This application relates to a method of assembling a gas turbine engine, wherein both a compressor rotors and the turbine rotors are assembled using a tie shaft connection.
Gas turbine engines are known, and typically include a compressor, which compresses air and delivers it downstream into a combustion section. The air is mixed with fuel in the combustion section and combusted. Products of this combustion pass downstream over turbine rotors, driving the turbine rotors to rotate.
Typically, the compressor section is provided with a plurality of rotor serial stages, or rotor sections. Traditionally, these stages were joined sequentially one to another into an inseparable assembly by welding or separable assembly by bolting using bolt flanges, or other structure to receive the attachment bolts.
More recently, it has been proposed to eliminate the welded or bolted joints with a single coupling which applies an axial force through the compressor rotors stack to hold them together and create the friction necessary to transmit torque.
A gas turbine engine has a compressor section carrying a plurality of compressor rotors and a turbine section carrying a plurality of turbine rotors. The compressor rotors and the turbine rotors are constrained to rotate together with a tie shaft. An upstream hub provides an upstream abutment face for the compressor rotors stack. A downstream hub bounds the upstream end of the compressor rotor and abuts the compressor rotor stack against the upstream hub.
The downstream hub creates a middle support used to provide radial support for a high pressure rotor and control to the tie shaft preload. The middle support also includes a high pressure compressor coupling nut that applies a preload that allows the high pressure compressor stack to be installed separately from the high pressure turbine rotor. The middle support is essential to control the dynamic stability of the long high pressure rotor spanning the distance between its forward and aft supports. The aft support includes a multiple layer interference fit between the shaft and the most downstream turbine rotor. The multi-layer fit accomplishes simultaneously radial support for the rotors stack and dynamic stability for a high pressure spool.
These and other features of the present invention can be best understood from the following specification and drawings, the following of which is a brief description.
Referring to
To address these requirements, a support 340 may be provided between bearings 330, 350 and a compressor rotor stack 313 and a turbine rotor stack 324 may be configured to retain a tight radial fit with a tie shaft 322. Axial preload in the compressor rotor stack 313 and the turbine rotor stack 324 may generate the friction between adjoining rotor faces required for torque transmission. A downstream hub 341 may act as a middle support member to address these requirements. The downstream hub 341 may allow the compressor rotor stack 313 to be assembled separately with a temporary preload applied by a high pressure compressor (HPC) coupling nut 332. The HPC coupling nut 332 may be axially preloaded to satisfy dynamic stability requirements and to prevent the HPC coupling nut 332 from whirling.
The kickstand 343 of the downstream hub 341 is designed as a soft spring to enable a secondary load path from the HPC coupling nut 332 through the kickstand 343, downstream hub 341, and compressor rotor stack 313. The secondary load path may prevent rolling and may ensure self alignment with the mating face of the HPC coupling nut 332. The kickstand 343 of the arrangement may also generate radial and axial reactions at the downstream hub 341 interface with the most downstream of the compressor rotors 338. The secondary load path applies a preload that is mostly temporary as it decreases significantly after the HPT lock nut 327 is tightened—the residual secondary preload may also create loaded contact between the kickstand 343 of the downstream hub 341 and the HPC coupling nut 332 even for conditions when the HPC coupling nut 332 tends to separate.
As shown in
The turbine rotors 325 may be axially preloaded and secured by the HPT lock nut 327 which may apply an axial preload force to hold the compressor rotor stack 313 and turbine rotor stack 324 together and produce the necessary friction to transmit torque. When the HPT lock nut 327 is tightened, the primary load path is transferred from the kickstand 343 to the cylindrical portion of the downstream hub 341 and through the turbine rotor stack 324, producing internal compression load in the compressor rotor stack 313 and turbine rotor stack 324 and tension load in the tie shaft 322.
The arrangement of the three fits 420, 430, and 440 may ensure that the compressor rotor stack 313 and turbine rotor stack 324 are reliably held together, will be capable to resist the forces to be encountered during use, and will transmit the necessary torque and satisfy dynamic stability requirements. All these functions may be accomplished within a minimal radial envelope and with a low-profile locking ring 485.
As a result of the arrangement described above, axial preload may be achieved with a single fastener, the tie shaft 322. The preload may be distributed between the primary path and the secondary path, via the kickstand 343, in a balanced manner such that there is a minimum loss in clamping capability while the dynamic stability is maintained for a long-span, high speed rotor, for example, a rotor that turns at a rate greater than 20,000 RPM. As illustrated in
Although embodiments of this invention have been disclosed, a worker of ordinary skill in this art would recognize that certain modifications would come within the scope of this invention. For that reason, the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this invention. In accordance with the provisions of the patent statutes and jurisprudence, exemplary configurations described above are considered to represent a preferred embodiment of the invention. However, it should be noted that the invention can be practiced otherwise than as specifically illustrated and described without departing from its spirit or scope.
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