This claims the benefit of European Patent Application EP 131 87698.9, filed Oct. 8, 2013 and hereby incorporated by reference herein.
The present invention relates to a component support.
In turbomachines such as steam turbines, stationary gas turbines or aircraft engines, different thermal expansions and the same relative movements may occur between two stator-side components which are in contact with each other, due to vibrations. A known component support between two stator-side components which are in contact with each other is outlined in
A turbomachine having an annular groove for accommodating a guide blade ring is illustrated in JP 59018213 A. The annular groove has a flat groove base and two steep side walls. Cavities are introduced into the transition areas between the side walls and the groove base.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an alternative component support of a turbomachine which eliminates the aforementioned disadvantages and in which a tilting effect between two stator-side components which are in contact with each other is prevented. Another alternate or additional object of the present invention is furthermore to provide a turbomachine having an optimized component support.
A component support of a turbomachine according to the present invention has at least two essentially annular components on the stator side, which are in axial contact with each other and are preferably provided coaxially to each other. The first component has a support ring surface and the second component has a plurality of bearing sections distributed over its circumference, via which it is in contact with the support ring surface. According to the present invention, a plurality of essentially radial, groove-like recesses are introduced into the support ring surface, each bearing section overlapping one recess with its two side edge areas, and an uncontoured support ring surface area extending between adjacent bearing sections.
Due to the support according to the present invention, tilting effects on the support ring surface and on the bearing sections during a relative movement of the components in relation to each other, for example due to different thermal expansions, are prevented. Due to the groove-like recesses, combined with the uncontoured support ring surface areas between the bearing sections, no significant change or no change in the structural mechanics of the first component occurs, so that no additional stresses are introduced into the first component, due to the groove-like recesses, not even when they are introduced into the first component. The groove-like recesses are furthermore easy to produce in terms of manufacturing. For example, the groove-like recesses are machined with the aid of a mechanical machining process such as milling or by an electrochemical or electroplating machining process.
In one preferred exemplary embodiment, the recesses have a depth-to-width ratio of 1:5 to 1:20. The depth is milled in the axial direction and the width in the circumferential direction. In one particularly favorable exemplary embodiment, the depth-to-width ratio is 1:10. The width is milled from a radial center plane of the recesses, so that the recesses have a total width which is equal to twice the width, similar to a diameter to a radius.
The recesses preferably have a total width which is 0.25 times to twice a width of the bearing sections.
An optimum adjustment of the first component to a support load to be accommodated may be achieved by the fact that the recesses each have different transition radii in the transition area to the uncontoured support ring surface areas and to support ring surface sections on which the bearing sections are supported or which accommodate the bearing sections.
In one alternative exemplary embodiment, the recesses each have the same transition radii in the transition area to the uncontoured support ring surface areas and to the support ring surface sections accommodating the bearing sections. Due to the same transition radii, an exemplary embodiment of this type is easier to manufacture than the preceding exemplary embodiment having the different transition radii.
From a structural mechanical perspective, it is favorable if the transition radii equal 0.1 times to 1 times a base radius of the recesses.
Alternatively, the transition areas from the recesses to the uncontoured support ring surface areas and to the support ring surface sections accommodating the bearing sections may be designed as chamfers or edges. Chamfers or edges are easy to provide in terms of manufacturing.
In one exemplary embodiment, the base radius is interrupted by a flat spot.
The at least two components are advantageously oriented coaxially to each other.
In particular, the at least two components may be provided with a rotationally symmetrical design. This facilitates the orientation of the components with respect to each other.
A turbomachine according to the present invention has at least one component support according to the present invention, with the aid of which tilting effects between stator-side components which are in contact with each other are prevented.
One preferred exemplary embodiment of the present invention is explained in greater detail below on the basis of schematic representations.
To avoid tilting effects in the area of bearing sections 34, 36, a plurality of groove-like recesses 40, 42, 44, 46 are introduced into support ring surface 38. Recesses 40, 42, 44, 46 are spaced evenly apart in the circumferential direction, and are spaced apart over uncontoured support ring surface areas 48, 50, 52.
In the sense of the present invention, the term “uncontoured” means that support ring surface areas 48, 50, 52 essentially continue an original contour of support ring surface 38. Of course, local indentations are included in support ring surface areas 48, 50, 52. Support ring surface areas 48, 50, 52 may also have a manufacturing-induced surface roughness which is not smoothed or is smoothed only in sections by reworking. For example, the surfaces of support ring surface areas 48, 52 which support bearing sections 34, 36 may be or may have been smoothed using finishing steps such as fine grinding and/or using coatings, while the surface of intermediate support ring surface area 50 essentially has a manufacturing-induced, original surface roughness.
Bearing sections 34, 36 are distributed evenly over the circumference. They have a distribution in the circumferential direction in such a way that they each rest against a support ring surface area 48, 52 and are spaced apart over a support ring surface area 50. An uncontoured support ring surface area 50 thus always exists between adjacent bearing sections 34, 36. For reasons of clarity, support ring surface areas 48, 52 on which bearing sections 34, 36 are supported are referred to as support ring surface sections. Support ring surface areas 50 which are free of bearing sections are referred to as support ring surface regions.
For reasons of clarity, only left bearing section 34 illustrated in
As is illustrated in the detailed representation in
Recesses 40, 42, 44, 46 have a depth-to-width ratio d:w of 1:5 to 1:20, preferably approximately 1:10. Width w is milled from a radial center plane 74 of recesses 40, 42, 44, 46. The depth is milled from the intersection area of center plane 74 with base 68 to adjacent support ring surface section 48 or support ring surface region 50. Recesses 40, 42, 44, 46 preferably have a total width W which is 0.25 times to twice width B of bearing sections 34, 36. Depth-to-width ratio d:w is set, in particular, via base radius R1.
Base radius R1 may be interrupted by a flat spot, which is not illustrated.
Transition radii R2, R3 may be provided with the same design, as in the exemplary embodiment illustrated herein. In one alternative exemplary embodiment, which is not illustrated, transition radii R2, R3 are different. Transition radii R2, R3 preferably correspond to 0.1 times to 1 times base radius R1. Alternatively, transition areas 70, 72 may be designed as chamfers or edges.
In addition to the use of the component support according to the present invention explained herein by way of example for supporting an intermediate turbine housing, the component support may, of course, also be used on other stator-side components. In particular, the components may be non-rotationally symmetrical.
A component support of the turbomachine, in particular an aircraft engine, is described, which includes at least two essentially annular components on the stator side, which are in axial contact with each other and are preferably oriented coaxially to the machine axis, the first component having a plurality of radial, groove-like recesses which are laterally overlapped by the second component with its projection-like bearing sections, and an uncontoured support ring surface section being provided between the adjacent bearing sections, a turbomachine also being described.
1 Housing ring
2 Projection/bearing section
4 Projection/bearing section
6 Support ring surface
8 Groove-like recess
10 Groove-like recess
12 Groove-like recess
14 Side edge area
16 Side edge area
18 Support ring surface section
20 Support ring surface section
22 Side wall
24 Side wall
26 Base
28 Transition area
30 Transition area
32 Housing
34 Bearing section
36 Bearing section
38 Support ring surface
40 Recess
42 Recess
44 Recess
46 Recess
48 Support ring surface area/support ring surface section
50 Support ring surface area/support ring surface region
52 Support ring surface area/support ring surface section
58 Side edge area
60 Side edge area
62 Contact surface
64 Side surface
66 Side surface
68 Base
70 Transition area
72 Transition area
74 Center plane
R1 Base radius
R2 Transition radius
R3 Transition radius
B Width of bearing section
d Depth of recess
w Width of recess, milled from center line
W Total width of recess
X Machine axis
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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EP13187698.9 | Oct 2013 | EP | regional |