This invention relates to a flow delivery system used for pressurizing seals in a turbo machine.
Turbo machines, such as a turbofan engine used in aircraft, incorporate carbon seals to separate a bearing compartment from a buffer compartment. The bearing compartment includes bearings supporting, for example, a turbine for rotation relative to a housing of the engine. The bearing compartment contains a lubricant that lubricates the bearings. The buffer compartment contains pressurized air that leaks past the seals which prevents the lubricant from weeping past the seals.
The carbon seals require a predetermined differential pressure across the seal in order to prevent leakage of lubricant past the seal. One problem is that lubrication has been known to leak past the carbon seals at idle conditions, because of an inadequate pressure differential across the seals.
The buffer compartment consists of a body which is generally cylindrical. Compressor bleed air flows into the body in a direction normal to a plane that is tangential to the body. As a result, a stagnation area forms within the body directly across from where the flow enters the body. This causes an uneven pressure distribution along the cylindrical wall of the body, and if one of the carbon seals is arranged near the cylindrical wall, the uneven pressure on the seal may result in leaks. Notwithstanding the position of the seal, the pressure in the buffer compartment is inadequate at idle.
Increased pressure is required within the buffer compartment in the vicinity of the carbon seals for the seals to be effective.
The present invention provides a turbo machine that includes a housing having a bearing compartment for receiving lubrication. The housing also provides a buffer compartment for receiving air, for example, compressor bleed air. A turbine shaft is supported within the housing on a bearing for rotation relative to the housing. The bearing is arranged within the bearing compartment. A seal is arranged between the turbine shaft and the housing and separates the bearing and buffer compartments. The seal includes opposing lubrication and air sides that are respectively exposed to the bearing and buffer compartments. A buffer tube is fluidly connected to a body of the buffer compartment. The buffer tube introduces flow generally tangential to an inner surface of the body for generating a swirl within the buffer compartment.
The buffer tube includes a velocity control device such as a venturi arranged at an exit of the tube to control the velocity of the flow entering the body. A flow control device such as an orifice plate is arranged upstream of the venturi to control the flow to a desired flow rate. The swirling flow within the body at the desired flow rate and velocity generates a uniform radial pressure gradient. At idle the radial pressure gradient results in a large enough pressure magnitude at the periphery of the buffer compartment to create the desired pressure differential across the seal. The increased pressure at the periphery prevents leakage of lubricant past the seal at idle.
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.
A portion of a turbofan engine 10 is shown in
The bearings 21 are arranged within a bearing compartment 20. First and second seals 26 and 28 contain the lubricant within the bearing compartment 20. An insufficient differential pressure exists across the seals, which are carbon seals in one example, so that oil can leak out of the bearing compartment 20 and collect in the housing 12 and at the bottom of the turbine flow path 19.
Referring to
A tube 34, schematically shown in
The present invention introduces flow 54 from an exit of the buffer tube 38 in a generally tangential plane T to an adjoining inner surface 24 of the cylindrical wall 23, as shown in
where ρ is the density of the air, w is the velocity of the air exiting the venturi, and r is the radial position for which the pressure is calculated. The pressure at the seal 26 can be adjusted to a desirable magnitude by changing the velocity at which the air is introduced into the buffer compartment, or the radius at which the air is introduced. In addition, the pressure at the seal 28 can be adjusted by changing the radial position at which the supply air is extracted from the buffer compartment.
Although a preferred embodiment of this invention has 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.
This invention was conceived in performance of U.S. Air Force Contract No. F33657-91-C-0007. The government may have certain rights in this invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3235090 | Bose et al. | Feb 1966 | A |
4312305 | Noguchi et al. | Jan 1982 | A |
6173735 | Perry et al. | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6330790 | Arora et al. | Dec 2001 | B1 |
6991235 | Ebert et al. | Jan 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080003097 A1 | Jan 2008 | US |