The technology described herein relates generally to cooling circuits for airfoils, and more particularly to such cooling circuits for use in turbine airfoils for gas turbine engines.
Many gas turbine engine assemblies include cooling circuits in rotating airfoils, such as high pressure or low pressure turbine blades, and/or non-rotating stationary airfoils, such as high pressure or low pressure turbine nozzles.
During operation, comparatively cooler air is supplied to the airfoil in order to maintain the temperature of the material from which the airfoil is made below the melting or softening temperature. Typically airfoils are cooled either by an impingement circuit, where the post impingement air flows axially out of the airfoil, or a serpentine circuit where the flow direction is primarily radial and cools by means of forced convection.
Most production turbine airfoil cooling circuits have a “serpentine” design consisting of a series of single or multi-pass radial cooling channels. Such circuits often have weak control of “hot spots” caused by variation in external hot-gas temperature and heat transfer coefficients. Newer, near-wall cooling designs give somewhat better control, but significant thermal gradients and hot spots often still occur. Generally, cooling features such as turbulators, pins, or bumps have been employed in local areas to reduce peak temperatures, but success has been limited. Much smaller near-wall cavities, or micro-channels, could be used, but these present a considerable fabrication challenge for cores and castings.
There remains a need for improved cooling circuits which will provide cooling to an airfoil in a robust and economical fashion.
An airfoil cooling circuit for a gas turbine engine having at least one internal cavity with a lobed cross-sectional shape.
Fan assembly 12 includes an array of fan blades 24 extending radially outward from a rotor disk 26, the forward portion of which is enclosed by a streamlined spinner 25. Gas turbine engine assembly 10 has an intake side 28 and an exhaust side 30. Fan assembly 12, booster 22, and turbine 20 are coupled together by a first rotor shaft 21, and compressor 14 and turbine 18 are coupled together by a second rotor shaft 22.
In operation, air flows through fan assembly 12 and a first portion 50 of the airflow is channeled through booster 32. The compressed air that is discharged from booster 32 is channeled through compressor 14 wherein the airflow is further compressed and delivered to combustor 16. Hot products of combustion (not shown in
A second portion 52 of the airflow discharged from fan assembly 12 is channeled through a bypass duct 40 to bypass a portion of the airflow from fan assembly 12 around core gas turbine engine 13. More specifically, bypass duct 40 extends between a fan casing or shroud 36 and splitter 34. Accordingly, a first portion 50 of the airflow from fan assembly 12 is channeled through booster 32 and then into compressor 14 as described above, and a second portion 52 of the airflow from fan assembly 12 is channeled through bypass duct 40 to provide thrust for an aircraft, for example. Splitter 34 divides the incoming airflow into first and second portions 50 and 52, respectively. Gas turbine engine assembly 10 also includes a fan frame assembly 60 to provide structural support for fan assembly 12 and is also utilized to couple fan assembly 12 to core gas turbine engine 13.
Fan frame assembly 60 includes a plurality of outlet guide vanes 70 that extend substantially radially between a radially outer mounting flange and a radially inner mounting flange and are circumferentially-spaced within bypass duct 40. Fan frame assembly 60 may also include a plurality of struts that are coupled between a radially outer mounting flange and a radially inner mounting flange. In one embodiment, fan frame assembly 60 is fabricated in arcuate segments in which flanges are coupled to outlet guide vanes 70 and struts. In one embodiment, outlet guide vanes and struts are coupled coaxially within bypass duct 40. Optionally, outlet guide vanes 70 may be coupled downstream from struts within bypass duct 40.
Fan frame assembly 60 is one of various frame and support assemblies of gas turbine engine assembly 10 that are used to facilitate maintaining an orientation of various components within gas turbine engine assembly 10. More specifically, such frame and support assemblies interconnect stationary components and provide rotor bearing supports. Fan frame assembly 60 is coupled downstream from fan assembly 12 within bypass duct 40 such that outlet guide vanes 70 and struts are circumferentially-spaced around the outlet of fan assembly 12 and extend across the airflow path discharged from fan assembly 12.
As shown in
A possible commercial advantage of cooling circuits described herein would be lower airfoil cooling flow which would improve engine specific fuel consumption. A technical advantage of this design would be the decreased temperature gradient across the airfoil which would yield lower engine operating airfoil stress and improve part life and durability.
Next-generation turbine blades often utilize near-wall cooling cavities. The near-wall cooling cavities are designed with lobed shapes as shown in
The super-shape equation has found applications in a number of engineering fields. This equation, and functional modification thereto for specific geometrics, was used for the first time in the turbine cooling field to produce many cavity unique, customized cavity shapes in the course of parametric design studies on shaped near-wall cooling cavities, and it is a novel and very useful feature of this design approach. The shaped cavities can provide greater coverage over the hot wall, as well as enhanced internal heat transfer, versus a simple, conventional racetrack shape such as shown in
One approach to designing and implementing shaped cooling cavities is as follows: 1. A castable, shaped near-wall cavity, possibly with radial area variation, is constructed having a single or multi-lobe shape of a form design to minimize peak temperatures and thermal gradients in the turbine airfoil wall. These lobe shapes are arbitrary in width and penetration into the cavity, and may have any producible form. A highly useful method of producing such shapes in the “super-shape” equation. 2. The lobe geometry controls the radial flow and internal heat transfer coefficient variation along the cavity. 3. The penetrating lobes also act as high-efficiency fins, and with customized shape geometries, enable an axial and radial smoothing of the airfoil wall temperature variation and a reduction in wall peak temperatures. 4. The shapes cavities can also produce favorable vortex flows in the plane of the cavity, thereby creating more desirable heat transfer coefficient distributions around the cavity perimeter.
Shaped cavities described here allow significant improvements in the ability to customize turbine wall heat transfer to minimize the effects of hot spots and thermal gradients. Shaped cavities can be cast, and cores produced, by disposable core die (DCD) methods and apparatus such as those known in the art. Lobed shapes also provide added stiffness to cavity cores. Reductions exceeding 40 degrees F. have been calculated for typical designs.
The technical advantages are: (1) potentially reduced turbine cooling flow, which produces better engine performance and lower SCF, (2) lower peak airfoil wall metal temperatures and wall thermal gradients, (3) reduced wall thermal stress, and (4) the designs can be made castable by either conventional or the newer DCD core fabrication processes.
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.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2013/042837 | 5/28/2013 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61653681 | May 2012 | US |