This application relates to a gas turbine engine having an improved combustor liner panel for a combustor section of the gas turbine engine.
Gas turbine engines include numerous components that are exposed to high temperatures. Among these components are combustion chambers, exhaust nozzles, afterburner liners and heat exchangers. These components may surround a portion of a gas path that directs the combustion gases through the engine and are often constructed of heat tolerant materials.
For example, the combustor chamber of a combustor section of a gas turbine engine may be exposed to local gas temperatures that exceed 3,500° F. (1927° C.). The hotter the combustion and exhaust gases, the more efficient the operation of the jet engine becomes. Therefore, there is an incentive to raise the combustion exhaust gas temperatures of the gas turbine engine.
Combustor liner panels made from exotic metal alloys are known that can tolerate increased combustion exhaust gas temperatures. However, exotic metal alloys have not effectively and economically provided the performance requirements required by modern gas turbine engines. Additionally, metallic combustor liner panels must be cooled with a dedicated airflow bled from another system of the gas turbine engine, such as the compressor section. Disadvantageously, this may cause undesired reductions in fuel economy and engine efficiency.
Ceramic materials are also known that provide significant heat tolerance properties due to their high thermal stability. Combustor assemblies having ceramic combustor liner panels typically require a reduced amount of dedicated cooling air to be diverted from the combustion process for purposes of cooling the combustor liner panels. However, known ceramic combustor liner panels are not without their own drawbacks. Disadvantageously, integration of ceramic liner panels into a substantially metallic combustor assembly is difficult. In addition, differences in the rate of thermal expansion of the ceramic combustor liner panels and the metal components the liner panels are attached to may subject the liner panels to unacceptable high stresses and/or potential failure.
Accordingly, it is desirable to provide an improved ceramic combustor liner panel that is uncomplicated, lightweight, simple to incorporate into the combustor section, and that requires minimal cooling airflow.
A combustor support-liner assembly includes a support structure and at least one combustor liner panel selectively attached to the support structure. The combustor liner panel includes an uncooled ceramic portion, a cooled ceramic portion and a support that receives the cooled ceramic portion.
A gas turbine engine includes a compressor section disposed about an engine longitudinal centerline axis, a turbine section downstream of the compressor section, and a combustor section positioned between the compressor section and the turbine section. The combustor section includes a support structure and a combustor liner panel. The combustor liner panel includes an uncooled ceramic portion, a cooled ceramic portion, and a support that receives the cooled ceramic portion.
A method of attaching a combustor liner panel to a gas turbine engine includes attaching an uncooled ceramic portion of the combustor liner panel to a cooled ceramic portion of the combustor liner panel, and attaching the cooled ceramic portion to a support of the combustor liner panel.
The various features and advantages of this invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description. The drawings that accompany the detailed description can be briefly described as follows.
In this example, the support structure 29 is a cage assembly 28 made of a metallic material, such as a nickel alloy or composite material, for example. In another example, the support structure 29 is a shell assembly 31 (See
The example cage assembly 28 illustrated in
A first plenum 36 is formed between the inner cage 32 and the combustor liner panels 30 attached to the inner cage 32. A second plenum 38 extends between the outer cage 34 and the combustor liner panels 30 of the outer cage 34. The plenums 36, 38 communicate airflow from behind the fuel nozzles 24 and through a portion of the combustor liner panels 30 into the combustion chamber 20 to cool the combustion chamber 20, as is further discussed below. The cooling air is required to reduce the risk of the combustion gases burning or damaging the combustion chamber 20.
It should be understood that the cage assembly 28, the combustor liner panels 30 and the plenums 36, 38 are not shown to the scale they would be in practice. Instead, these components are shown larger than in practice to better illustrate their function and interaction with one another. A worker of ordinary skill in this art will be able to determine an appropriate positioning and spacing of these components for a particular application, and thereby appropriately size and configure the support-liner assembly 26.
Referring to
In one example, the supports 44 are made of a metallic material. In another example, the supports 44 are made of metallic foam. The cooled ceramic portions 42 of the combustor line panels 30 are received on the supports 44 of the combustor line panels 30. In one example, the cooled ceramic portions 42 include a groove 48 formed therein. The groove 48 of the cooled ceramic portion 42 is received on a tongue 50 of the support 44 to mount the cooled ceramic portion 42 to the support 44. It should be understood that the cooled ceramic portions 42 may be attached to the support 44 in any known manner. The uncooled ceramic portions 40 are attached to the cooled ceramic portion 42 in a casting process, for example, as is further discussed below.
The support 44 also includes a base portion 52. Each combustor liner panel 30 is attached to the inner cage 32 or the outer cage 34 via the base portion 52 of the support 44. In one example, the base portion 52 of each support 44 is brazed to the inner cage 32 or the outer cage 34. In another example, a rivet is used to attach the combustor liner panels 30 to the cages 32, 34 (see
Judicious alignment of the support 44 and the cooled ceramic portions 42 of the combustor liner panels 30 with the hot spots of the fuel nozzles 24 reduces the thermal gradients of the cooled ceramic portions 42, lowers stress, and increases combustor section 16 durability. Although the cooled ceramic portions 42 are illustrated in-line with the fuel nozzles 24, it should be understood that the actual alignment may be slightly off-center from the fuel nozzles due to the amount of swirl experienced by the fuel as it is injected from the fuel nozzles 24. A person of ordinary skill in the art would understand how to align the cooled ceramic portions 42 relative to the hot spots of the combustion chamber 20.
Cooling airflow from the plenums 36, 38 is communicated through each support 44, through each cooled ceramic portion 42, and into the combustion chamber 20 to cool the combustor section 16. In addition, since each support 44 is cooled, stress on each support 44 is minimized which increases the service life of each combustor liner panel 30. In one example, the supports 44 and the cooled ceramic portions 42 are transpiration cooled. Transpiration cooling involves forcing air, such as compressed cooling air, through a porous article to remove heat. The cooling air remains in contact with the material of the article for a relatively long period of time so that a significant amount of heat may be transferred into the air and thence removed from the article. Other cooling methods are also within the scope of this application.
Next, at step block 104, the cooled ceramic portion 42 of the combustor liner panel 30 is attached to the support 44 of each combustor liner panel 30. In one example, a groove is machined into the cooled ceramic portion 42 and is inserted onto a tongue portion 50 of the support 44.
The combustor liner panels 30 are attached to the support structure 29, such as the cage assembly 28, for example, at step block 106. A person of ordinary skill in the art having the benefit of this disclosure would understand that other support structures may be utilized for attaching the combustor liner panels 30. The combustor liner panels 30 are attached to the cage assembly 28 via the supports 44. In one example, a rivet 35 (
The present application provides a combustor section 16 including combustor liner panels 30 made of ceramic foam materials that require a reduced amount of dedicated cooling air. The reduction in dedicated combustor cooling air for the combustor liner panels 30 can be used to increase engine efficiency and/or improve fuel economy. The supports 44 of the combustor line panels 30 provide a simple attachment method for attaching the combustor liner panels 30 to the cage assembly 28 of the combustor section 16.
The foregoing description shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in any limiting sense. A worker of ordinary skill in the art would recognize that certain modifications would come within the scope of this invention. For that reason, the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this invention.
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20120125005 A1 | May 2012 | US |