1. Technical Field
The present disclosure relates to an axial flow device which is used as a fan or an axial flow compressor and on which casing treatment has been performed and to a jet engine.
2. Description of the Related Art
The axial flow device is generally known as a device that is used as the fan or the axial flow compressor and constitutes part of a turbine engine such as the jet engine. The axial flow device includes at least one stage of a compressor that has a rotor blade row including a plurality of rotor blades and rotating centering on a central axis, and a stator vane row provided in the rear of the rotor blade row and including a plurality of stator vanes. The fan is provided at the forefront of the engine and sucks the outside air. The axial flow compressor is installed between the fan and a combustion chamber, compresses gas that has been taken in from the fan while decelerating it and thereafter supplies it into the combustion chamber.
In a case where the fan and the axial flow compressor are of a multistage system that the rotor blade row and the stator vane row are alternately arrayed, a speed, a pressure and a temperature of the gas change every time it passes through each stage. On the other hand, in a steady operation, each rotor blade row rotates with a predetermined number of rotations. Accordingly, in a relation between a flow rate and a pressure ratio of the gas, a range (a so-called operating range) that all stages work efficiently is narrow. In a case where operating states of the fan and the axial flow compressor have deviated from this operating range, a surge (a stall) is prone to occur.
It is conceived to expand a margin (in the following, a surge margin) from a design point to a stall point in order to prevent this stall from occurring. JP 2009-236069 A (Patent Literature 1), U.S. Pat. No. 7,811,049 A (Patent Literature 2), U.S. Pat. No. 5,607,284 A (Patent Literature 3), and U.S. Pat. No. 8,066,471 A (Patent Literature 4) propose, as a technology of promoting expansion of this surge margin, so-called casing treatment that forms a groove or a flow path in an inner surface of a casing that houses the rotor blade row and the stator vane row.
As indicated in Patent Literatures 1 to 4, it is possible to expand the surge margin by performing the casing treatment on the inner surface of the casing. Expansion of the surge margin is always demanded with development of the turbine engine. On the other hand, as described also in Patent Literature 1, although conventional casing treatment expands the surge margin, there was a problem that it reduces efficiency inversely.
The present disclosure has been made in view of such circumstances. That is, the present disclosure aims to provide an axial flow device on which the casing treatment that suppresses a reduction in efficiency and can improve the stall margin has been performed, and a jet engine.
According to a first aspect of the present disclosure, there is provided an axial flow device that is used as a fan or an axial flow compressor, comprising: at least one stage of a compressor including a rotor blade row and a stator vane row; a tubular casing housing the compressor; and an operating range expansion unit having a suction port that opens into a region corresponding to the rotor blade row in an inner surface of the casing, a blow-out port that opens anterior to the rotor blade row in the inner surface of the casing, and a hollow section that is formed inside the casing and communicates the suction port with the blow-out port, wherein a flow path in the blow-out port is inclined reversely to a rotation direction of the rotor blade row relative to the radially inward side.
The axial flow device may further include a plurality of fins that is installed at intervals in a circumferential direction in the blow-out port and constitutes the flow path of the blow-out port.
The suction port may be provided at a position crossing a shock wave that is generated when the rotor blade row rotates at a design point in the inner surface of the casing.
The compressor may be provided in a plurality of stages and the operating range expansion unit may be provided for the rotor blade row in at least one stage of the compressor in the plurality of stages of the compressors.
In addition, a second aspect of the present disclosure is a jet engine that includes the axial flow device relating to the first aspect.
According to the present disclosure, there can be provided the axial flow device on which the casing treatment that suppresses the reduction in efficiency and can improve the stall margin has been performed.
In the following, an axial flow device relating to an embodiment of the present disclosure will be described on the basis of the appended drawings. Incidentally, in the respective drawings, the same numerals are assigned to common parts and duplicated description is omitted. In the respective drawings, the left side (the left) is defined as the front side (the front) or the upstream side of a main stream S (see
The axial flow device of the present embodiment is used as a fan and an axial flow compressor and constitutes part of a turbofan engine that is one of gas turbine engines. However, the engine that includes the axial flow device of the present embodiment is not limited to the turbofan engine and is also applicable to jet engines such as a turbojet engine, a turboprop engine, a turboshaft engine, and a turbo-ram jet engine. In addition, also application of the gas turbine engine is not limited to use for air crafts. It is also applicable to, for example, gas turbine engines for ships and for power generation. In the following, the axial flow compressor will be simply referred to as a compressor and the turbofan engine will be simply referred to as an engine for the convenience of description.
The fan 2 and the compressor 3 of the present embodiment will be described. Configurations of the fan 2 and the compressor 3 will be shown by use of
The operating range expansion unit 40 has the suction port 41 and the blow-out port 42 that open in the inner surface 7a (8a) of the casing 7 (8), and a hollow section 43 that communicates the suction port 41 with the blow-out port 42. The suction port 41 opens into a region 7b (8b) corresponding to the rotor blade row 31 in the inner surface 7a (8a) of the casing 7 (8) and sucks part of the gas that has flown into the rotor blade row 31. In addition, the suction port 41 is provided posterior to a later described crossing position P. The region 7b (8b) is a belt-shaped part that has a width ranging from the leading edge 33a to the trailing edge 33b of the rotor blade 33 in an axial direction and extends in the circumferential direction on the inner surface 7a (8a) of the casing (8). In other words, the region 7b (8b) is the part that corresponds to (faces) the locus of the tip 33c of the rotor blade 33 that rotates on the inner surface 7a (8a) of the casing 7 (8).
In the following, an example in which the operating range expansion unit 40 is formed in the casing 7 will be described. Since the configuration of the operating range expansion unit 40 is the same also in a case where it is formed in the casing 8, detailed description thereof is omitted unless otherwise noted in particular.
The suction port 41 is formed into a groove shape that extends in the circumferential direction in the same sectional shape. A depth direction of the suction port 41 is parallel with the radial direction. The suction port 41 functions as a so-called diffuser that decelerates the gas that has flown in from the casing 7 and compresses it. A width of the suction port 41 in the axial direction is constant at any place in the radial direction. Note that a height of the hollow section 43 in the radial direction is larger than the width of the suction port 41 in a section including the axis 1. Accordingly, from the viewpoint of reducing a pressure loss, the width of the suction port 41 may be gradually widened as it goes outward in the radial direction.
The blow-out port 42 opens anterior to the rotor blade row 31 in the inner surface 7a of the casing 7 and blows out the gas that has been sucked in through the suction port 41. The blow-out port 42 is formed as a groove that extends in the circumferential direction in the same sectional shape and a later described fin 44 is further provided within it. The blow-out port 42 extends in the radial direction in the section including the axis 1. In addition, a width of the blow-out port 42 in the axial direction is constant at any place in the radial direction. Incidentally, this width is smaller than the height of the hollow section 43. Accordingly, the blow-out port 42 reduces the pressure of the gas and accelerates the gas concerned when blowing it out.
As shown in
The hollow section 43 is formed inside the casing 7 and communicates the suction port 41 with the blow-out port 42. The hollow section is a belt-shaped space that extends in the axial direction and extends in the circumferential direction in the same sectional shape. As described above, the height of the hollow section 43 in the radial direction is larger than the width of the suction port 41. Accordingly, the gas that has flown into it through the suction port 41 is decelerated and compressed and moves in the hollow section 43 toward the blow-out port 42. The height of the hollow section 43 in the radial direction is constant at any place in the axial direction.
An operation and advantageous effects of the operating range expansion unit 40 owing to the above-mentioned configuration will be described. The pressure is increased toward the downstream side in the rotor blade row 31. A pressure difference is generated between the suction port 41 and the blow-out port 42 in response to this pressure increase. As a result, part of the gas in the rotor blade row 31 is sucked into the suction port 41 and blows out through the blow-out port 42. In other words, the operating range expansion unit 40 makes part of the gas that has flown into the rotor blade row 31 circulate between the rotor blade row 31 and the front side thereof. The gas that has blown out through the blow-out port 42 compensates for the flow rate of the gas that flows into the rotor blade row 31. Accordingly, at a flow rate that a surge occurs in a general compressor in which the operating range expansion unit 40 is not provided, occurrence of the surge concerned can be prevented. That is, it becomes possible to move a stall point of the fan 2 or the compressor 3 closer to the low flow rate side. That is, a stall margin is improved.
In addition the pressure difference across the rotor blade row 31 is proportional to a workload that the rotor blade row 31 has done on the gas. This workload is proportional to a product of a difference between circumferential-direction components of respective relative velocities of the gas (the main stream) that flows into the rotor blade row 31 and the gas (the main stream) that is discharged from the rotor blade row 31, and a rotating speed of the rotor blade row 31. In the present embodiment, the flow path in the blow-out port 42 is inclined reversely to the rotation direction R of the rotor blade row 31 relative to the radially inward side. Accordingly, the gas is blown out through the blow-out port 42 such that it swirls reversely to the rotation direction R. The difference in the above-mentioned relative velocity becomes large by blowing-out of the gas that generates this reverse swirling flow and, as a result, the workload is increased. However, since an incidence angle that is a difference between an inflow angle of a flow into the rotor blade row 31 and a blade inlet angle of the rotor blade 33 becomes large in comparison with a case where the operating range expansion unit 40 is not provided, separation on the back side of the rotor blade 33 is increased. Accordingly, it is possible to avoid the surge concerned and increase the surge margin by sucking out a separation region on the back side of the aforementioned rotor blade by the suction port 41.
Incidentally, in a case where the rotor blade row 31 rotates at a high speed, part of the main stream S reaches an acoustic velocity between the rotor blades 33 and, as a result, a shock wave is generated. This shock wave arrives at the inner surface 7a (the region 7b) of the casing 7 (the inner surface 8a (the region 8b) of the casing 8). When the rotor blade row 31 rotates at a design point, this arrival point is located at a crossing position P shown in
In addition, as shown in
As mentioned above, according to the present disclosure, there can be provided the fan or the axial flow compressor on which the casing treatment that suppresses a reduction inefficiency and can improve the stall margin has been performed. Incidentally, the present disclosure is not limited to the above-mentioned embodiment. That is, addition, omission, replacement and other alterations of configurations are possible within a range not deviating from the gist of the present disclosure.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2014-258675 | Dec 2014 | JP | national |
This application is a continuation application of International Application No. PCT/JP2015/075677, filed on Sep. 10, 2015, which claims priority to Japanese Patent Application No. 2014-258675, filed on Dec. 22, 2014, the entire contents of which are incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/JP2015/075677 | Sep 2015 | US |
Child | 15452228 | US |