Reducing Low-Pressure Turbine Shroud Leakage Loss by Optimizing Leakage-Mainstream Interaction

Verfasst von

Josué-Inocente Camarero Pueyo, Eike Konrad Helmsen, Marcel Oettinger, Stefan Klinkl, Haris Junghans, Kacper Palkus, Lars Carsten Wein

Abstract

In turbomachinery, mixing in the blade tip region between tip leakage and mainstream flow leads to irreversible entropy production, which is detrimental to efficiency. Despite extensive efforts to reduce leakage flows, the mixing process remains a significant source of performance loss, even at small mass flowrates. Introducing vane bleed holes (VBHs) into existing machines offers a promising solution to reduce these losses. Vane bleed holes operate by extracting the leakage flow from the rear section of the outer air seal cavity of the rotor blade and reintroducing it into the main gas path in the shroud region of the subsequent vane. This process significantly reduces mixing losses between leakage and mainstream flows and improves inflow conditions at the vane’s near-endwall region. The aim of this article is to present the numerical design and optimization of a vane bleed hole that will be experimentally integrated and tested in a 1.5-stage low-pressure turbine. Within the framework of this study, a VBH geometry is generated, parameterized, and optimized using a genetic algorithm to maximize isentropic efficiency. The study particularly focuses on the quantitative assessment of the loss-generating mechanisms using an entropy production-based decomposition of the losses, which is crucial for the development of future VBH improvement strategies.

Details

Organisationseinheit(en)
Institut für Turbomaschinen und Fluid-Dynamik
Turbine
Multiphysik turbulenter Strömungen
SFB 1463: Integrierte Entwurfs- und Betriebsmethodik für Offshore- Megastrukturen
Externe Organisation(en)
MTU Aero Engines AG
Typ
Artikel
Journal
Journal of Turbomachinery
Band
148
ISSN
0889-504X
Publikationsdatum
05.2026
Publikationsstatus
Veröffentlicht
Peer-reviewed
Ja
ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
Maschinenbau
Elektronische Version(en)
https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4070570 (Zugang: Offen )

Zitieren

Laden...