The invention relates to ceramic matrix composites and more particularly to ceramic matrix composites with enhanced abradability.
Most components of combustion turbines require the use of a coating or insert to protect the underlying support materials and structure from the very high temperatures of the working environment. Ceramic matrix composite (CMC) structures have been developed for these coatings to provide the high temperature stability of ceramics without the intrinsic brittleness and lack of reliability of monolithic ceramics. Although these coatings must resist erosion from the severe environment they are also required to preferentially wear or abrade as necessary. For example, to maintain turbine efficiency between stages, the turbine ring seal must maintain a tight tolerance with the tips of the turbine blades. The surface of the ring seal must abrade when impacted by the blade tips to reduce damage to the blades and to maintain a tight tolerance.
A number of types of abradable coatings for CMC components have been developed. Merrill et al., U.S. Pat. No. 6,641,907 teaches a coating that has come to be known as a friable graded insulation, (FGI), with temperature stability up to temperatures approaching 1700° C. Other known coating systems are less thermally stabile, less capable of providing erosion resistance, and display an inferior thermal expansion match with the substrate, poorer bonding to the substrate, lower flexibility, and lower abradability at temperatures in the range of 1600° C.
Although FGI works well for high incursion rates when cubic boronnitride (cBN) coated turbine blade tips, at low incursion rates FGI does not perform adequately. Low incursion rates are common of large land-based gas turbines and for rub cases which occur beyond the practical life of cBN abrasive tip treatments.
A ceramic matrix composite component with an abradable surface has a pattern of composite and voids with the voids having a depth of less than the composite thickness and where voids are 60 to 90 percent of the surface and the component has a means to restrict gas flow through the void while an impinging blade passes over the void. The means to restrict gas flow can be discontinuous voids where the voids have dimensions that permit sealing of the void by the blade's tip while passing over the void. Another means to restrict gas flow is filler deposited in the void. The filler is a ceramic material. The ceramic filler can be phosphates, silicates, zirconates or hafnates.
The pattern can be a regular array of composite with square top surfaces surrounded by the void and the means to restrict gas flow is filler. Rows of the square tops are preferentially aligned at a 30 or a 60 degree angle to the direction of the blade path. The pattern can be a regular array of the composite with square top surfaces connected by narrow ligaments partitioning the voids into discontinuous crosses and the means to restrict gas flow is discontinuous voids. The discontinuous voids can include filler. Rows of the square tops are preferentially aligned at a 30 or a 60 degree angle to the direction of the blade path. The pattern can be a regular array of circular voids surrounded by the composite and the means to restrict gas flow can be discontinuous voids or discontinuous voids with included filler. The circular voids are preferentially aligned at a 30 or a 90 degree angle to the direction of the blade path. The pattern can be a regular array of hexagonal voids surrounded by the composite where the means to restrict gas flow is discontinuous voids or discontinuous voids with included filler. The pattern can be a regular array of elliptical voids surrounded by the composite where the means to restrict gas flow can be discontinuous voids or discontinuous voids with included filler. The rows of the elliptical voids are preferentially aligned at a 30 or a 60 degree angle to the direction of the blade path. The pattern is a regular array of cross shaped voids surrounded by composite where the means to restrict gas flow comprises discontinuous voids or discontinuous voids with included filler.
The present invention provides a ceramic matrix composite (CMC) components used in combustion turbines with a significantly improved abradability. The surface of the CMC comprises a pattern of voids at the surface of the composite where the voids continue to a predetermined depth. The predetermined depth is chosen to be approximately equal to the final anticipated depth of abrasion to a component, such as a ring segment of a gas turbine, upon impact by another component, such as the tip of a turbine blade, after commissioning. The depth is less than the thickness of the composite. The shape of the composite and voids in the pattern can vary. Although nearly any shape is possible, the shape can be that of regular polygons, circles, ellipses, and are chosen primarily for ease of processing and to inhibit the flow of gas through the void during the functioning of the component, as leakage about a turbine blade during the operation of a turbine can significantly reduce the turbine's efficiency. Multiple shapes can be present on a given component surface. The walls of composite material defining the voids can be perpendicular to the top surface or can be oriented at an angle other than 90 degrees.
The voids can be formed by the removal of composite material from the continuous solid composite surface by a method such as ultrasonic machining. Other methods include end-milling, drilling, laser ablation, and electron beam ablation. An alternative to the removal of composite material from the surface of the component is to prepare the composite in a manner where voids at the surface result from the method of forming the composite. Filament winding is one method of forming CMC structures that can generate a regular pattern of voids at the surface with some control of the void depth and shape. Controlling the winding parameters such as the winding angle, repeat pattern, filament tow size, filament tension, and band width can generate a surface with voids of a predetermined shape and depth in a predetermined pattern. Autoclave processing using a fugitive insert below the surface of the CMC to generate a surface profile is another such method.
For a CMC with an abradable surface a goal of the invention is that voids occupy 50 percent or more of the surface area and preferably 60 to 90 percent of the surface area. It is also a goal of the invention to remove material in a pattern such that the path of the blade tip can achieve uniform cutting with the blade tip displaying nearly uniform wear. The most uniform wear is achieved by having a specific orientation of the pattern relative to the blade path. By the proper orientation of the pattern to the blade path over the component, the entire impinging portion of the blade encounters approximately the same amount of composite as it sweeps across the surface. This orientation depends upon the shape of features in the pattern.
One feature of the invention is to have a means by which leakage of gas through the voids is partially or fully inhibited. In one embodiment the means to inhibit the flow of gas through the voids is to form discontinuous voids. Hence, a void should not extend in the direction of the blade path longer than the cross-section of an impinging component, such as a turbine blade tip, that passes over the void. In this manner most of the voids can be sealed by the contacting blade tip as it passes over the void, and leakage can be minimized. Some voids, such as circular voids, are discontinuous closed-cell structures that can inherently optimize a seal at any given instant as the blade passes over an appropriately sized void.
Another means to achieve the seal is to replace the removed insulation with filler. Appropriate filler materials have a significantly higher abradability than the CMC. The abradability of the filled CMC surface is approximately the average of filler and the CMC. As the proportion of the CMC remaining upon patterning of the surface decreases and the dimensions of the voids increase, the greater the need becomes to seal the voids to prevent gas leakage by addition of filler. Where the discontinuous voids are large or are oriented with the long cross-section of the void in the direction of the blade cutting path, filler can be placed in the void to inhibit gas leakage through the void.
For all patterned surfaces the voids can include filler. By using the filler some of the practical limitations of the relative sizes of voids and the cross section of the blade tip are mediated, where in general the use of filler permits the formation of large voids. Appropriate filler ceramic materials include phosphates, silicates, zirconates and hafnates. Example compositions of these filler ceramic materials include monazite (yttrium phosphate), yttrium silicate, and gadolinium zirconate or gadolinium hafnate. Other examples of these and related oxides may include, but are not limited to: HfSiO4, ZrSiO4, Y2O3, ZrO2, HfO2, yttria and or rare earth partially or fully stabilized ZrO2, yttria and/or rare earth partially Pr fully stabilized HfO2, yttria and/or rare earth partially or fully stabilized ZrO2/HfO2, yttrium aluminum garnet (YAG); rare earth silicates of the form R2Si2O7; oxides of the form R2O3; zirconates or hafnates of the form R4Zr3O12 or R4Hf3O12, where R may be one or more of Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, and Lu. The filler ceramic material is generally chosen based on the performance requirements of the filler in a given application. Preferably, the filler ceramic material is filled to the complete depth of the void to provide sealing in all areas including those where the blade tip rubs and those areas where the blade tip does not rub.
If the blade cutting path is parallel to a row of squares 2 of composite material, relatively high wear can occur to the portions of the blade that pass over the squares 2, but little or no wear could occur to the portions of the blade that pass primarily or exclusively over the voids 4. If the sides of the squares 2 are situated at 45-degrees to the blade cutting path, the wear to the blade would be greatest where the blade path bisects two opposite corner of the squares 2, and would be less to essentially absent midway between bisected corners, depending on the relative sizes of the squares 2 and the voids 4. As illustrated in
Because the voids, as shown in
Another means to limit the leakage through the voids for a pattern of squares is to remove material such that the resulting squares 8 are connected via ligaments 10 as illustrated in
The shape of the voids can be elliptical as shown in
Another alternate pattern is that of hexagonal voids 24 that are cut into the surface, as illustrated in
Other patterned surface can be formed that give discontinuous voids.
The alternatives for the CMC and filling materials, patterns, depths of the voids, and other variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art and do not limit the scope of the invention. Variations and modifications can be made without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention as defined by the following claims.