The disclosure relates generally to turbomachines and, more particularly, to arrangement of blades in turbomachines so as to reduce noise during operation.
Gas turbine engine manufacturers are faced with the problem of developing new ways of effectively reducing noise. One of the common noise sources includes noise generated by the turbomachinery within the gas turbine engine. It has long been recognized that in turbomachines one of the principal noise sources is the interaction between the wakes of upstream blades and downstream blades during operation. This wake interaction results in noise at the upstream blade passing frequency and at its harmonics, as well as broadband noise covering a wide spectrum of frequencies.
In one type of turbomachinery, noise results from a relative motion of adjacent sets of blades, such as of those found in compressors (including fans) and turbines. For example, a compressor comprises multiple bladed stages, each stage including a rotatable blade row and possibly a stationary blade row. Another type of turbomachinery blade system of particular interest are propeller blades in an open rotor type propeller system, including counter-rotatable propellers. Vortices produced by a forward propeller travel rearward, into the aft propeller where it “chops” each vortex, producing noise. One reason why the chopping causes noise is that the tip vortex changes the momentum field through which the propeller travels. The change causes the forces on the propeller blade to momentarily change, and noise results.
One of the commonly used methods to reduce the wake interaction noise in turbomachinery is to increase the axial spacing between adjacent sets of blades. This modification provides space for the wake to dissipate before reaching the downstream set of blades, resulting in less noise. However, increased spacing of blades in turbomachines increases axial length of the machine leading to more weight, aerodynamic performance losses, and/or installation and space requirements.
Therefore, an improved means of reducing the wake interaction noise in turbomachinery is desirable.
In accordance with one exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure, an apparatus is provided. The apparatus includes one or more upstream blades each comprising one or more geometric parameters and one or more downstream blades disposed downstream relative to the one or more upstream blades and each comprising one or more geometric parameters. The geometric parameters of each of the one or more upstream blades and the one or more downstream blades provide aeroelastic tailoring such that the one or more downstream blades includes a greater degree of effective clipping during a second condition than at a first condition.
In accordance with another exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure, An open rotor aircraft gas turbine engine assembly is provided. The open rotor aircraft gas turbine engine assembly includes an outer casing, a gas generator housed within the outer casing, a forward annular row of a first set of blades disposed radially outwardly of the outer casing and an aft annular row of a second set of blades disposed radially outwardly of the outer casing. The gas generator including a compressor section, a combustor section and a turbine section, wherein the compressor section, the combustor section and the turbine section are configured in a downstream axial flow relationship. Each blade of the first set of blades including one or more geometric parameters. Each blade of the second set of blades including one or more geometric parameters. The geometric parameters of each of the first set of blades and the second set of blades provide aeroelastic tailoring such that the second set of blades includes a greater degree of effective clipping during a second condition than at a first condition.
In accordance with another exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure, a method is provided. The method includes the steps of rotating a first set of blades relative to a second set of blades disposed downstream relative to the first set of blades and impacting a first wake generated by the first set of blades with the second set of blades such that a spectral content of wake excitation perceived, and an acoustic signal generated by the second set of blades is altered. Each of the first set of blades and the second set of blades include aeroelastic tailoring such that the second set of blades includes a greater degree of effective clipping during a first condition than at a second condition.
These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present disclosure will become better understood when the following detailed description is read with reference to the accompanying drawings in which like characters represent like parts throughout the drawings, wherein:
Embodiments of the present disclosure relate to an apparatus, an assembly including the apparatus, and a method for reduction of wake interaction noise and improved efficiency in a turbo machine. As used herein, the apparatus, assembly and method are applicable to various types of turbomachinery applications such as, but not limited to compressors, turboshafts, turbojets, turbo fans, turbo propulsion engines, aircraft engines, gas turbines, steam turbines, wind turbines and water/hydro turbines. In addition, as used herein, singular forms such as “a”, “an”, and “the” include plural referents unless the context clearly dictates otherwise.
As discussed in detail below, embodiments of the disclosure include aeroelastically tailored propellers or blades; an apparatus including said aeroelastically tailored propellers or blades and a method for reduction of wake interaction noise and improved efficiency in apparatus such as turbomachines or the like. As used herein, the propellers, assembly and method are applicable to various types of applications having blade-wake interactions resulting in unsteady pressure. Further, the term ‘unsteady pressure’ as used herein refers to air unsteady pressures and acoustics as well as blade surface unsteady pressure that are also referred to as ‘aeromechanical loading’. The embodiments of the present disclosure are beneficial by allowing the designer the freedom to both reduce acoustic energy emitted by the system.
Each of the forward and aft annular rows 14, 16 comprise first and second sets of blades or propellers 18, 20, each including a plurality of circumferentially spaced airfoils, or fan blades, described presently. The forward and aft annular rows 14, 16 are counter-rotatable which provides a higher disk loading and propulsive efficiency. It should be appreciated that the aft annular row 16 of the second set of blades 20 serves to remove the swirl on the circumferential component of air imparted by the forward annular row 14 of the first set of blades 18. As described below, the first and second sets of blades 18, 20 in the forward and aft annular rows 14, 16 are aeroelastic tailored as described herein, to reduce fan noise emanating from the open rotor aircraft gas turbine engine assembly 10.
The nacelle 22 further includes a spacer fairing 30 disposed between the forward and aft fairings 24, 26 and a forward nacelle 32 disposed radially outwardly of and surrounding a gas generator 34, further described in
The open rotor aircraft gas turbine engine assembly 10 illustrated in
Referring to
As illustrated in
As previously indicated, a dominant source of open rotor noise and aeromechanical loading is the interaction of the wakes from upstream blades (e.g., pylon, upstream fan or wing) on the downstream bladerows (e.g., downstream stators, counter-rotatable fan or wing) moving relative to each other. As is well understood, the wake is defined as the region of reduced momentum behind an airfoil evidenced by the aerodynamic drag of the blade. The unsteady interaction noise sources contributing to community noise (particularly at takeoff) are often dominated by the upstream rotor, or blade tip vortices. To reduce noise, clipping of the aft blades or vanes, may be accomplished to extend radially only a distance sufficient to reduce/avoid the influence of these vortices. In addition, to provide high fan efficiency at cruise conditions, it is preferred that the aft blades, or vanes, extend sufficiently in a radial direction to fully deswirl the flow behind the upstream blades or vanes. To accomplish this contradiction, passive tailoring of the blade designs and radial extension with aeroelastic considerations is proposed and described presently. In an embodiment, passively tailoring provides that an aft positioned blade naturally appears more clipped at takeoff conditions to reduce noise while appearing less clipped at cruise conditions to improve efficiency. In yet another embodiment, such as in a wing-mounted installation, aeroelastically tailoring a blade height may not allow the wing to miss the vortex, but a higher level of dihedral (described presently), such as in a short R2, would allow for a quieter wing interaction due to phase benefits.
As previously indicated, this disclosure provides for modification of the blades, or propellers, to reduce tip vortex interaction noise while improving aerodynamic performance. The modifications include aeroelastically tailoring geometric parameters including the design of the blade sweep, dihedral (e.g., proplets) and twist distribution so that the blade deflections, and more particularly blade tip deflections, under mechanical and aerodynamic loading can be favorably controlled by blade speed ratio, also referred to as RPM ratio, via pitch setting. In an embodiment, each blade in the first set of blades 18 and the second set of blades 20 may define any suitable aerodynamic profile. Thus, in some embodiments, each of the blades may define an airfoil shaped cross-section that is aeroelastically tailored. In an embodiment, aeroelastic tailoring of the blades may entail bending or twisting the blades in generally a chordwise direction “z” and/or in a generally spanwise direction “x”. As illustrated in
Referring now to
As illustrated in
In an embodiment, a closed pitch angle setting for forward blades 70 would translate a tip 78 axially forward, also effectively reducing clipping, the amount of which depends on the amount of sweep and twist in the blade design. Increased forward blade rotation speeds to aeroelastically deform the blade tip radially outward must account for this effect to attain the desired change to effective clipping. Conversely, reducing the rotation speed of the aft blades 80 to aeroelastically shorten the radial extent would translate their tip 84 axially downstream, also effectively reducing clipping. Consideration of blade pitch setting between a highly loaded condition 74, such as takeoff (closed) and a less loaded condition 72, such as cruise (open), may also have an effect. A flow stream tube contracts radially inward, with a steeper contraction angle at highly loaded fan settings and slower flight velocities as depicted by 83 relative to 82. When the blade 70 closes and the blade tip 78 is swept aft of the pitch axis, the tip 78 is positioned axially forward, compared to more open pitch settings such as that illustrated in
In addition to the previous described aeroelastic tailoring of the blades 70, 80, additional aeroelastic tailoring may be provided the first and second sets of blades 18, 20 such that the aft blades 80 naturally appear more clipped at takeoff while appearing less clipped (possibly optimal) at cruise. Referring now to
Dihedral may be used to improve noise and performance by controlling the relative distance between the aft blade tip 80 and the forward blade tip vortex streamline 82, by optimizing this distance to be minimal at cruise, yet maximum at takeoff. When optimized, the aft blade tip 84 is substantially below the vortex at takeoff yet aligned with the vortex at cruise. When a blade has substantial dihedral, centripetal loading will deflect the blade to “stand up”, or extend radially, as indicated by “R”, as the speed is increased. Depending on the speed ratio ratio between takeoff and cruise conditions (UTO/UCR), which for other reasons is typically desired to be >1, the forward blade 70 should maximize dihedral to be tallest at takeoff, or a highly loaded condition 74 making the aft blade 80 appear shorter, and in effect shifting the tip streamline 83 outboard, as best illustrated in
In the illustrated embodiment, a suction-side dihedral is aeroacoustically preferred (relative to pressure side dihedral) for each blade 70, 80, in the first and second sets of blades 18, 20, respectively. To achieve such aeroelastic tailoring, in an embodiment, a suction-side dihedral stacking is applied to each blade 70, 80, in the first and second sets of blades 18, 20. As best illustrated in
The various embodiments discussed herein for reduction of unsteady pressure in turbomachinery thus provide a convenient and efficient means to reduce aerodynamic noise and/or aeromechanical loading caused by interaction of wakes between sets of blades moving relative to each other. The technique provides a design for low cruise and high takeoff tip speeds whereby a first wake generated by a first set of blades impacts a second set of blades such that a spectral content of wake excitation perceived, and an acoustic signal generated by the second set of blades, is altered. In addition, performance is enhanced by reclaiming a portion of a downstream blade clipping performance penalty. For high fan efficiency at cruise, the aft blades are preferably of a sufficient length to fully deswirl the flow behind the upstream blades. Accordingly, provided herein is a means to achieve passive tailoring of the forward and aft blade designs with aeroelastic considerations such that the aft blade naturally appears more clipped at takeoff while appearing less clipped at cruise. The aeroelastic tailoring is accomplished such that reducing effective blade stiffness does not pose risk to the aeromechanical capability of the fan blades. The aeroelastic effects may be controlled by the degree of blade stiffness, sweep, dihedral, speed ratio between takeoff and cruise, and corresponding pitch settings. Reducing open rotor noise by this means provides further noise reduction and/or reduction in efficiency penalties associated with other noise designs and technologies that require performance compromises.
The concepts described above may also be employed to further reduce spacing between the forward and aft set of blades, thereby improving engine weight and fuel burn. For example, in an embodiment axially forward movement of a forward blade, such as forward blade 70, from a cruise pitch angle setting to a takeoff setting may be enhanced by a suction side dihedral. While this reduces effective clipping of an associated aft blade, such as aft blade 80, the increased curvature or arc-length of the wake shed from the forward blade (relative to a design where aeroelastic tailoring and blade stacking is not applied) is higher. Furthermore, the wakes have a longer axial gap to mix before impinging on the aft blade.
In the illustrated embodiments, the geometric parameters may be varied depending on the application. Furthermore, the skilled artisan will recognize the interchangeability of various features from different embodiments. For example, the first set of blades or second set of blades may include further geometric variations of at least one of a camber, a stagger, a chord, a blade thickness, and a trailing edge camber angle with respect to another. Similarly, the various features described, as well as other known equivalents for each feature, can be mixed and matched by one of ordinary skill in this art to construct additional systems and techniques in accordance with principles of this disclosure.
It is to be understood that not necessarily all such objects or advantages described above may be achieved in accordance with any particular embodiment. Thus, for example, those skilled in the art will recognize that the systems and techniques described herein may be embodied or carried out in a manner that achieves or improves one advantage or group of advantages as taught herein without necessarily achieving other objects or advantages as may be taught or suggested herein
While the technology has been described in detail in connection with only a limited number of embodiments, it should be readily understood that the specification is not limited to such disclosed embodiments. Rather, the technology can be modified to incorporate any number of variations, alterations, substitutions or equivalent arrangements not heretofore described, but which are commensurate with the spirit and scope of the claims. It is, therefore, to be understood that the appended claims are intended to cover all such modifications and changes as fall within the true spirit of the disclosure. Additionally, while various embodiments of the technology have been described, it is to be understood that aspects of the specification may include only some of the described embodiments. Accordingly, the specification is not to be seen as limited by the foregoing description, but is only limited by the scope of the appended claims.