This application claims priority to German Patent Application DE102009060051.5 filed Dec. 21, 2009, the entirety of which is incorporated by reference herein.
This invention relates to an arrangement for the discharge of oil-contaminated exhaust air separated from the lubricating oil de-aeration system of a gas-turbine engine and led to the atmosphere via a venting line.
In the bearing housings of gas-turbine engines, the lubricating oil mixes with sealing air which, as is generally known, is separated from the lubricating oil returned to the oil tank by a de-aeration system and discharged to the atmosphere via a venting line and a venting port issuing at the outside of the engine fairing (nacelle) or the fairing (pylon) of the engine mounting arrangement. However, the discharged air still contains oil particles which lead to considerable contamination of the fairing of the engine or the engine mounting arrangement on the aircraft fuselage, with this contamination being aggravated even more by adhering dirt and dust particles. Such contamination is aesthetically undesirable and, when burnt into the fairing by the high engine temperature, can only be removed by costly cleaning measures. The known proposals for the solution of this problem are aimed at discharging the oil-contaminated air (oil air) at a position as remote as possible from the surface of the fairing to avoid contact of the oil air with the surface of the fairing. The configuration of such air outlet openings, which must also be aerodynamically faired because of the high in-flight air drag and necessitate the provision of a long venting line extending up to the outside of the fairing of the engine or the engine mounting arrangement, incurs high investment and an increase in weight.
In a broad aspect, the present invention provides an arrangement for discharging the air issuing from the lubricating oil de-aeration system of a gas-turbine engine by which oil contamination of the fairing of the engine or the engine mounting arrangement is avoided and also a saving in weight is achieved. In other words, the present invention, in essence, provides that the oil-particle contaminated exhaust air (oil air) from the lubricating oil de-aeration system issues via a venting line, which is substantially reduced in length, directly into an attenuation chamber essentially formed by the exhaust cone of the gas-turbine engine, and the exhaust air in the attenuation chamber is connected via a discharge tube to a Venturi nozzle arranged in the exhaust-gas flow of the gas-turbine engine and oriented in flow direction. The low static pressure at the narrowest part of the nozzle body, and thus in the discharge tube, and the pressure difference relative to the high-pressure exhaust air in the attenuation chamber effect that the exhaust air is drawn off the attenuation chamber, then entrained by the gas flow in the nozzle body and introduced into the exhaust-gas flow and distributed therein. Thus, oil particles are prevented from depositing on any of the engine parts, in particular on visible surfaces. The reduced length of the venting line also enables a saving in weight to be achieved.
In development of the present invention, the attenuation chamber is confined by the exhaust cone as well as an exhaust-gas stator casing of the engine and a rear wall. The venting line directly issues into the attenuation chamber via an opening provided in the rear wall.
The nozzle body of the Venturi nozzle is positioned remotely from the inner surfaces of the exhaust flow duct. The position of the nozzle body is settable via the respective length of the discharge tube.
Preferably, the nozzle body is positioned centrally in the exhaust-gas flow so that the oil-contaminated exhaust air is completely absorbed in the exhaust-gas flow and discharged with the latter.
In further development of the present invention, a portion of the discharge tube issuing into the attenuation chamber conically widens towards the tube opening to ensure good suction effect.
The present invention is more fully described in light of the accompanying drawings, showing a preferred embodiment. In the drawings,
The turbofan engine 1 shown in
In operation of the turbofan engine 1, part of the exhaust-gas flow passes around and through the Venturi nozzle 14. The static pressure at the narrowest part 16 of the nozzle body 15 decreases according to the Venturi nozzle principle, with the pressure in the discharge tube 17 connected to the narrowest part 16 of the nozzle body 15 simultaneously decreasing, while the pressure of the oil air in the attenuation chamber 12 is at a significantly higher level. The pressure difference accordingly effects that the oil air is drawn off the attenuation chamber 12 and initially mixed with the exhaust-gas flow in the nozzle body 15, and finally with the entire exhaust-gas flow, to be then discharged to the atmosphere without contacting any engine parts.
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10 2009 060 051 | Dec 2009 | DE | national |
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20110146223 A1 | Jun 2011 | US |