Gas turbine engines operate by passing a volume of high energy gases through a plurality of stages of vanes and blades, each having an airfoil, in order to drive turbines to produce rotational shaft power. The shaft power is used to drive a compressor to provide compressed air to a combustion process to generate the high energy gases. Additionally, the shaft power is used to drive a generator for producing electricity. In order to produce gases having sufficient energy to drive the compressor or generator, it is necessary to combust the air at elevated temperatures and to compress the air to elevated pressures, which again increases the temperature. Thus, the vanes and blades are subjected to extremely high temperatures, often times exceeding the melting point of the alloys comprising the airfoils.
In order to maintain the airfoils at temperatures below their melting point it is necessary to, among other things, cool the airfoils with a supply of relatively cooler bypass air, typically bleed from the compressor. The bypass cooling air is directed into the blade or vane to provide impingement and film cooling of the airfoil. Specifically, the bypass air is passed into the interior of the airfoil to remove heat from the alloy, and subsequently discharged through cooling holes to pass over the outer surface of the airfoil to prevent the hot gases from contacting the vane or blade directly. Various cooling air patterns and systems have been developed to ensure sufficient cooling of the leading edges of blades and vanes.
Typically, each airfoil includes a plurality of interior cooling channels that extend through the airfoil and receive the cooling air. The cooling channels typically extend through the airfoil from the inner diameter end to the outer diameter end such that the air passes out of the airfoil. In other embodiments, a serpentine cooling channel winds axially through the airfoil. Cooling holes are placed along the leading edge, trailing edge, pressure side and suction side of the airfoil to direct the interior cooling air out to the exterior surface of the airfoil for film cooling. The leading edge is subject to particularly intensive heating due to the head-on impingement of high energy gases. The head-on impingement may result in stagnation of air at the leading edge, increasing the mixing out of cooling air from leading edge cooling holes. In order to improve cooling effectiveness at the leading edge, a trench has been positioned at the leading edge in various prior art designs, such as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,050,777 to Tabbita et al., which is assigned to United Technologies Corporation. The trench allows the cooling air to spread radially before mixing with the turbine gases and eventually spreading out over the outer surfaces of the airfoil. There is a continuing need to improve cooling of turbine airfoil leading edges to increase the temperature to which the airfoils can be exposed to increase the efficiency of the gas turbine engine.
The present invention is directed toward an airfoil. The airfoil comprises a wall, a cooling channel, a trench and a plurality of cooling holes. The wall has a leading edge, a trailing edge, a pressure side, a suction side, an outer diameter end and an inner diameter end to define an interior. The cooling channel extends radially through the interior of the wall between the pressure side and the suction side and along the leading edge. The trench extends radially along an exterior of the wall at the leading edge and is recessed axially into the leading edge to form a back wall. The back wall is contoured to include at least one undulation. The plurality of cooling holes extends through the back wall of the trench to connect the interior of the wall at the cooling channel to the exterior.
Fan 12 is enclosed at its outer diameter within fan case 23A. Likewise, the other engine components are correspondingly enclosed at their outer diameters within various engine casings, including LPC case 23B, HPC case 23C, HPT case 23D and LPT case 23E such that an air flow path is formed around centerline CL.
Inlet air A enters engine 10 and it is divided into streams of primary air AP and secondary air AS after it passes through fan 12. Fan 12 is rotated by low pressure turbine 22 through shaft 24 to accelerate secondary air AS (also known as bypass air) through exit guide vanes 26, thereby producing a major portion of the thrust output of engine 10. Shaft 24 is supported within engine 10 at ball bearing 25A, roller bearing 25B and roller bearing 25C. primary air AP (also known as gas path air) is directed first into low pressure compressor (LPC) 14 and then into high pressure compressor (HPC) 16. LPC 14 and HPC 16 work together to incrementally step up the pressure of primary air AP. HPC 16 is rotated by HPT 20 through shaft 28 to provide compressed air to combustor section 18. Shaft 28 is supported within engine 10 at ball bearing 25D and roller bearing 25E. The compressed air is delivered to combustors 18A and 18B, along with fuel through injectors 30A and 30B, such that a combustion process can be carried out to produce the high energy gases necessary to turn turbines 20 and 22. Primary air AP continues through gas turbine engine 10 whereby it is typically passed through an exhaust nozzle to further produce thrust.
HPT 20 and LPT 22 each include a circumferential array of blades extending radially from discs 31A and 31B connected to shafts 28 and 24, respectively. Similarly, HPT 20 and LPT 22 each include a circumferential array of vanes extending radially from HPT case 23D and LPT case 23E, respectively. Specifically, HPT 20 includes blades 32A and 32B and vane 34. Blades 32A and 32B and vane 34 include internal passages into which compressed air from, for example, LPC 14 is directed to providing cooling relative to the hot combustion gasses. Blades 32A include leading edge trenches having contoured cooling hole surfaces of the present invention to improves adherence of cooling air to leading edges of the blades before mixing with primary air A.
Typically, cooling air is directed into the radially inner surface of root 36 from, for example, HPC 16 (
Back wall 64 provides a base connecting side walls 62A and 62B such that trench 48 includes a total width W. As such, back wall 64, side wall 62A and side wall 62B form a single contoured surface through which cooling holes 46 extend in the embodiment shown. Trench 48 is centered on the stagnation line for conditions under which leading edge 42 is subject to the greatest heat. First side wall 62A and second side wall 62B are equally spaced from the stagnation line at those conditions such that back wall 64 is wide enough to envelop the stagnation line for any operating condition of engine 10. Trench 48 is not, however, always centered exactly on the stagnation line due to the variable nature of the stagnation line. In one embodiment, width W is selected to ensure trench 48 will always encompass the stagnation line during different operating states of engine 10. As mentioned above, trench 48 with contoured back wall 64 can also be positioned to envelop multiple columns of cooling holes extending radially along pressure side 50 and suction side 52. Each cooling hole of each column is positioned with respect to the contoured back wall to enhance attachment of cooling air from each hole to back wall 64.
Side walls 62A and 62B are recessed into airfoil 40 such that back wall 64 is a depth D away from stagnation point 66. Depth D of trench 48 is sufficiently deep to allow a recirculation zone of mixed gases to form as a buffer between cooling air AC and primary air AP at stagnation point 66. Cooling air AC from cooling channel 56 tends to flow straight out of cooling hole 46 into trench 48, away from back wall 64 and airfoil 40. Flow of primary air AP bends the trajectory of cooling air AC by transferring momentum to the cooling air. The transfer of momentum produces shear on the cooling air, leading to mixing with primary air AP and a reduction in thin film cooling effectiveness. To improve cooling effectiveness, it is desirable for cooling air AC to remain against airfoil 40 rather than to mix with primary air AP. In the present invention, back wall 64 is contoured to decrease premature mixing of the cooling air with primary air AP. Specifically, shaping of back wall 64 allows cooling air AC to remain attached to airfoil 40, thus passing behind the swirling mixture of primary air AP and cooling air AC.
First side wall 62A and second side wall 62B are shown in
Primary air AP impinges leading edge 42 and flows around pressure side 50 and suction side 52 of airfoil 40. Cooling air AC is introduced into trench 48 through cooling holes 46. Primary air AP pushes cooling air AC onto pressure side 50 and suction side 52 to form a buffer between airfoil 40 and primary air AP. Primary air AP and cooling air AC mix within trench 48 where they intersect near stagnation point 66 of the stagnation line (
As depicted in
The invention makes use of a contoured back wall of the trench configured in such a way as to place a convex curvature directly behind the exit of each of the coolant holes. The boundary layer of the coolant flow is stabilized by the convex curvature, by a principle known as the Coanda effect, causing the jet flow to follow the contour of this back wall and effectively bending the jet back towards the surface of the leading edge, confining it within the trench without the high sheer generated by mixing of the coolant flow with the hot gas path. The contoured back wall will reduce the mixing of the film, improving cooling performance and improving airfoil life, or reducing cooling flow.
While the invention has been described with reference to an exemplary embodiment(s), it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the invention without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiment(s) disclosed, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20130039777 A1 | Feb 2013 | US |