COMPOSITE BLADE, COMPRISING A LEADING-EDGE REINFORCEMENT MADE OF ANOTHER MATERIAL

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20180156232
  • Publication Number
    20180156232
  • Date Filed
    April 28, 2016
    8 years ago
  • Date Published
    June 07, 2018
    6 years ago
Abstract
The invention relates to a blade made of composite material, provided with a reinforcement (17) made of a stronger material with regard to a leading edge (5) likely to be struck by solid objects, which comprises, under the aerodynamic portion of the blade, extensions (18, 19) attached to the blade root. According to the invention, the extensions (18, 19) are dissymmetric, the extension (18) located on the suction side being generally further back from the leading edge (5) than the extension (19) on the pressure side.
Description

The invention relates to a composite blade, comprising, besides a structural portion made of a first material, a leading-edge reinforcement made of another material.


Such a structure may be proposed particularly for blowers at the aircraft engine inlet, or for other blade rings exposed to projections of solid foreign bodies liable to damage same due to shocks. The leading edge, which is exposed to these shocks, is formed by the reinforcement, which is made of a more impact-resistant material than that of the structural portion. The structural portion may thus be formed of a composite material comprising polymer, and the titanium leading-edge reinforcement. The documents EP 2 611 143 A1, EP 2 378 079 A2, GB 2 482 247 A and EP 2 634 368 A2 disclose blades equipped with such reinforcements.


The junction between the two portions is subject to significant stress, particularly due to operating vibrations, and it was sought to reduce this stress by designing this invention.


The innovation relates more specifically to the extensions of the reinforcement which extend onto the pressure and suction faces beyond the leading edge (in a direction extending from said leading edge) covering the blade root, which is a part with not aerodynamic role inserted into a disk fixation bearing the blade ring, so as to hold the blade in place. It was more specifically observed that a dissymmetry of the extensions was beneficial for reducing the stress applied on said junction. The dissymmetry relates more specifically to the front portion, near the leading edge, of the extensions, which is subject to stress concentrations. According to the invention, the front edge of the extension of the suction face is further (in a direction extending from the blade root) from the lead edge than that of the pressure face.


This different distance may be obtained if the extensions are limited by a front edge close to the leading edge, a rear edge at a distance from the leading edge and a rounded section joining these two edges, rending the angle formed by the front edge of the pressure face smaller than the corresponding angle formed by the front edge of the suction face with the leading edge.





These aspects, features and advantages of the invention, along with others, will now be described with reference to the following figures:



FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 represent a known composite blade design with leading-edge reinforcements; and



FIGS. 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 and 17, two merely illustrative embodiments of the invention.





Hereinafter in the description, terms such as “top” and “bottom”, “below” and “above”, “lower” and “upper”, or “upward” and “downward” are understood with reference to a blade orientation where the root is assumed to be below the aerodynamic portion, and the extension of the leading edge reinforcement, to which the invention relates, is below the rest of the reinforcement; they are also conforming with respect to the orientation of the blade in the figures. In addition, the terms “front” and “rear” are understood with respect to the conventional gas flow direction in the turbo-engine. The axes XX, YY and ZZ plotted in some of the figures, XX along the root 2, ZZ from the root 2 to the vertex of the blade 1 and YY transversal and perpendicular to the above, are also introduced to help understand the description.



FIGS. 1, 2, 3 and 4 respectively represent a composite blade of known design at the trailing edge, at the leading edge, at the suction side, and at the pressure side; and FIGS. 5 and 6 are enlargements of FIGS. 3 and 4 respectively, combining the reinforcement of the leading edge and the blade root.


The blade conventionally comprises a blade 1 having a curved and irregular shape, extending longitudinally along an axis ZZ, responsible for the aerodynamic performances of the blade, and a root 2 at the bottom of the blade 1, widening towards the bottom of the blade and extending longitudinally along an axis XX substantially orthogonal to the axis ZZ, so as to be suitable for being inserted into a fixation having a complementary cross-section of a disk and holding the blade therein. The blade 1 is limited by a suction side 3 and a pressure side 4 joined with a leading edge 5 and a trailing edge 6 which are opposing. The blade comprises a structural portion, which forms the largest portion of the blade 1 and of the root 2, and a reinforcement 7 located at the leading edge 5 and which is more resistant than the structural portion. This reinforcement 7 comprises, as seen more clearly in FIGS. 5 and 6, a suction face 8 locally covering the suction side 3 of the structural portion, and a pressure face 9 locally covering the pressure side 4 thereof. The faces 8 and 9 join at the front to form the leading edge 5. The faces 8 and 9 each comprise an extension 10, which extends below the lower end of the leading edge 5 and therefore overlaps with the root 2, covering a portion of the surface thereof. At the junction of the blade 1 and of the root 2, an edge 11 of the faces 8 and 9 forms the lower end of the leading edge 5. From the edge 11 and opposite the leading edge 5, the extensions 10 comprise an oblique front edge 12, with an inclination in the downward direction ZZ towards the bottom of the root 2, a rounded section 13, and an oblique rear edge 14, with an inclination in the direction ZZ rising progressively towards the top of the root 2. The extensions 10 are identical in this known design, except optionally to the rear, furthest from the leading edge 5, where the rear edges 14 may be of different lengths up to the respective rear edges 15 and 16 of the suction face 8 and of the pressure face 9, since the suction 8 and pressure 9 faces may be of different widths in the direction X-X: the rear edge 15 of the suction face 8 may thus be closer to the leading edge 5 than the rear edge 16 of the pressure face 9.



FIGS. 7 to 14 represent the invention. FIGS. 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11, correspond to FIGS. 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 respectively, and FIGS. 12, 13 and 14 represent separately the leading edge reinforcement at the suction side, obliquely at the leading edge, and at the pressure side.


The leading-edge reinforcement now bears the reference 17. It differs from the previous leading-edge reinforcement 7 by the extensions covering the root 2, which are now referenced by 18 and 19 for the suction face 8 and the pressure face 9, respectively.


The extensions 18 and 19 are herein dissymmetrical. This specific feature makes it possible to reduce the mechanical stress applied to the junction of the reinforcement 17 and of the structural portion forming the rest of the blade. Indeed, stress concentrations are likely to appear at the bottom of the reinforcement 17 and close to the leading edge 5, which is an area of structural irregularity of the blade. Furthermore, the stress is very different between the suction side 3 and the pressure side 4. It is therefore essential to have a freedom of design of the extensions 18 and 19 involving the dissymmetry thereof. An important consideration is that the extension 18 on the suction side 3 will gain by being positioned further from the leading edge 5, in the direction XX, than the extension 19 on the pressure side 4. This is obtained by moving the front edge 20 of the extension 18 on the suction side 8 further away from the leading edge 5 than the front edge 21 of the extension 19 on the pressure side 9; in the embodiment actually proposed herein, by rendering the front edge 21 of the extension 19 of the pressure face 9 more parallel with the profile of the leading edge 5 (at the lower portion thereof, represented substantially vertically in FIGS. 12 and 14) than the front edge 20 of the extension 18 of the suction face 8; the corresponding angles between the leading edges 5 and the front edges 21 and 20 (angles A in FIG. 14 and B in FIG. 12), where therefore A<B, may respectively be less than 30°, preferentially between 5° and 25°, and between 30° and 60°, and preferentially between 35° and 50°, for example. Conversely, the rear edges 24 and 25 may respectively form angles C less than 30° and D between 30° and 60°, or more generally D>C, with the edges 15 and 16 of the suction 8 and pressure 9 faces at a distance from the leading edge 5. The front edges 20, 21 and rear edges 24, 25 are joined by rounded sections 22 and 23 useful for enabling satisfactory production and not creating stress concentration at a connection angle.


Due to the greater width of the pressure face 9 in the direction XX, the extension 19 of this side may be wider (again in the direction XX) than the extension 18, have a greater depth (in the direction ZZ) below the leading edge 5, and a greater surface area also.


The invention may be implemented in many ways. Any embodiment envisaged with finite-element calculations could be validated.



FIGS. 15, 16 and 17 illustrate a different, but equally satisfactory, embodiment of a leading-edge reinforcement, with the same terms of representation as FIGS. 12, 13 and 14 respectively; the corresponding portions bear the corresponding reference numbers increased by “100”: as such, the leading edge 105, the pressure 108 and suction 109 faces, and the extensions 118 and 119 are featured. Herein, A=20° and B=45° whereas A was equal to 9°, and B to 40°, in the previous embodiment. Reductions of 30% in static stress were observed at the leading edge of the reinforcement, and of 5% in the structural portion, with respect to a symmetrical conventional reinforcement.

Claims
  • 1-9. (canceled)
  • 10. Composite blade, comprising a structural portion made of one material and a leading-edge reinforcement (17) made of another material, the reinforcement comprising a pressure face (9) and a suction face (8), the pressure and suction faces joining at the leading edge (5) and comprising respective extensions (19, 18) extending beyond the leading edge in an extension direction (ZZ) of said leading edge and partially covering a blade root (2) belonging to the structural portion, characterised in that, the extensions being limited by a front edge (20, 21) close to the leading edge, and a rear edge (24, 25) at a distance from the leading edge, the front edge (21) of the pressure face (9) forms a smaller angle (A) with the leading edge (5) than an angle (B) formed by the front edge (20) of the suction face (8) with the leading edge.
  • 11. Composite blade according to claim 10, characterised in that the front edge (21) of the pressure face (9) forms an angle (A) of not more than 30° with the leading edge (5), and the front edge (20) of the suction face (8) an angle (B) between 30° and 60° with the leading edge.
  • 12. Composite blade according to claim 11, characterised in that the rear edge (25) of the pressure face (9) forms a greater angle (D) with an edge (16) of the pressure face (9) at a distance from the leading edge (5) than an angle (C) formed by the rear edge (24) of the suction face (8) with an edge (15) of the suction face (8) at a distance from the leading edge (5).
  • 13. Composite blade according to claim 12, characterised in that the rear edge of the pressure face forms an angle (D) between 30° and 60° with an edge (16) of the pressure face (9) at a distance from the leading edge (5), and the rear edge of the suction face forms an angle (C) of not more than 30° with an edge (15) of the suction face (8) at a distance from the leading edge (5).
  • 14. Composition blade according to claim 10, characterised in that the front edge and the rear edge of the extensions are joined by a rounded section (22, 23).
  • 15. Composite blade according to claim 10, characterised in that the pressure face (9) is wider in an extension direction (XX) of the root (2) than the suction face (8).
  • 16. Composite blade according to claim 10, characterised in that the extension (19) of the pressure face (9) has a greater depth, in a direction (ZZ) from the root (2) to a vertex of the blade, below the leading edge (5) than the extension (18) of the suction face (8).
  • 17. Composite blade according to claim 10, characterised in that the material of the structural portion is a composite, and the material of the leading-edge reinforcement is titanium.
  • 18. Composite blade according to claim 10, characterised in that it is a blower blade at an aircraft engine inlet.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
15 53891 Apr 2015 FR national
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind
PCT/FR2016/050997 4/28/2016 WO 00