The present invention relates to the casting of metal or alloy articles of manufacture and more particularly, to a method of making a ceramic core and cooperating integral ceramic mold, or mold portion, useful though not limited to, the casting a turbine airfoil with cast-in cooling features and enhanced external casting wall thickness control.
Most manufacturers of gas turbine engines are evaluating advanced multi-wall, thin-wall turbine airfoils (i.e. turbine blade or vane) which include intricate air cooling channels to improve efficiency of airfoil internal cooling to permit greater engine thrust and provide satisfactory airfoil service life. However, cooling schemes for advanced high-thrust aircraft engines are complex, often involving multiple, thin walls and non-planar cooling features. The ceramic cores that define these advanced cooling schemes are conventionally formed by forcing ceramic compound into steel tooling, but core complexity is limited by the capabilities of tooling design/fabrication. Therefore, complex advanced cooling schemes often rely on the assembly of multiple ceramic core pieces after firing. Assembly requires specialized labor and results in core dimensional variability due to mismatch between assembled core components, while the fragile nature of fired cores results in elevated handling scrap, and compromises to the advanced cooling schemes are required to allow for assembly and positioning of the core assembly or multiple core pieces in the subsequent casting.
Some core geometries require the formation of multiple fugitive core inserts to define features that do not operate in common planes, including: (1) multiple skin core segments, (2) trailing edge features (e.g., pedestals and exits), (3) leading edge features (e.g., cross-overs), and (4) features that curve over the length of the airfoil. Forming multiple fugitive inserts and assembling them in a core die presents a similar problem to that created by core assembly. Intimate contact between inserts may not be insured when they are loaded into a core die, either due to dimensional variability in the individual inserts or poor locating schemes in the core die. Subsequent molding of the ceramic core material may result in formation of flash at the union of two fugitive insert segments. While flash is common in ceramic core molding and is removed as part of standard processing, flash around or between fugitive inserts may reside in hidden, internal cavities or as part of intricate features, where inspection and removal is not possible. Any such flash remaining in the fired ceramic core can alter air flow in the cast blade or vane.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,295,530 and 5,545,003 describe advanced multi-walled, thin-walled turbine blade or vane designs which include intricate air cooling channels to this end.
In U.S. Pat. No. 5,295,530, a multi-wall core assembly is made by coating a first thin wall ceramic core with wax or plastic, a second similar ceramic core is positioned on the first coated ceramic core using temporary locating pins, holes are drilled through the ceramic cores, a locating rod is inserted into each drilled hole and then the second core then is coated with wax or plastic. This sequence is repeated as necessary to build up the multi-wall ceramic core assembly.
This core assembly procedure is quite complex, time consuming and costly as a result of use of the multiple connecting and other rods and drilled holes in the cores to receive the rods. In addition, this core assembly procedure can result in a loss of dimensional accuracy and repeatability of the core assemblies and thus airfoil castings produced using such core assemblies.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,626,230 describes forming multiple fugitive (e.g. wax) thin wall pattern elements as one piece or as individual elements that are joined together by adhesive to form a pattern assembly that is placed in a ceramic core die for molding a one-piece core.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,258,156 describes the use of ceramic cores and refractory metal cores that are used to form trailing edge cooling passage exits or convoluted airfoil cast-in cooling features wherein the cores are removed to define internal cooling features.
Copending application U.S. Ser. No. 13/068,413 filed May 10, 2011, of common assignee herewith, describes a method of making multi-wall ceramic core wherein at least one fugitive core insert is pre-formed and then at least another fugitive core insert is formed in-situ connected to the pre-formed core insert to from complex cores with internal walls that cannot be readily inspected or repaired once the core is formed.
The present invention provides a method useful for, although not limited to, making a mold for casting of advanced turbine airfoils (e.g. gas turbine blade and vane castings) which can include complex cast-in internal and/or external cooling features to improve efficiency of airfoil cooling during operation in the gas turbine hot gas stream.
An illustrative method involves the steps of incorporating at least one fugitive insert in a ceramic material in a manner to form a core and at least a portion of an integral, cooperating mold wall wherein the core defines an internal feature to be imparted to the cast article and the at least portion of the mold wall has an inner surface that defines an external feature to be imparted to the cast article, selectively removing the fugitive insert, and incorporating the core and the at least portion of the integral, cooperating mold wall in a mold for receiving molten metal or alloy wherein the core defines an internal feature to be imparted to the cast article and the mold wall has an inner surface that defines an external feature to be imparted to the cast article. Solidification of molten metal or alloy in the mold produces such cast-in internal and external features of the cast article.
The present invention can be practiced to form a core with only a portion of an integral cooperating mold wall wherein the missing mold wall portions can be subsequently formed by conventional shell investment molding steps to provide a complete mold shell about the core. Alternately, the present invention can be practiced to form in one step in the first die a ceramic core and a substantially complete integral, cooperating ceramic mold for casting a turbine airfoil or other article of manufacture.
In practice of the present invention to cast a turbine airfoil, certain core surfaces can form cast-in internal cooling features, such as internal cooling air passages with turbulators to increase cooling efficiency, while the inner surface of the integral, cooperating mold wall can form cast-in external cooling air exit holes penetrating the adjacent external airfoil surface, and features on the casting external surface that enhance performance such as features that reduce aerodynamic drag or assist in coating adherance, when the molten metal or alloy is solidified.
Practice of the present invention is advantageous in that complex external cooling features, such as film cooling air exit holes and/or features that reduce aerodynamic drag or assist in coating adherance, can be cast-in external airfoil surfaces in locations and/or orientations that are not possible by post-cast machining operations, such as drilling, with shapes and tapers to improve cooling performance and with improved external and internal casting wall thickness control. Further, the thermal expansion characteristics of the core and cooperating mold wall are matched at least at the local region and can be tailored to provide desired thermal and/or mechanical properties in the mold as a whole or locally to reduce hot tearing in equiaxed castings, local recrystallization in DS/SC castings, and/or provide local grain size control. Moreover, practice of certain embodiments of the invention can be used to reduce or eliminate the extent of conventional investment shelling steps needed to form the mold.
Other advantages of the practice of the present invention will become more readily apparent from the following detailed description taken with the following drawings.
In order to make aero and/or industrial gas turbine engine airfoil cooling air schemes most effective, especially high pressure turbine blade and vanes (hereafter turbine airfoils), internal cooling features, such as air cooling passages, support pedestals, etc. as well as external cooling features, such as film cooling air exit holes, cooling-enhancing turbulators, etc. need to precisely partition and direct the cooling air such that its pressure is controlled and it is directed to the most needed regions of the blade or vane. Practice of the present invention permits production of complex airfoil geometries with complex cast-in internal and external cooling features and enhanced external casting wall thickness control.
Although the present invention will be described below in connection with the casting of advanced turbine airfoils (e.g. gas turbine blade and vane castings) which can include complex cast-in internal and external cooling air features to improve efficiency of airfoil cooling during operation in the gas turbine hot gas stream, the invention is not limited to turbine airfoils and can be practiced to produce other cast articles that include complex cast-in internal and/or external features pursuant to a particular design specification.
Referring to
The gas turbine blade 10 (or vane) can be cast using conventional nickel based superalloys, cobalt superalloys, titanium, titanium alloys, and other suitable metals or alloys including intermetallic materials. Practice of the present invention is not limited to any particular metal or alloy. Moreover, the turbine blade (or vane) can be cast using different conventional casting processes including, but not limited to, equiaxed casting processes to produce an equiaxed grain turbine blade or vane, directional solidification casting processes to produce a columnar grain turbine blade or vane, and single crystal casting processes to produce a single crystal turbine blade or vane. Practice of the present invention is not limited to any particular casting process.
Referring to
Moreover, although the fugitive insert 50 is shown for convenience as a single piece in
The fugitive insert 50, whether one-piece or multi-piece, can be molded from a fugitive material that can tolerate the temperature conditions typically employed to form ceramic cores using thermoplastic or thermosetting binders by injection or transfer molding, or pouring. Such temperature can range from 100 to 400 degrees F. For purposes of illustration and not limitation, the fugitive insert 50 can be made of soluble resins or high temperature liquid crystal polymers, that are soluble in water or other liquids such as alcohols, mild or strong acids, keytones and mineral spirits.
In this processing sequence, the fugitive insert 50 or second pattern P can be selectively removed by dissolution if the insert or pattern comprises a soluble material, by thermal degradation if the insert or pattern comprises a thermal degradable material, or any other suitable means appropriate to the insert material being selectively.
According to another more direct processing sequence which may only be possible with some core geometries, the core 100 and the integral mold wall portions 102a, 102b on the fugitive insert 50,
In these processing sequences, the missing mold shell wall is formed in a further subsequent processing step where additional ceramic material is invested or otherwise formed about regions of the fired core 100 and integral mold wall portions 102a, 102b (first processing sequence) or about the unfired core 100 and mold wall portions 102a, 102b on fugitive insert 50 (second processing sequence) where missing the mold shell 102a as shown in
Alternately, referring to
The present invention is capable of forming different types of cast-in cooling air passages/exit hole configurations as illustrated in
Referring back to
The present invention can produce core/mold wall geometries that require features that do not operate in common planes, including: (1) multiple skin core segments, (2) trailing edge features (e.g., pedestals and exits), (3) leading edge features (e.g., cross-overs), and (4) features that curve over the length of the airfoil. While one preformed fugitive insert 50 was over molded in the above description, in practice of the invention any number of preformed fugitive inserts can be preformed, assembled and over-molded with the ceramic material,
Practice of the present invention is advantageous in that complex external cooling features, such as film cooling holes and/or cooling-enhancing turbulators, can be cast-in external cast airfoil surfaces in locations and/or orientations that are not possible by post-cast machining operations, such as drilling, with shapes and tapers to improve cooling performance and with improved external and internal casting wall thickness control. Further, the need for subsequent core pinning or locating is reduced or eliminated since the core not only forms the internal blade features, but also at least a portion of the external shell mold which more precisely locates the core with respect to the shell mold. The thermal expansion characteristics of the core and cooperating mold wall are matched at least at the local region and can be tailored to provide desired thermal and/or mechanical properties in the mold as a whole or locally to reduce hot tearing in equiaxed castings, local recrystallization in DS/SC castings, and/or provide local grain size control. Still further, a molten metal or alloy filter, such as a reticulated foam filter or lattice filter, can be molded into a down-sprue connected to the assembly of
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made in the embodiments of the present invention described above without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims.
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