1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method for coating a component of a gas turbine or aircraft engine, in particular for producing a blade-tip armor cladding on a blade of a gas turbine or an aircraft engine, in which a coating material is applied to the component with a solder and the component is heated inductively, as well as a corresponding device.
2. Prior Art
It is known from the prior art to furnish the blade tips of gas turbines or aircraft engines, that is, generally turbomachines, with an armor cladding to protect the rotating blades of a gas turbine or aircraft engine from wear. In particular, such an armor cladding in the region of the blade tips serves to protect the blades, which slide against a casing so as to create a structure that is as tight as possible, and to provide for the abraded material in the casing.
Known from DE 10 2009 008 887 A1, DE 10 2007 010 256 A1, DE 10 2009 007 666 A1, DE 10 2008 003 100 A1, and U.S. Pat. No. 4,818,833 are various methods for armor cladding the tips of blades of a gas turbine or aircraft engine.
Thus, for example, DE 10 2007 010 256 A1 describes the inductive heating of a blade tip by use of an induction amplifier, while, in U.S. Pat. No. 4,818,833, the limited heating of the blade tip is to be accomplished by special formation of a corresponding receiving space and deliberate insertion and retraction of the blade tips in the receiving space.
However, in the proposed solutions, there is still the problem that the heating of the blade tip also entails heating of the turbine blade, which can lead to local overheating of the blade material. As a result, a property change can occur in the material of the base body of the blade and thus a degradation in the properties of the blade.
Therefore, the problem of the present invention to provide a method for coating a component of a gas turbine or an aircraft engine, in particular a method for producing a blade-tip armor cladding on a blade of a gas turbine or an aircraft engine, as well as a corresponding device for carrying out such a method, in which the temperature load on the base material of the blade is minimized, with it being possible, at the same time, to construct the device and carry out the method in a simple manner and to ensure a qualitatively high-grade coating of the component.
This problem is solved by a method having the features of claim 1 as well as a device having the features of claim 11. Advantageous embodiments are the subject of the dependent claims.
The invention is characterized in that a combination of inductive heating of the component and targeted heating of a local region of the component to be coated or the coating material is undertaken. It is ensured through these measures that the coating material is bonded securely and reliably with the base material of the component and, at the same time, overheating of the base material is prevented.
The local heating is effected by laser-light irradiation using a laser, so that a targeted warming in terms of place and scope of heating is possible. Beyond this, the use of a laser allows a simple sweeping (scanning) of a surface of a component to be coated.
In accordance with the invention, the material to be coated is applied to the component with a solder, so that, by means of the solder, a firm bonding of the coating material or its elements with the component is achieved. For example, the hard particles of an armor cladding are embedded in the solder, which, through the soldering, undergoes firm bonding with the base material of the blade.
The intensity of the light irradiation in terms of light intensity and intensity over time can be chosen such that exactly the temperature required for soldering is produced in the region of the coating material applied to the component. In this process, it is possible to use both fusion solders and diffusion solders, with fusion solder being preferred since the process can be accomplished faster.
The component temperature produced by induction in the region in which the coating is to be applied can appropriately lie below the required soldering temperature, in particular up to 500° C., preferably up to 300° C. or 200° C., below the appropriate soldering temperature. This is dependent on the chosen material of the component, the coating, and the solder.
The induction heating can commence already some time prior to the start of laser heating and can be continued over the period of time in which the laser heating takes place. Alternatively, it is also possible to start the laser heating simultaneously with the induction heating or to discontinue the induction heating in part or in whole during the laser heating.
The coating material and/or the solder can be applied already prior to the induction heating, after the induction heating and prior to the laser heating, or even during the induction heating.
The coating material can be applied, in particular, in the form of a molded part, which can additionally include the solder as well. A corresponding molded part can be formed as a strip or film and can comprise at least a binder and an element of the coating to be produced, such as, for example, the hard particles for the armor cladding. The solder can be added in appropriate powder form to the molded part, so that, for example, a so-called soldering tape made from a matrix composed of binder and soldering powder with embedded hard particles can be formed for creating a corresponding armor cladding.
The solder is chosen depending on the coating material and the base material of the component to be coated, with it being possible to employ particularly a titanium-based solder or a nickel-based solder, that is, a solder containing nickel or titanium as the principal constituent, for the intended purpose of the application. In general, a eutectic solder containing at least one base material of the component to be coated can be is employed, to which an appropriate element for lowering the fusion temperature is added to lower the melting temperature.
The solder can also have an MCrAlY matrix or an MCrAlXZ matrix, with M being iron, cobalt, nickel, nickel-cobalt, or cobalt-nickel and it being possible for X to be formed by silicon, tantalum, vanadium, niobium, platinum, or palladium and Z by yttrium, titanium, hafnium, zirconium, or ytterbium.
The binder can be a plastic, in particular a thermoplastic.
The coating material can have any suitable composition. Particularly for creating an armor cladding, it may contain hard particles made of ceramic materials, nitrides, carbides, borides, oxides, in particular boron nitride, cubic boron nitride, titanium carbide, tungsten carbide, chromium carbide, aluminum oxide, and/or zirconium oxide and/or combinations thereof.
Depending on the composition of the solder, the coating material and the binder, different soldering temperatures in the range of 800 to 1300° C., preferably 1000 to 1200° C., can be employed, it being possible to heat the component to temperatures in the range of 600 to 900° C. by way of the induction heating.
The device according to the invention for carrying out a corresponding method thus comprises, besides the induction device for heating the component to be coated, a laser that can irradiate and heat at least a partial region of the component to be coated. Accordingly, it is possible to employ lasers of different design and functional principles, which, can achieve an appropriate heating in conjunction with the component to be coated, the solder used, and the coating material.
The device can have an appropriate component receiver, in which the component to be coated can be arranged such that simultaneously an inductive heating and a heating by laser irradiation are possible in an appropriate manner. In particular, for the coating of blades of a gas turbine or an aircraft engine, the component receptacle can be arranged so that the blade tip is oriented in the direction of the laser so as to heat a solder placed there with a coating material, while induction loops can be created laterally on the blade surface, preferably parallel to the main surfaces, that is, the surfaces having the largest dimensions.
In particular, the present method enables both the coating of individual blades of a gas turbine or an aircraft engine and also the coating of component combinations, such as, for example, so-called blisks (combination of blade and disk (blisk) thus, blade and disk, as well as of other components to be carried out.
The appended figures show purely schematically:
Further advantages, characteristics, and features of the present invention will be clarified in the following detailed description of an embodiment example on the basis of the appended drawings. However, the invention is not limited to this embodiment example, but rather the scope of protection is governed by the appended claims.
Tape 2 can be formed, for example, as a flexible strip or as a flexible film, with the hard particles being embedded in a matrix comprised of binder and soldering powder. When tape 2 is heated, the binder, for example, a thermoplastic, is combusted or vaporizes in the gaseous state, while the soldering powder fuses and bonds the hard particles embedded in tape 2 with the base material of blade 1.
For this purpose, the device shown in
By way of the induction device, which is operated, for example, with high-frequency alternating current with frequencies in the range between 50 and 700 kHz, preferably 100 to 600 kHz, alternating magnetic fields are produced, which, in turn, induce currents in blade 1 that lead to a heating of blade 1. The heat produced in this way in blade 1 brings about a preheating, which, however, is adjusted in such a way, that the target temperature is below the soldering temperature that is required for soldering tape 2 onto the blade 1.
The required soldering temperature in the region of the blade tip for soldering tape 2 onto blade 1 is produced by laser 4 or laser beam 5, which can be swept over the region of the blade tip, so that the soldering temperature is attained locally for a brief time in the region of tape 2, so that tape 2 is soldered onto blade 1. In this process, the binder is combusted or expelled and the soldering powder is fused, so that the hard particles contained therein, which are embedded in the solder, are bonded to the blade tip of blade 1.
In the plan view of
The method according to the invention has the further advantage that, by means of the laser 4, the locally delimited fusion can be carried out exactly for a wide variety of component geometries, because the laser beam 5 can be appropriately well positioned in location. Accordingly, a simple automation of the method can be carried out.
Although the present invention has been described in detail on the basis of the embodiment example, it is obvious to the person skilled in the art that the invention is not limited to this embodiment example, but rather modifications are possible such that individual features can be omitted or other types of combinations of features can be undertaken, without any departure from the scope of protection of the appended claims. The disclosure of the present invention encompasses, in particular, all combinations of all of the individual features.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2011 101 576.4 | May 2011 | DE | national |