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Transient Shutdown Cooling Simulation of a Gas Turbine Test Rig Configuration Under Ventilated Natural Convection
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Transient Shutdown Cooling Simulation of a Gas Turbine Test Rig Configuration Under Ventilated Natural Convection

Zixiang Sun, Dario Amirante, Chris Barnes, Nick Hills and Daniel Fahy
Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power-transactions of The Asme, Vol.147(3), 031011
03/2025

Abstract

Computational fluid dynamics, Cooling, Cylinders, Finite element analysis, Flow (Dynamics), Heat transfer, Natural convection, Radiation (Physics), Simulation, Temperature, Heat flux, Buoyancy, Transients (Dynamics), Gas turbines
A transient simulation of shutdown cooling for a gas turbine test rig configuration under ventilated natural convection has been successfully demonstrated using a coupled aerothermal approach. Large eddy simulation (LES) and finite element analysis (FEA) were employed for fluid domain computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and solid component thermal conduction simulation, respectively. Coupling between LES and FEA was achieved through a plugin communicator. The buoyancy-induced chimney effect under the axially ventilated natural convection is correctly reproduced. The hotter turbulent flow in the upper part of the annular path and the colder laminar-type air movement in the lower part of the annulus are appropriately captured. The heat transfer features in the annular passage are also faithfully replicated, with heat flux of the inner cylinder reaching its maximum and minimum at the bottom dead center (BDC) and the top dead center (TDC), respectively. Agreement with experimental measurements is good in terms of both temperature and heat flux, and the result of the transient simulation for the shutdown cooling is encouraging too. In addition, radiation is simulated in the FEA model based on the usual gray body assumptions and Lambert's law for the coupled computation. It has been shown that at the high power (HP) condition, the radiation for the inner cylinder is approximately 11% of its convective heat flux counterpart. The importance of radiation is thus clearly revealed even for the present rig test case with a scaled-down temperature setup.
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Author's Accepted Manuscript CC BY-NC V4.0 Open Access
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https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4066373View

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