This application relates to gas turbine engines and, in particular, to the design of rotary airfoil blades therefore.
The design of gas turbine blades is an area of continuous improvement as blade geometry and material directly impact engine performance. Blade creep growth is a perennial issue with high pressure turbine blades (i.e. blades mounted on the high pressure turbine, or compressor turbine) due to the hot environment in which they operate. A feature, sometimes known as a “growth pocket”, may be incorporated at or near the tip of a high pressure turbine blade to assist with monitoring blade creep growth over the life of the part and establish at which point the blade needs replacement. However, introducing a growth pocket can introduce stress concentrations, structural or dynamic weakness, and/or vibration issues, depending on the blade design and the specific environment to which the blade is subjected in use. Accordingly, there is room for improvement.
In a first aspect, provided is a turbine blade comprising an airfoil extending from a root to a tip, the airfoil defined by a suction side and a pressure side each extending from a leading edge to a trailing edge, the tip having a suction side rail of constant thickness defining a suction side outer periphery of the tip, the tip further having a substantially constant depth pocket defined in the tip, the pocket extending from the suction side rail chordwise to a rail-less pressure side, the pocket having a planar floor extending from the suction side rail to the pressure side and meeting the pressure side substantially perpendicularly along an entire length of the pocket, the length of the pocket extending substantially from the blade leading edge to the blade trailing edge, the pocket further comprising a fillet radius between the planar floor and the suction side rail along an entire length of the suction side rail, the fillet radius having at least a first radius in a region of the pocket corresponding to a maximum width of the pocket and a second radius in a region of the pocket adjacent the blade trailing edge, wherein the second radius is larger than the first radius.
In a second aspect, provided is a turbine blade comprising an airfoil extending from a root to a tip, the airfoil defined by a suction side and a pressure side each extending from a leading edge to a trailing edge, the tip being a substantially planar surface extending perpendicularly from the pressure side, the tip having a suction side rail extending radially outwardly from the planar surface along the suction side of the airfoil, the suction side rail having substantially constant thickness, the rail and surface being substantially perpendicular to one another and having a fillet radius extending between the rail and surface along an entire length of a rail-surface interface, the fillet radius having a changing radius along its length, wherein the fillet radius has a smaller radius adjacent the blade leading edge and a larger radius adjacent the blade trailing edge.
In a third aspect, provided is a method of making a turbine blade comprising a method of manufacturing a turbine blade, the method comprising the steps of: casting a turbine blade having at least an airfoil having a leading edge a trailing edge, pressure and suctions sides and a tip; electron discharge machining (EDM) a tip using an electrode to provide an airfoil-shaped tip pocket, the tip pocket having a floor extending substantially perpendicularly relative to the pressure side, the pocket being defined on at least one side by a rail extending above the pocket.
The figures depict aspects of the disclosed apparatus and method, in which:
A growth pocket 30 is provided in the blade tip 24, the pocket having a tip platform 32 bounded on the suction side 16 of the blade by a suction-side rail 34. The tip platform 32 has a planar portion 36 which extends axially (i.e. substantially perpendicular to a radius extending from the engine axis) across the blade. The tip platform extends chord-wise across the blade from the suction-side rail to a rail-less pressure side 14 of the blade, the absence of a rail on the pressure side resulting in a generally perpendicular intersection of the tip platform 32 and the blade pressure side 14. A tip platform of this configuration is provided to minimize tip weight, to reduce centrifugally-induced steady stresses and for vibration interference tuning. Though not depicted in the Figures, a slight radius or break-edge may be provided between platform 32 and pressure side 14. The tip platform is a flat, featureless surface, uninterrupted by cooling holes.
The growth pocket 30 further includes a fillet radius 38 between tip platform 32 and suction-side rail 34, extending generally from a leading edge end 40 to a trailing edge end 42 of the fillet radius 38 along the entire length of the platform-rail interface. However, the size of the fillet radius 38 is not constant along its length, as it extends from end 40 to end 42, as will now be described.
As shown in
The growth pocket 30 is radially positioned on the blade to have a specific desired radial depth from the blade tip (i.e. from the height of the suction-side rail), which may be 0.105″, for example. The pocket depth may be selected to optimize negative effects due to airfoil torsional vibration mode (if the pocket was too deep) and negative effects due to airfoil bending vibration mode (if the pocket is too shallow).
The growth pocket axial position is specifically set to leave a sufficient wall thickness at the airfoil tip (i.e. the thickness of suction-side rail 34), which may be a minimum of 0.017″, such that the blade can withstand a blade tip rub without excessive damage to the blade. The suction-side rail may be constant thickness along its length from leading edge to trailing edge. With a rail of constant thickness, the planar portion 36 of the tip platform 32 itself has an airfoil shape (i.e. the airfoil 12 cross-sectional shape less the cross-sectional shape of the rail and fillet radius).
The blade may be cast from a single crystal alloy. The pocket, however, cannot easily be provided in a casting, and it is difficult to conventionally machine reliably, due to the variable fillet radius and thin wall thickness for suction-side rail 34. Therefore, referring to
The above description is meant to be exemplary only, and one skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made to the embodiments described without departing from the scope of the invention disclosed. Still other modifications which fall within the scope of the present invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art, in light of a review of this disclosure, and such modifications are intended to fall within the appended claims.