This specification is related to and incorporates herein by reference U.S. application Ser. No. 11/946,111, entitled “VORTEX AIR-OIL SEPARATOR SYSTEM”, and U.S. application Ser. No. 11,946,128, entitled “FREE VORTEX AIR-OIL SEPARATOR”, which were filed concurrently with this application.
This invention relates generally to gas turbine engines and more particularly to an air oil separator for recovering oil used to lubricate and cool the bearings of a gas turbine engine.
Gas turbine engines typically include a core having a compressor for compressing air entering the core, a combustor where fuel is mixed with the compressed air and then burned to create a high energy gas stream, and a high pressure turbine which extracts energy from the gas stream to drive the compressor. In aircraft turbofan engines, a low pressure turbine located downstream from the core extracts more energy from the gas stream for driving a fan. The fan usually provides the main propulsive thrust generated by the engine.
Bearings are used in the engine to accurately locate and rotatably mount rotors with respect to stators in the compressor and high and low pressure turbines of the engine. The bearings are enclosed in oil-wetted portions of the engine called sumps.
In order to prevent overheating of the bearings, lubricating oil and seals must be provided to prevent the hot air in the engine flowpath from reaching the bearing sumps, and lubricating oil flows must be sufficient to carry away heat generated internally by the bearings because of their high relative speed of rotation.
Oil consumption arises from the method used to seal the engine sumps. The sealing method makes it necessary for an air flow circuit to exist that flows into and out of the sumps. This flow ultimately contains oil that is unrecoverable unless adequately separated and delivered back to the sumps. In one particular configuration the forward engine sump is vented through the forward fan shaft and out of the engine through a center vent tube. Once the air/oil mixture exits the sump, it swirls, depositing oil on the inside of the fan shaft. Oil that is contained in the air/oil mixture is lost when it is unable to centrifuge back into the sump through the vent hole due to rapidly escaping vent air.
Some conventional designs allow for oil recovery by using weep holes, which are passages whose function is to provide a dedicated path for oil to re-enter the sump, integrated into the forward fan shaft design. In other conventional designs, the fan shaft has no dedicated weep holes, only vent holes. Some conventional designs use a weep plug in a rotating shaft that injects the air-oil mixture radially into a chamber for separating the oil and air, and routes the separated oil through a passage in the weep plug. The weep plug allows the air-oil mixture to radially enter a separator cavity through a central passage in the weep plug. As the air-oil mixture swirls down to a lower radius centrifugal forces drive the more massive oil particles back to the inside diameter of the shaft, while the air escapes through the vent exit. However, air-oil separation is very poor in these conventional designs in cases where the axial distances are short between the radial entrance locations and the air vent entrances. Due to the high radial momentum of the air-oil mixture entering the chamber through the vent holes or the weep plugs, and the short axial distance to the vent exit, the dwell time for vortex motion of the air-oil mixture is short. It has been found that without adequate dwell time for vortex motion, oil separation from the air-oil mixture will be poor.
It is desirable to have an air-oil separator system that reduces the radial momentum and increases tangential momentum of the air-oil mixture. It is desirable to have an air-oil separator which is effective in removing oil in engine systems which have sumps that are axially short. It is desirable to have a method to recover oil more efficiently in existing sump structures without modifying the existing hardware.
The above-mentioned need may be met by an air-oil separator comprising a first region having a mixture of air and oil, a second region wherein separation of at least some of the oil from the air-oil mixture occurs and at least one multi-directional injector plug located on a rotating component in flow communication with the first region and the second region, the multi-directional injector plug having a discharge head that is oriented such that at least a part of the air-oil mixture discharged therefrom has a component of velocity that is tangential to the direction of rotation of the rotating component.
The subject matter which is regarded as the invention is particularly pointed out and distinctly claimed in the concluding part of the specification. The invention, in accordance with preferred and exemplary embodiments, together with further objects and advantages thereof, is described in the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
Referring to the drawings wherein identical reference numerals denote the same elements throughout the various views,
The core 16 is effective for generating combustion gases. Pressurized air from the compressor 18 is mixed with fuel in the combustor 20 and ignited, thereby generating combustion gases. Some work is extracted from these gases by the high pressure turbine 22 which drives the compressor 18. The remainder of the combustion gases are discharged from the core 16 into a low pressure turbine 26.
An inner drive shaft 38 is mounted for rotation relative to the outer drive shaft 24 via rear bearings 32, differential bearings 40, and via suitable forward bearings 42 interconnected to the outer stationary casing 14. The inner drive shaft 38, in turn, rotatably drives a forward fan shaft 62, which in turn drives a forward fan rotor 44 and, in some cases, a booster rotor 45. Fan blades 48 and booster blades 54 are mounted to the fan rotor 44 and booster rotor 45 for rotation therewith.
Referring to
As shown in
Conventional circumferential labyrinth or carbon air and oil seals 64, 66 are provided adjacent to the forward bearings 42 and between the forward ends of the relatively rotating forward fan shaft 62 and the static outer annular structure 60 to seal the forward end of the bearing sump 58. Oil is pumped to the forward bearings 42 and therefore into the sump 58 through an oil supply conduit 68. Pressurized air 100 is injected to the air/oil seal 64 from a pressurized air cavity 57 which receives air from an air supply system, such as for example, the booster flow path, in order to prevent oil from leaking through the carbon seal 66.
A portion of the injected pressurized air 100 which enters the bearing sump 58 must be vented from the sump 58 in a controlled manner in order to maintain sump pressure at a proper balance. However, the pressurized air becomes mixed with particles of the oil in the sump 58. The air-oil mixture in the bearing sump 58 is shown as item 120 in
An exemplary embodiment of a system for reducing oil consumption in aircraft engines by separating oil from an air-oil mixture is shown in
In the separator cavity 78, the rotating air/oil mixture swirls down to lower radius as it flows axially towards the air vent. This vortex swirling 190 of the air-oil mixture results in high tangential velocities and centrifugal forces acting on the air and oil particles. These centrifugal forces drive the more massive oil particles radially out (shown as item 192 in
As discussed earlier, dwell time and tangential velocity are two important factors which determine the effectiveness of vortex separation of the oil particles from the air-oil mixture. The multi-directional injector plug 290 increases tangential velocity of the air-oil mixture entering the separator cavity 78 as well as the dwell time for tangential flow at larger radii as compared to a conventional vent hole design or one using a conventional radial plug. This is accomplished by turning the flow within the multi-directional injector plug 290 to impart a tangential component of velocity in the direction of shaft rotation as shown in
The increase in tangential velocity of the air-oil mixture flow results in a stronger vortex and higher centrifugal acceleration to separate the oil particles from the air/oil mixture in the separator cavity 78. Because the air is injected tangentially rather than radially, the air/oil mixture follows a much longer path before reaching the vortex separator exit and, therefore, the dwell time for the air/oil mixture is greater than that for conventional configurations. The new multi-directional injector plug 290 plug not only has the benefit of increasing centrifugal acceleration and dwell time but also reduces the initial inward radial momentum of the oil particles 78, thus facilitating the removal of oil particles prior to venting out.
An exemplary embodiment of the invention using multi-directional injector plugs 290 arranged circumferentially in a rotating shaft 62 is shown in
Referring now to
A pair of slots 222 are formed in opposite sides of the elongated portion 231. The slots 222 begin at the distal end 212 of the elongated portion 231 and extend partially down the length of the elongated section 231. The slots 222 divide the elongated section 231 into two prongs 224. Each of the prongs 224 has a pair of chamfered surfaces 220 formed at its distal end 212, on opposite sides of the prong 224. An annular protruding lip 226 extends from the distal end 212 of each of the prongs 224. Although the illustrated example shows two slots 222, it should be noted that three or more slots 222 could be formed in the elongated section 231, dividing it into three or more prongs 224. At least one weep passage 230 is formed in the outer surface 228 of the elongated section 231. The weep passages 230 are in the form of grooves having a generally semicircular cross-section, although other shapes may be used. The weep passages have an outlet 232 disposed at the distal end of the elongated section 231. The weep passages then extend axially towards the platform 204. The weep passages 230 intersect an annular groove 214 located between the elongated section 231 and the platform 204. The weep passages 230 are in flow communication with the groove 214. The platform 204 has several weep passages 240 located on the surface of the platform 204 near the first end 296 of the body 230. These weep passages 240 are in flow communication with the groove 214. These weep passages 230, 240 and the groove 214 facilitate the return of the oil separated from the air-oil mixture from the separator cavity 78.
The multi-directional injector plugs 290 has a discharge head 206 which has a bend portion 205. The discharge head bend portion 205 has an interior passage 208 through which the air-oil mixture flows prior to entering the separator cavity 78. The air-oil mixture 202 is discharged into the separator cavity 78 at the exit orifice 210. The discharge head interior passage 208 and the exit orifice 210 are suitably shaped to provide any desired orientation angles A, B and C. In the exemplary embodiment shown in
As described previously, the multi-directional injector plugs 290 introduces the air-oil mixture into the separator cavity at selected orientation angles A, B and C. It is important to ensure that during engine assembly, the multi-directional injector plugs 290 are assembled in the correct orientation. This is accomplished by providing a flat surface 286 on the side of the platform 204 as shown in
The multi-directional injector plugs 290 is manufactured from a material which is capable of withstanding the temperatures prevailing in the sump 58, which is approximately 149 Deg. C. (300 Deg. F.), and resisting attack from the engine lubricating oil. Also, because the fan shaft 62 may be a life-limited part whose characteristics must not be compromised, the multi-directional injector plugs 290 must be made of a material which will itself wear rather than cause wear of the fan shaft 62. Furthermore, the weight of the multi-directional injector plugs 290 is preferably minimized both to avoid extra weight in the engine 10 generally, and to preclude imbalance problems in the fan shaft 62. One suitable material is VESPEL polyimide, available from E.I. DuPont de Nemours and Company, Wilmington, Del. 19898 USA. Another suitable material is PEEK polyetheretherketone, which is available from Victrex USA Inc., 3 Caledon Court, Suite A, Greenville, S.C. 29615 USA. In general, any material that satisfies the requirements described above may be used, for example aluminum or other relatively soft metals may also be suitable materials. The multi-directional injector plugs 290 may be formed by any known method, for example injection molding, compression molding a near-net shape followed by machining, or by machining from a blank of material.
It has been found that in general that oil separation efficiency for vortex separators tends to increase with oil particle size, and may approach 100% for large oil particles of 15 microns or higher. However, it has been found using conventional computational fluid dynamic analyses that that embodiments described herein are highly efficient in separating oil particles smaller than 15 microns also. For example, in an aircraft engine under cruise conditions, it has been analytically found that for an oil particle size of 10 microns, the oil separation efficiency using the present invention is more than 95% where as the oil separation efficiency using conventional techniques is less than 20%.
While the invention has been described in terms of various specific embodiments, those skilled in the art will recognize that the invention can be practiced with modification within the spirit and scope of the claims.
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