The present invention relates to a compressor guide-vane stage for a turbine engine, in particular for a low-pressure compressor of a turbine engine.
A turbine engine compressor includes at least one guide-vane stage comprising two coaxial shrouds extending one inside the other with substantially radial vanes extending between them, which vanes are connected at their radial ends to the shroud.
The outer shroud of a guide-vane stage has radial orifices in which the radially outer ends of the vanes are engaged and fastened, generally by welding. The inner shroud of the guide-vane stage has radial orifices in which the radially inner ends of the vanes are engaged with clearance, such clearance being of the order of 2 millimeters (mm) to 3 mm, approximately.
In the prior art, the inner ends of the vanes are secured to the inner shroud by means of a polymerizable sealing resin that is applied to the inside surface of the shroud and that, once hardened, serves to fasten the vanes to the shroud. The resin forms an annular block inside the inner shroud in which the radially inner ends of the vanes are embedded and presenting an inner periphery that defines an abradable track for co-operating with annular wipers of a rotor in order to form a labyrinth type seal.
Before the resin is applied to the inner shroud, it is known to inject the same resin into the above-mentioned clearance between each vane and the edges of the orifice in the inner shroud, around the entire periphery of each vane. This makes it possible to fill in the clearance beforehand and prevent a fraction of the resin subsequently passing through the clearance while the resin is being applied to the inner shroud (in order to avoid wasting resin and in order to limit the time taken for cleaning the guide-vane stage in order to eliminate any runs of resin therefrom). At present, resin is injected into the clearance by means of a syringe that is filled by an operator, with this injection step being lengthy and expensive (taking about 8 hours for one guide-vane stage), difficult, dirtying, and poorly reproducible. In order to limit the resin running when it is applied, it may be stored in a refrigerator prior to application in order to increase its viscosity. Nevertheless, although that makes it easier to work the resin, it involves complex management of batches of resin.
The present invention applies a simple, effective, and inexpensive solution to that problem.
To this end, the invention provides a compressor guide-vane stage for a turbine engine, the stage comprising two coaxial shrouds, respectively an inner shroud and an outer shroud, with substantially radial vanes extending therebetween, the radially outer ends of the vanes being welded to the outer shroud and the radially inner ends being engaged with clearance in orifices in the inner shroud and being secured to the inner shroud by a polymerizable sealing resin applied to the inside surface of the shroud and defining an abradable track after hardening, the guide-vane stage being characterized in that a gasket is mounted on the radially inner end of each vane, the gasket having a slit through which the vane passes and being mounted to bear against or to be in contact with the radially inside surface of the shroud in order to limit the passage of resin through the above-mentioned clearance during its application.
The invention makes it possible to eliminate the prior art step that consists in injecting the resin by means of a syringe into the clearance between each vane and the edges of the corresponding orifice in the inner shroud, prior to applying the resin to the inside surface of the shroud. This injection step, which is awkward and difficult to perform, is replaced by a step that is simpler and much faster in which gaskets are mounted on the radially inner ends of the vanes (it takes 30 minutes to mount gaskets of the invention on all of the vanes of a guide-vane stage, in one particular embodiment of the invention). The gaskets serve to replace the above-described injection of resin in the clearance around each vane, and thus serve to prevent resin from passing through the clearance and running radially outwards into the guide-vane stage. The gasket thus guarantees sealing between the vanes and the edges of the orifices in the inner shroud, which sealing can be provided by pressing the gaskets radially against the inside surface of the inner shroud. The gaskets and the radially inner ends of the vanes are designed to be embedded in the resin that, once hardened, defines a radially inner abradable track.
The resin and the gaskets are preferably made of the same material based on silicone, for example of the room temperature vulcanization (RTV) type. The gaskets of the invention are thus made of the same material as the resin that is injected in the prior art, which means there is no need to alter the specification defining the engine and its certification.
Advantageously, in the mounted position, each gasket forms a continuous band extending all around the end of the corresponding vane, the outer periphery of the band bearing against the radially inside surface of the shroud or being in the proximity of said surface.
The thickness of the gasket may be determined firstly so that it has sufficient tearing strength and secondly so as to enable it to retain a certain amount of flexibility in order to fit as closely as possible to the shape of the inside surface of the shroud when in the mounted position. By way of example, each gasket has a thickness of the order of 2 mm to 3 mm.
The present invention also provides a gasket for a turbine engine guide-vane stage as described above, the gasket being characterized in that it includes a concave curved edge and a convex curved edge for extending respectively beside the pressure side and beside the suction side of a vane, and it includes a through line of cut that extends between and along the above-mentioned edges, and that, in the free state without stress, extends with an angle of curvature that is substantially identical to the angle of curvature of the suction side of the vane. The gasket may be made of silicone, e.g. of the RTV type.
The invention also provides a method of assembling a guide-vane stage of the above-specified type, the method being characterized in that it comprises the steps consisting in:
The method may include, prior to step c), a step consisting in coating the inside surface of the inner shroud with a substance that enhances the adhesion of the gaskets on said surface.
Step c) may be performed manually or by means of a tool of elongate shape and including a stepped longitudinal recess, said recess including a first portion or stage of shape substantially complementary to a gasket and situated at one end of the tool, and a second portion or stage of shape substantially complementary to the radially inner end of a vane and having a depth that is not less than the length of the end portion of the vane that extends beyond the gasket when the gasket is in the mounted position on the vane.
The method may include a preliminary step of fabricating gaskets, either by cutting slices from an extruded section member of elongate shape, or by molding in recesses in a surface of a plate that is scraped after the resin has been deposited and before it has hardened.
The present invention can be better understood, and other details, characteristics, and advantages of the present invention appear more clearly on reading the following description made by way of non-limiting example and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Reference is made initially to
Each moving-blade stage 12 comprises a disk 14 carrying an angular row of substantially radial blades 16 at its periphery, the blades being surrounded by a casing 18 of the compressor.
Each guide-vane stage 10 comprises two shrouds, respectively an inner shroud 20 and an outer shroud 22, between which there extends an annular row of substantially radial vanes 24, the outer shroud 22 being fastened to the casing 18 by nut-and-bolt type means 26.
The radially outer ends of the vanes 24 are welded to the outer shroud 22. The radially inner ends of the vanes 24 are engaged with clearance 25 in orifices of the inner shroud 20 (
In the prior art, the step of applying the resin 26 is preceded by a step of injecting resin 30 into the above-mentioned clearance 25, this step being shown diagrammatically in
The resin 30 is injected by means of a syringe 32 that is filled and handled by an operator. Resin 30 is injected into the clearance 25 all around each vane 24 so as to fill in the clearance and consequently prevent resin 26 from passing through the clearance when it is applied on the inside surface of the inner shroud 20.
Nevertheless, as explained above, this injection step presents numerous drawbacks.
The invention provides a simple and effective solution to this problem by replacing the resin 20 that is injected into the clearance by gaskets that are mounted on the radially inner ends of the vanes so as to provide radial sealing between those ends and the edges of orifices in the inner shroud, subsequently limiting or preventing resin from passing between those elements when resin is applied to the inside surface of the shroud.
Each gasket 140 is a member that is thin and flat having a general shape that is slightly curved and that corresponds substantially to the shape of a section of a vane 124. Each gasket 140 has a concave curved edge 142 and a convex curved edge 144, which edges are to extend respectively beside the pressure side and the suction side of the vane, as can be seen in
The gasket 140 includes a slit that is formed by a slightly curved line of cut 146 extending over a major fraction of the length of the gasket and substantially in its middle, i.e. halfway between the above-mentioned edges 142 and 144. The slit is of small transverse size such that in the free state without stress (
The line of cut 146 presents curvature that is substantially identical to the curvature of the suction side of the vane, so that the portion of the gasket 140 that extends beside the suction side of the vane is deformed little when in the mounted position on the vane (
As can be seen in
Once the resin 126 has been cast, it exerts pressure on the gasket that keeps it pressed against the inner shroud 120, this pressure being a function of the surface area of the gasket that is covered in resin.
Each gasket 140 may be mounted on a vane 124 either manually or by means of a tool such as that shown in
The tool 150 may be used as follows. A gasket 140 is engaged in the first portion 154 of the recess 152 of the tool, and then the tool is engaged on the radially inner end of a vane 124. During this engagement, the gasket 140 deforms and becomes engaged on the vane, which vane penetrates into the second portion 156 of the recess 152 in the tool. As the vane penetrates further into this portion 156, the gasket 140 is moved over the vane. When the radially inner end of the vane comes to bear against the bottom of the recess 152 in the tool, the gasket is pressed against or is in the immediate vicinity of the inside surface of the inner shroud 120. The tool 150 may then be withdrawn from the vane and used to mount a gasket on another vane.
In order to enhance the adhesion of the gasket 140 on the inside surface of the shroud 120, a suitable substance such as an adhesive or even a small quantity of resin 126 (made of the same material as the gaskets 140) may be deposited on this inside surface or on the gaskets before they are mounted on inner ends of the vanes.
In
In
The gaskets 140 and the resin 126 are preferably made of the same material, which may be based on RTV silicone, for example.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
12 53174 | Apr 2012 | FR | national |