The present application relates generally to gas turbines and more particularly relates to turbine buckets having a bucket damping system for minimizing bucket vibration.
Gas turbines generally include a rotor with a number of circumferentially spaced blades or buckets mounted in adjacent positions extending radially about the periphery of a rotor wheel or disk. The buckets generally include an airfoil, a platform, a shank, a dovetail, and other elements. The dovetail is positional about the rotor and secured therein, generally by being slidably received in a complimentary configured recess in the rotor disk. The airfoils project into the gas path so as to convert the kinetic energy of the gas into rotational mechanical energy.
Each airfoil typically includes a convex side and a concave side. Likewise, the airfoil platform typically includes a leading edge and a trailing edge extending between the convex side and the concave side. A pair of generally axially spaced support ledges may be positioned on the convex side of the bucket. Likewise, an undercut may be positioned within the bucket platform from the leading edge to the trailing edge along the convex side on the other end. The undercut may include an angled surface that may extend the full axial length of the bucket.
During engine operation, vibrations may be introduced into the turbine buckets that can cause premature failure of the buckets if the vibrations are not adequately dissipated. In order to improve the high cycle fatigue life of a turbine bucket, vibration dampers are typically provided below the platforms to frictionally dissipate vibratory energy and reduce the corresponding amplitude of vibration during operation. The amount of vibration energy that is removed by the vibration damper is a function of the dynamic weight of the vibration damper and the reaction loads.
Although these known dampers may be largely adequate during typical operations, there is a desire to improve overall damper effectiveness. Prior attempts to accomplish damping of vibrations have included round damper pins, sheet metal flat dampers, or complex wedge shaped dampers. Often the true damper performance of these types of dampers is not known until the first engine test. At that time, the damper pocket geometry in the buckets is locked in by hard tooling. If the damper does not perform as expected, then an expensive tooling rework is required. Accordingly, there is desire to eliminate one or more of these aforementioned problems.
The present disclosure thus describes a damping system for a turbine bucket of a gas turbine. The damping system may include a damper pin with a rounded top portion and a flat bottom portion. The damper pin flat bottom portion may have material added to it, or it may have material removed from it to achieve a desired dynamic weight ratio. If, upon initial engine testing, it is determined that the damper performance is not optimal, the damper pocket geometry need not be reworked, only the damper pin needs to be reworked.
These and other features of the present disclosure will become apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art upon review of the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the drawings and the appended claims.
Referring now to the drawings, in which like numerals refer to like elements throughout the several views,
An alternative embodiment of a flat bottom damper pin, generally 20, as described herein is illustrated in
Yet another alternative embodiment of a flat bottom damper pin, generally 30, as described herein is illustrated in
The damper pin 30 may include bossed ends 36 with bosses 40 provided along the underside of the damper pin 30, which shall be subsequently described.
As used herein, the term “substantially the entire length,” with reference to a flat bottom, is intended to mean not only damper pins that have a flat bottom along their entire length, but also damper pins having a Murphy proofing tab disposed on the bottom of an otherwise flat-bottomed damper pin, and otherwise flat-bottomed damper pins having bosses on the bottom surface thereof and/or bossed ends extending from the damper pin.
Prior to full speed rotation of the rotor, the damper pin 30, as illustrated in
As seen in
The damping weight of the damper pin disclosed herein may be optimized by analytical results or by test results. The result may be an ability to tune to a specific dynamic weight by adding or removing a given amount of material without changing the pocket geometry or the radius of the damper pin between adjacent contact points. By retaining the rounded top portion, i.e., the same arc of curvature at the contact points 57, 58, the bucket geometry does not need to change. The performance characteristics of the damper pin can be optimized by only changing the flat bottom portion through machining or other techniques to add or remove known amounts of material.
Referring now to
When a damper pin 30 such as illustrated in
Preferably, the shape of the damper pin ends 11 and bossed ends 36 and the bucket damper slot 50 are designed such that the damper pin 10 is able to seal and provide damping during operation.
As will now be appreciated, other shapes, configurations, and combinations for the flat bottom damper pins described herein may be used. For example, the damper pin may include bossed ends, and a Murphy proofing tab. Or, the damper pin may include bosses and no Murphy proofing tab. Other combinations are of course possible.
The present disclosure also provides a method of fabricating a flat bottom damper pin as disclosed herein. The method may comprise the steps of providing a pin having a rounded top portion, determining an optimal dynamic weight ratio for the pin in the bucket via analytical and past test experience, adding to or removing a portion of the pin material, such as by machining or other known methods to create a flat bottom portion along substantially the entire length of the pin, such that the weight of the damping pin following addition of material or elimination of the removed portion of the pin material corresponds to the predetermined dynamic weight ratio.
The method may further comprise the steps of installing the damper pin in a bucket damper slot of a gas turbine, performing an engine test on the gas turbine, determining from the engine test if the damper pin is performing at the optimal dynamic weight ratio, for example, by monitoring vibratory response levels, and if the damper pin is not performing at the optimal dynamic weight ratio, adding material to, or removing an additional portion of pin material from, the flat bottom surface along substantially the entire length thereof, maintaining a substantially flat surface along substantially the entire bottom surface of the pin.
As will now be appreciated, in practicing the disclosed method, the pin may initially be round in cross section along its length, and the flat bottom surface may be achieved by removing, for example by machining, abrading, grinding, etc., a quantity of material from the pin such that the weight of the resulting flat bottom pin corresponds to the desired optimal dynamic weight ratio. As will now also be readily appreciated, if the pin includes a Murphy proofing tab, or one or more bosses, the corresponding change in weight of the pin should be taken into account in determining the amount of material to add to or remove from the flat bottom portion in order to achieve the optimal dynamic weight ratio.
Turning now to
This written description uses examples to disclose the invention, including the best mode, and also to enable any person of ordinary skill in the art to practice the invention, including making and using any devices or systems and performing any incorporated methods. The steps recited in the accompanying method claims need not be taken in the recited order, where other orders of conducting the steps to achieve the desired result would be readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art. The patentable scope of the invention is defined by the claims, and may include other examples that occur to those of ordinary skill in the art. Such other examples are intended to be within the scope of the claims if they have structural elements that do not differ from the literal language of the claims or if they include equivalent structural elements with insubstantial differences from the literal languages of the claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20140079529 A1 | Mar 2014 | US |