This invention relates to the position control of an actuator by means of an electrically controlled servo-valve.
A particular field of application of the invention is that of position control of actuators used in aeronautical engines, especially for metering fuel or for adjusting variable setting angle guide vanes or nozzle flaps in gas turbine engines.
For these applications, the “freezing” of the position of a controlled element is requested in the event of electrical failure at the servo-valve control, to provide safety operation and so that the position occupied before the failure can be found again when it has been possible to rectify the failure.
Servo-valves with what is termed position memory in the event of a failure (or “fail freeze” servo-valves) are well known. In particular, it will be possible to refer to document FR 2 818 331. In this document, the servo-valve comprises a distributor which, in the event of an electrical control failure, comes into a position in which distributor use holes connected to actuator control chambers are closed. A drift from the actuator's “frozen” position is difficult to avoid, due to leaks of the hydraulic fluid contained in the control chambers.
The aim of the invention is to propose an actuator device controlled by an electrically controlled servo-valve, in which the position of the actuator can be frozen in the event of an electrical failure without substantial risk of drift.
This aim is achieved due to a device comprising:
Advantageously, the actuator intermediate chamber is connected to high pressure and, in its safety position, the distributor slide connects the distributor use holes to low pressure.
Thus, the frozen position of the actuator slide is not affected by leaks. Minor leaks of the seals do not change the pressure differential value which applies to the dynamic seals and thus the frictional force which “freezes” the actuator slide position.
The invention is especially applicable to a fuel flow control device in an aeronautical engine, the actuator forming a fuel metering device with an intermediate chamber connected to a high pressure fuel source and having an outlet hole, of which the cross section of flow is a function of the actuator slide position.
In such an application, the dynamic seals also offer the advantage of preventing leaks of the flow of metered fuel.
The invention will be understood better when the description given below, on a guiding but non-limiting basis, is read, with reference to the attached drawings in which:
An embodiment of the invention will be described with reference to
The servo-valve 10 is electrically controlled and comprises an electric motor element, for example an electric torque motor 12, a hydraulic distributor 20 and associated hydro-mechanical elements (hydraulic potentiometer and mechanical negative follow-up) which form the pilot control element 14 of the distributor 20.
The hydraulic distributor 20, a particular embodiment of which is described below, comprises a slide which can move with linear translational motion in a cylinder. The distributor 20 comprises holes connected to a double high pressure (HP) supply and to an outlet (or low pressure (LP) tank return), use outlets U1, U2 connected to the metering unit 50 and pilot control inlets P1, P2 opening into pilot control chambers situated at the ends of the distributor 20. The pilot control inlets P1, P2 are connected to the pilot control element 14, the pressures applied by the latter to the inlets P1, P2 acting in opposition to each other in order to control the displacement of the distributor slide. The hydraulic fluid used can be the fuel.
The fuel metering unit 50 comprises a slide 52 carrying two stages 54, 56 and being capable of sliding in a cylinder 60. The stages 54, 56 divide the internal volume of the cylinder 60 into two control chambers 62, 64 situated at the ends of the cylinder 60 and into an intermediate chamber 66, between the stages 54, 56. The control chambers 62, 64 are connected by control lines to the use outlets U1, U2.
The intermediate chamber 66 is connected via a supply hole 66a to the high pressure (HP) supply (high pressure fuel supply source) and via a use hole 66b to a fuel injection pipe. The degree of closing of the use hole 66b by the stage 56 determines the flow metered.
A servo-valve/fuel metering unit assembly as described above is known per se.
In the event of failure of servo-valve electrical excitation, the hydraulic distributor slide comes into a position in which the same pressure, in the present case low pressure, is available at use outlets U1 and U2. Each stage 54, 56 of the metering unit 50 is then subjected, on one side to low pressure and, on the other side, to high pressure.
Sealing between the stages 54, 56 and the cylinder 60 is carried out by means of dynamic seals producing a frictional force between stage and cylinder, depending on the difference between the pressures exerted on the two sides of each one of the stages. Thus, in the event of failure of servo-valve electrical excitation, this difference in pressure is at the maximum (difference between HP and LP), so the frictional force is also at the maximum. The position of the slide 52 at the time of the failure can therefore be preserved without the risk of substantial drift, so that the fuel flow rate is frozen at its value at the moment of the failure.
With the use of dynamic seals, it is also possible to improve the sealing between the stages 54, 56 and the cylinder 60 in normal operation of the metering unit, reducing the requirements of tolerances on the dimensions.
An example of variation of the flow rate of fuel metered as a function of the intensity of an excitation current of the electric motor element 12 is shown in
The operation points A, B, C, D, E and F correspond to the following respectively: the maximum flow rate (A), the stationary rate (B), the limits of a minimum flow rate range (C-D) and the limits (E-F) of the position “freeze” (“fail freeze”) range, when the intensity of the excitation current becomes too low or nil.
In position A, the slide 22 is at a first end of its stroke in the cylinder 40, the positive difference between the pressures applying in the pilot control chambers 31, 32 at the ends of the cylinder being at the maximum. The pilot control chambers 31, 32 are defined by the ends of the cylinder 40 and of the respective stages 23, 24 carried by the slide 22. The use outlet U2 (which here comprises two separate bores formed in the wall of the cylinder 40) communicates with low pressure LP via a LP chamber 33 which is situated between the stage 23 and a stage 25 and in which the outlet opens. The use outlet U1 communicates with high pressure HP via the pilot control chamber 31.
In position B, the slide 22 closes the use outlet U1 with the stage 23 and the two bores forming the use outlet U2 with the stage 25 and a stage 26.
In positions C and D, the slide 22 puts the use outlet U2 in communication with high pressure via a HP chamber 35 situated between the stages 24 and 26, whereas the use outlet 31 opens in LP chamber 33.
In positions E and F, the slide 22 puts the LP chamber 33 in communication with the use outlet U1 and with the use outlet U2 via a passage 29 formed in the slide valve 22 and connecting the LP chamber 33 to a chamber 34 situated between the stages 25 and 26. In position F, the slide 22 is at the other end of its stroke in the cylinder 40.
Of course, the operation profile in
The invention is, of course, applicable to hydraulic actuators other than fuel metering units for aeronautical engines, as the actuator position can be “frozen” by application, in two control chambers of the actuator, of a pressure (LP or HP) opposed to that applying in an intermediate chamber with sealing by dynamic seals between the intermediate chamber and each of the control chambers.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
07 53960 | Mar 2007 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3034483 | Rasmussen | May 1962 | A |
3081787 | Meulendyk | Mar 1963 | A |
3234968 | Frantz | Feb 1966 | A |
3282283 | Takeda | Nov 1966 | A |
3596560 | Butterworth | Aug 1971 | A |
3910314 | Nicholson | Oct 1975 | A |
3922955 | Kast | Dec 1975 | A |
4227443 | Toot | Oct 1980 | A |
4827981 | Livecchi et al. | May 1989 | A |
5156189 | Tranovich | Oct 1992 | A |
5477878 | Hashida et al. | Dec 1995 | A |
6640833 | Brocard et al. | Nov 2003 | B2 |
20070023093 | Shelby et al. | Feb 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2 818 331 | Jun 2002 | FR |
1 532 725 | Nov 1978 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20080230127 A1 | Sep 2008 | US |