The field of the present disclosure relates generally to rotary machines, and more particularly to airfoils used with rotary machines.
At least some known rotary machines such as, gas turbine engines used for aircraft propulsion, include a plurality of rotating blades that channel air downstream. Each blade has a cross-sectional shape that defines an airfoil section. Conventional single rotation turboprop engines provide high efficiency at low cruise speeds (flight Mach number up to about 0.7), although some single rotation turboprop engines have been considered for higher cruise speeds. Higher cruise speeds (Mach 0.7 to 0.9) are typically achieved using a ducted turbofan engine to produce the relatively high thrust required.
Unducted, counter-rotating propeller engines, frequently referred to as the unducted fan (UDF®), or open-rotor, have been developed to deliver the high thrust required for high cruise speeds with higher efficiency than ducted turbofans. Counter-rotating propellers for high cruise speed efficiency have strong acoustic interactions (i.e., noise generation) at low flight speed, such as takeoff, typically at flight Mach number of 0.3 or less. Counter-rotating propellers designed for quiet operation at low flight speed tend to be inefficient at high cruise speeds. Thus, a need exists for both single rotation and counter-rotating propellers that have both good efficiency at high flight speed and low noise at low flight speed.
To operate at a wide range of operating conditions, propeller blades are typically attached to rotating hubs such that each blade setting angle, or pitch, can be adjusted during flight. Although this adjustment of blade pitch angle affects performance, because the blades are essentially rigid, the airfoil sections that comprise a blade are shaped in a specific way to improve both efficiency at high speed flight and reduce noise at low speed flight. Thus, a need exists for propellers that have both high efficiency and low noise at high speed.
In one aspect, an airfoil section of a propeller for a propulsion device includes a pressure surface and a suction surface, the pressure surface and suction surface intersecting at a leading edge and a trailing edge. The airfoil section has a meanline defined midway between the pressure surface and the suction surface and a meanline angle is defined as an angle between a tangent to the meanline and a centerline of the propeller. The blade has a meanline curvature defined as the slope of a meanline angle with respect to chord fraction along the meanline, and at least a portion of the meanline has meanline curvature that increases from between approximately 0.1 chord fraction progressing toward the leading edge and at least another portion of the meanline has meanline curvature decreases from between approximately 0.1 chord fraction progressing toward the leading edge.
In another aspect, an airfoil section for a propeller for a propulsion device includes a pressure surface and a suction surface, the pressure surface and suction surface intersecting at a leading edge and a trailing edge. The airfoil section has a meanline defined midway between the pressure surface and the suction surface and a meanline angle is defined as an angle between a tangent to the meanline and a centerline of the propeller. The airfoil section has a meanline curvature defined as a slope of the meanline angle with respect to chord fraction along the meanline, and a thickness of the airfoil section is defined as a distance measured normal to the meanline between the pressure surface and the suction surface, and wherein the airfoil has a maximum thickness located between about 0.15 and about 0.25 chord fraction.
In yet another aspect, an open rotor propulsion device includes a plurality of propeller blades, each of the propeller blades having at least one airfoil section comprising a pressure surface and a suction surface. The pressure surface and suction surface intersect at a leading edge and a trailing edge. The at least one airfoil section has a meanline defined midway between the pressure surface and the suction surface. A meanline angle is defined as an angle between a tangent to the meanline and a centerline of the propeller blade, and the meanline has a meanline curvature defined as the slope of a meanline angle with respect to chord fraction along the meanline. The at least one airfoil section meets at least one of conditions (A) and (B), wherein: (A) is at least a portion of the meanline has meanline curvature that increases from between approximately 0.1 chord fraction progressing toward the leading edge and at least another portion of the meanline has meanline curvature that decreases from between approximately 0.1 chord fraction progressing toward the leading edge; and (B) is a thickness of the airfoil is defined as a distance measured normal to the meanline between the pressure surface and the suction surface, and wherein the airfoil has a maximum thickness ratio located between about 0.15 to about 0.25 chord fraction, and the thickness ratio is 0.8 or greater at approximately 0.1 chord fraction.
In the exemplary embodiment, counter-rotating propeller engine 110 includes an engine cowling 114 which houses a power generating rotary machine (not shown). The rotary machine is coupled to a first set of rotor blades 116 and a second set of rotor blades 118. In operation, first set of rotor blades 116 and second set of rotor blades 118 are in counter-rotation. First set of rotor blades 116 rotates about hub 120 and second set of rotor blades rotates about a second hub 122, which are arranged co-axially with centerline 112. Each of first set of rotor blades 116 and second set of rotor blades 118 include a plurality of circumferentially spaced rotor blades 124, 126.
For a rotating propeller blade, a surface of the blade on an advancing side thereof, due to rotation, is referred to as the pressure surface. A surface on the retreating side of the blade, due to rotation, is called a suction surface. The leading edge of a propeller blade is used herein to refer to a three-dimensional curve at which the suction surface and pressure surface meet on an upstream edge of the blade, based on the flight direction. A trailing edge refers to an intersection of the same suction surface and pressure surface on the downstream edge of the blade. The mean surface is used herein to refer to the imaginary surface connecting the leading edge to trailing edge, which lies midway between the pressure surface and suction surface.
In the exemplary embodiment, an airfoil section of blade 124 has a meanline angle 139, which refers to the angle between the tangent to meanline 130 and centerline 112. Meanline angle 139 can be measured at any location along meanline 130, and is illustrated in
As used herein, camber is defined as a change in meanline angle 139 between any two points along meanline 130. Curvature of meanline 130 is calculated as the derivative, or slope, of meanline angle 139 with respect to chord fraction along meanline 130. Typically, and as used herein, for a propeller airfoil section in which the meanline angle generally decreases from leading edge to trailing edge, camber is expressed as the meanline angle change from one specified point along the meanline to another specified point closer to the leading edge (i.e., positive camber is where the meanline angle increases progressing toward the leading edge). Similarly, curvature is considered positive for an increasing meanline angle in a direction toward the leading edge, although the slope of the meanline angle distribution is mathematically negative for positive curvature.
In one embodiment, the above described region 147, having an increase followed by a decrease in slope of meanline angle distribution 148 as compared to meanline angle distribution 146, is accompanied by a modification to the thickness distribution along meanline 130 of an airfoil section within blade 124 that shifts maximum thickness location 137 forward (toward leading edge 131) from approximately 0.4 chord fraction to approximately 0.2 chord fraction. In the exemplary embodiment, additional thickness is also added to an airfoil section within blade 124 from approximately 0.0 to approximately 0.15 chord fraction, so that suction surface 132 coincides closely to a suction surface of a conventional low noise airfoil section and the thickness ratio greater than 0.8 at 0.1 chord fraction. The resulting pressure surface 134 is thus farther from suction surface 132 than for a conventional low noise airfoil section, thereby increasing a radius of curvature for the airflow around pressure surface 134 near leading edge 131, as compared to a conventional airfoil section, to reduce airflow separation and loss of efficiency in high speed flight.
In one embodiment, the oscillation in curvature (i.e., the curvature distribution 168 increases then sharply decreases from about 0.1 chord fraction to the leading edge) occurs at least once between 0.1 and about 0.0 chord fraction of blade 124 and is accompanied by thickness distribution that maintains suction surface 132 to be suitable for a low noise airfoil. In one embodiment, the curvature increase and decrease are each about 10 degrees per unit chord in magnitude or greater, and each occurs over less than approximately 0.05 chord fraction. However, other curvature and thickness distributions along the meanline may be used within the scope of the present disclosure.
This written description uses examples to disclose the invention, including the best mode, and also to enable any person skilled in the art to practice the invention, including making and using any devices or systems and performing any incorporated methods. The patentable scope of the invention is defined by the claims, and may include other examples that occur to those skilled in the art. Such other examples are intended to be within the scope of the claims if they have structural elements that do not differ from the literal language of the claims, or if they include equivalent structural elements with insubstantial differences from the literal languages of the claims.
This application claims priority to provisional application No. 61/605,041, filed Feb. 29, 2012, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
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Entry |
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Office Action issued in connection with corresponding CN Application No. 201310063247.3 on Nov. 19, 2015. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130224031 A1 | Aug 2013 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61605041 | Feb 2012 | US |