The invention relates to a low pressure turbine element for an aircraft turbojet. More particularly, the invention is about a structure of a hooking means for a nozzle sector of a low pressure turbine. The invention also relates to the method for manufacturing such a structure.
A low pressure turbine includes several successive expansion stages. Each of these stages has a runner (rotor) and a fixer wheel (also referred to as a nozzle, a stator, or a grate).
The downstream hooking means 24 of a sector 16, are more particularly described, with reference to
The means 24 include two annular rims 28 and 30.
The rim 28 extends angled, towards the outside of the turbine and downstream (that is upwards and towards the right side of
The rim 30 here extends towards the outside, beyond the rim 28, and also downstream. The rim 30 includes a radial portion 30a and an axial portion 30b.
The radial portion 30a includes two upstream and downstream radial surfaces, respectively 38a and 38b.
The portion 30b extends as a cornice from the distal end of the portion 30a, transversely and downstream. The portion 30b includes two outer and inner annular surfaces, respectively 40a and 40b.
A recess 32 is provided on the ridge formed by the surfaces 38a and 40a. This recess 32 forms a housing for a slug secured on the casing and which acts as an anti-rotation stop for the nozzle sector 16.
A shoulder 34 is provided protruding from the surfaces 38b and 40b, facing the recess 32. The shoulder includes two end surfaces 42a and 42b, opposite each other and being each transverse to both surfaces 38b and 40b.
The shoulder 34 axially stretches up to an end surface 38c of the portion 30b. The shoulder 34 finally includes a lower surface 40c.
Alternatively, the shoulder 35 illustrated in
With reference to
The shoulder 34 is provided to cooperate with the projection 27 (
For an optimum cooperation between the sector 16 and the sealing sector 26, it is desirable to limit to a maximum the radius of curvature at the junctions between the faces 42a and 38b on the one hand, and between the faces 42a and 40b on the other hand.
Similarly, it is desirable to limit to a maximum the radius of curvature between the faces 42b and 38b, and between the faces 42b and 40b.
The desired radius of curvature is here ideally lower than 0.35 mm, in order to maximize among other things the shear contact surface between the nozzle 12 sector 16 and the sealing sector 26. However, the conventional tools of the milling cutter or grinding wheel type do not enable such a fine machining to be reached.
From a rough casting, certain surfaces of the rim 30 are machined by resurfacing (that is using a grinding wheel) and other surfaces by electrical discharge machining (EDM). More precisely, the surfaces 40a and 38c are processed by resurfacing, and the inner surfaces of the recess 32 as well as the surfaces 38b, 40b, 40c, 42a, and 42b are EDM machined.
Nevertheless, if the EDM machining enables the desired accuracy to be reached, this method creates a significant wear of the electrode ends which need to be very often reshaped in order to maintain the machining quality of this area, in particular of the inner ridges.
A further drawback of the present solution is that it requires a considerable volume of the material in which the shoulder is machined.
The present method therefore has considerable technical constraints and a high cost. The aim of the invention is to provide a simple to implement, efficient and inexpensive alternative to an anti-rotation shoulder such as described above.
The invention thus relates to a nozzle sector of an aircraft turbomachine, including an at least partially annular hooking member and a shoulder member, the hooking member having a projection radially extending towards the outside of the sector, a recess being provided through at least one part of the distal end of the projection, the recess accommodating, the shoulder member, the latter forming an anti-rotation stop for a surface of an axially adjacent sector.
Advantageously, the shoulder member can be mounted and secured in the recess before assembling the nozzle sector in the turbomachine, for example by welding, crimping, or soldering.
By providing a recess intended to accommodate a shoulder-forming insert on such a sector, machining can be simplified into a single method of the resurfacing or milling type, thus reducing the manufacturing cost and time of the piece. The radius of curvature between the contact surface of the shoulder and the surfaces which are transverse thereto can also be improved. The cost and the adjustment time of the electrodes imposed by the EDM are furthermore avoided without a performance loss.
Advantageously, the projection has a radial portion and an axial portion extending from a distal end of the radial portion, the recess being provided through at least one part of the axial portion.
In a particular embodiment of the invention, said adjacent sector is a sealing sector.
According to a particular feature of the invention, the shoulder member radially protrudes towards the inside of the distal end of the projection.
The shoulder member of the sector works in shear. Thus, an economical method of the welding, crimping, or soldering type is enough to provide the operating performance.
The invention also relates to a shoulder member for a nozzle sector of an aircraft turbo-machine such as described above, the shoulder member having a contact surface with a predetermined orientation, configured to form an anti-rotation stop for a corresponding surface of an adjacent sector and along a direction transverse to a longitudinal direction of the turbomachine.
Such a shoulder member is economical to manufacture. The inner ridges of an assembly between such a shoulder member and the accommodating sector can be advantageously obtained by grinding or milling with a radius of curvature near zero therefore much better than the presently used EDM method, which enables the functional contact surfaces between the shoulder and the transverse surfaces belonging to the nozzle sector to be increased.
According to an advantageous feature, the shoulder member includes a first part with a width substantially identical to the recess and a second part with a width greater than the first part.
Thus, the shoulder member can be used as a both economical and simple to manufacture alternative to the shoulder described in the preamble which is machined in a single piece with a nozzle sector, with the part having a lesser width being mounted in the recess and the widest part acting as a shoulder.
Advantageously, said contact surface is provided on the second part of the shoulder member.
The invention also relates to a method for manufacturing a nozzle sector of an aircraft turbomachine comprising the following steps:
The shoulder member is manufactured independently of the sector.
The step of machining the projection surface and the step of manufacturing said shoulder member can be performed without a particular order.
Advantageously, the above described manufacturing method, includes a step of machining a recess by resurfacing, grinding or milling, at least one part of the recess being configured to accommodate a stop-forming shoulder member for a surface of an adjacent sector.
Advantageously, the shoulder member is secured in the recess by welding, crimping, or soldering.
The invention finally relates to an aircraft turbomachine including a nozzle sector such as previously described.
The invention will be better understood and further characteristics, details, and advantages thereof will appear more clearly upon reading the following description, made by way of non-limiting example and with reference to the appended drawings, in which:
The sector 56 has downstream hooking means 64. These means 64 have two rims 68 and 70.
The rim 68 extends angled, towards the outside of the turbine and downstream (that is upwards and towards the right side of
The rim 70 includes a radial portion 70a and an axial portion 70b.
The radial portion 70a includes two upstream and downstream radial surfaces, respectively 78a (
The portion 70b extends as a cornice from the distal end of the portion 70a, transversely and downstream up to an end surface 78c. The portion 70b includes two outer and inner annular surfaces, respectively 80a and 80b. The radial thickness of the portion 70b between the surfaces 80a and 80b is here constant throughout the angular extent of the sector 56.
A recess 72 is provided across the axial portion 70b (
The recess 72 axially extends from the surface 78a up to the end surface 78c, that is it longitudinally passes throughout the axial portion 70b. The recess 72 further radially extends from the surface 80a up to a bottom surface 86a, which is here planar, over a height greater than the radial thickness of the portion 70b. The recess 72 also has two opposite side surfaces 88a and 88b which are here parallel.
A shoulder member, here the wedge 74, is provided to be mounted on the rim 70 (
The wedge 74 is here made in a single piece with a top part 74a and a bottom part 74b (respectively at the top and the bottom of
The top part 74a is provided to be mounted in the recess 72.
The top part 74a has here a height equal to the thickness of the axial portion 70b. Thus, when the wedge 74 is mounted on the rim 70, an upper surface 80c of the top part 74a is coextensive with the outer surface 80a, whereas an upper surface 80d of the bottom part 74b is flat against the inner surface 80b. Moreover, a T-shaped planar surface 78d, shared by the top and bottom parts 74a and 74b, is coextensive with the end surface 78c of the axial portion 70b, whereas a surface 78e of the bottom part 74b is flat against the surface 78b of the radial portion 70a (
The bottom part 74b of the wedge 74 laterally extends between two end surfaces 82a and 82b (
The wedge 74 itself has a recess 84 provided in the bottom part 74b (
A planar surface 86c here extends from the bottom surface 86b, tangentially thereto and angled up to the upper surface 80c. The surface 86b is here provided to be tangentially coextensive with the bottom surface 86a of the recess 72.
The recess 84 and the recess part 72 which is not obstructed by the wedge 74 form together a hollow having dimensions similar to the recess 32 shown in
The connection between the sector 56 and the wedge 74 does not have to be as robust as in the case of the shoulder 34 formed in a single piece with the sector 16. Indeed, the wedge 74 works in shear (and not in tension). Thus, the wedge 74 can be sealingly secured to the sector 56 by a connection of the crimping, soldering, or welding type or by any other method while ensuring the desired mechanism strength and the functions of the sector 16 described in the preamble.
Advantageously, and unlike the surfaces of the recess 32 which are EDM machined, the surfaces of the recess 72, as well as the downstream surface 78b of the rim 70 and the inner surface 80b of the axial portion 70b, can be machined before placing the wedge 74, by an economical means such as resurfacing.
It is also possible to form the outer surfaces of the wedge 74 by resurfacing, especially the surface 82a.
Manufacturing the sector 56 can thus include the following steps:
This method enables a better radius of curvature to be obtained at the junction between the surface 82a and both transverse surfaces 78b and 80b than in the method described in the preamble. In other words, the surface 82a is separately machined with a good flatness. The surface 82a is at the tip of the piece, that is connected to the adjacent surfaces of the wedge 74 by outer ridges, which are simpler to machine than inner ridges.
Mounting a wedge such as 74 on such a sector 56 of a low pressure nozzle enables the machining to be simplified, the costs thereof to be reduced, the radius of curvature between the contact surface 82a and the transverse surfaces to be improved, and the adjustment cost and time of the electrodes imposed by EDM to be avoided without a performance loss.
Advantageously, the casing 14 forms a rotationally blocking member of the sector 56, directly or through a non-represented slug, for example by contact on the surface 88a and/or the surface 88b, whereas the sector 56 forms a rotationally blocking member of the axially adjacent sector 26 through the wedge 74.
Thus, the reference rotationally blocking member of the sector 56 is different from the reference rotationally blocking member of the sector 26. This enables the sectors to be easily and rapidly mounted in the turbomachine.
Of course, without departing from the scope of the invention, modifications can be brought to the implementation form given as an example.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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13 51402 | Feb 2013 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FR2014/050342 | 2/19/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2014/128403 | 8/28/2014 | WO | A |
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