This paper presents the results of two test programmes using novel instrumentation to characterise the pressure and turbulent velocity fields in gas-turbine combustor exit flows. The probes are uncooled, therefore a fast-insertion traverse system is employed to prevent thermal degradation of the instrumentation in these severely hostile high-temperature environments. High-bandwidth ultra-miniature pressure transducers are used to measure unsteady total pressure, whilst a Pitot tube is employed to measure time-averaged total pressure. The probes are 4 mm in diameter with a measurement bandwidth of the order of 100 kHz. In the first test programme, the probes are used to characterise the streamwise turbulent velocity field approximately two axial chords downstream of an uncooled single-stage turbine in a turbojet engine. Established data reduction methods and calibration against a hot-wire are used to obtain turbulent velocity fluctuations from unsteady total pressure measurements. Comprehensive turbulence results are presented including time-histories, power spectra, intensities, and lengthscales obtained at four-engine conditions and at two radial and two circumferential measurement locations. In the second test programme the probes are demonstrated in an industrial combustor rig, featuring a can combustor with swirler nozzle and no dilution holes, at temperatures up to 1500 K. Static pressure fluctuations are obtained up to 100 kHz, and some typical combustor spectral features are identified.
This paper describes a new modular experimental facility that was purpose-built to investigate flow interactions between the combustor and first stage nozzle guide vanes of heavy duty power generation gas turbines with multiple can combustors. The first stage turbine nozzle guide vane is subjected to the highest thermal loads of all turbine components and therefore consumes a proportionally large amount of cooling air that contributes detrimentally to the stage and cycle efficiency. It has become necessary to devise novel cooling concepts that can substantially reduce the coolant air requirement but still allow the turbine to maintain its aerothermal performance. The present work aims to aid this objective by the design and commissioning of a high-speed linear cascade which consists of two can combustor transition ducts and four first stage nozzle guide vanes. This is a modular non-reactive air test platform with engine realistic geometries (gas path and near gas path), cooling system, and boundary conditions (inlet swirl, turbulence level and boundary layer). The paper presents the various design aspects of the high pressure blow down type facility, and the initial results from a wide range of aerodynamic and heat transfer measurements under highly engine realistic conditions.
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