The present invention relates to a bypass turbine engine provided with a precooler.
It is known that, on board an aircraft, it is necessary to have hot air available to perform certain functions, such as air conditioning in the cockpit and the passenger cabin or for deicing certain parts of the aircraft.
It is also known that this hot air is taken from the turbine engines of the aircraft and has to be cooled significantly before it can be used. To do this, a heat exchanger is provided, this generally being known as a precooler, in which the hot air bled from the central generator of the turbojet engine is cooled by cold air bled from the fan duct, that is to say from the cold stream of the turbine engine, thus disrupting the correct operation of this engine. What is more, said precooler is generally housed in said fan duct, and this adds aerodynamic disturbances to the disruption caused by the tapping-off of cold air.
What is more, the cold air bled from the cold stream of the turbine engine and used to cool the hot stream bled from the central generator gives rise to a current of heated cold air, which has to be discharged to the outside of the turbine engine, thus increasing the drag of the aircraft.
It is an object of the present invention to remedy the disadvantages of the prior art.
To these ends, according to the invention, the bypass turbine engine for an aircraft comprising:
Thus, by virtue of the present invention it is possible to avoid aerodynamic disturbances in the fan duct attributable to the precooler because the precooler is now housed in the rear part of said inner fairing. In addition, the disadvantages attributable to tapping air from the cold stream and discharging the heated cold air are avoided because said precooler can, without tapping or discharging, make direct use of the cold stream exiting the fan duct and which is blown onto said rear part of the inner fairing.
Thus the problems of the prior art are solved.
As a preference, in order to obtain a satisfactory area for heat exchange between the hot air flowing through said precooler and the cold stream blown thereonto, provision is made for said precooler to have a shape of annular cross section and extends over the entire internal periphery of said rear part of the inner fairing.
It is known that, in certain turbine engines, said inner fairing and said central generator between them delimit an intermediate chamber of annular cross section surrounding said central generator, said intermediate chamber being used to circulate a current of cold air able to regulate the temperature of said central generator. In this case, the embodiment of the present invention is particularly advantageous because said precooler is then positioned on the same side as said intermediate chamber.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, said inner fairing is, at least in its rear part, double walled, that is to say comprises an inner wall and an outer wall which are separated from one another by a space in the form of an annular gap, and said precooler is positioned in said space.
To these ends, said precooler may comprise:
As a preference, between said distribution pipe and said collection pipe (which pipes are positioned at the internal periphery of the rear part of the inner fairing in a way that is optimized for the cooling of the hot air), said precooler comprises a plurality of curved ducts for guiding the hot air, said ducts being transverse to the longitudinal axis of the nacelle and distributed over the length of said annular space.
Such ducts may advantageously be formed by a framework that reinforces the inner fairing, secured to said inner and outer walls thereof.
Advantageously, in order to provide even finer and easier regulation of the temperature of the cooled hot air, a duct is provided, preferably equipped with a controllable valve, mounted in parallel with said precooler and connecting its hot air inlet to its cooled hot air outlet.
The figures of the attached drawing will make it easy to understand how the invention may be embodied. In these figures identical references denote elements that are similar.
The bypass turbine engine shown by each of
Positioned inside the hollow nacelle 1 are:
The inner fairing 10 and the fairing 4, external to it, between them form a fan duct 13 of annular cross section surrounding the central generator 6 and through which the cold stream 9 flows.
Formed between the inner fairing 10 and the central generator 6 are, at the front, an annular air intake slot 14, and, at the rear, an annular air discharge slot 15. Thus, the intermediate chamber 12 can be swept by a current of cold air f bled from the cold stream 9 at the front slot 14 and discharged at the boundary between said hot stream 7 and said cold stream 9 at the rear slot 15, this current of cold air f being used to regulate the temperature of the central generator 6.
Furthermore, in the usual way, the nacelle 1 is supported by a wing 17 of the aircraft (this wing is depicted in part) via a suspension pylon 18.
In the known turbine engine illustrated in
Thus, in this known layout, some of the cold stream is bled off by the precooler 19 to cool the current of hot air 20 and to generate the cooled hot air current 23 and this also results in said precooler forming a current of heated cold air (not depicted) corresponding to said bled-off portion of the cold stream. This current of heated cold air is discharged to the outside, in any known way not depicted in
It will be readily understood therefore that the presence of the precooler 19 in the fan duct 13, the bleeding-off of some of the cold stream 9 and the discharging of the heated cold air are detrimental to the performance of the known engine illustrated in
In the nacelle 1.1, according to the present invention and depicted in
The precooler 30 has an annular cross section and is positioned inside said rear part 10R of the inner fairing 10, on the same side as the intermediate chamber 12 and extends over the entire internal periphery of said rear part. It is coaxial with the axis L-L and is in thermal contact with said rear part 10R. Because this rear part is in contact with the cold stream 9 exiting the fan duct 13, said precooler 30 is itself cooled by the cold stream 9 without in any way having to bleed off some of the air or having to discharge cooled hot air.
The exemplary embodiment of the precooler 30 which is illustrated by
As can be seen in
Furthermore, said precooler 30 comprises (see
As illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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06 00472 | Jan 2006 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR2007/000090 | 1/18/2007 | WO | 00 | 7/7/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2007/083026 | 7/26/2007 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3842597 | Ehrich | Oct 1974 | A |
4493184 | Nikkanen | Jan 1985 | A |
5269135 | Vermejan et al. | Dec 1993 | A |
5729969 | Porte | Mar 1998 | A |
5782077 | Porte | Jul 1998 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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24 11 950 | Sep 1974 | DE |
0 743 435 | Nov 1996 | EP |
2 272 025 | May 1994 | GB |
2 277 781 | Nov 1994 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090000305 A1 | Jan 2009 | US |