1994-07-12 General Electric Company Turbine airfoil with double shell outer wall
FR2712919A1 (en) * 1993-11-22 1995-06-02 Toshiba Kk Cooled turbine blade.
WO1995018916A1 (en) * 1994-01-05 1995-07-13 United Technologies Corporation Gas turbine airfoil
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