Abstract
The durability of gas turbine engines is strongly dependent on the component temperatures. For the combustor and turbine airfoils and endwalls, film cooling is used extensively to reduce component temperatures. Film cooling is a cooling method used in virtually all of today’s aircraft turbine engines and in many power-generation turbine engines and yet has very difficult phenomena to predict. The interaction of jets-in-crossflow, which is representative of film cooling, results in a shear layer that leads to mixing and a decay in the cooling performance along a surface. This interaction is highly dependent on the jet-to-crossflow mass and momentum flux ratios. Film-cooling performance is difficult to predict…
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Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Materials science
- Gas turbines
- Turbine
- Aerospace engineering
- Mechanical engineering
- Mechanics
- Nuclear engineering
- Engineering
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Affordable and clean energy
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