This invention relates generally to free-tipped axial-flow fans, which may be used as automotive engine-cooling fans, among other uses.
Engine-cooling fans are used in automotive vehicles to move air through a set of heat exchangers which typically includes a radiator to cool an internal combustion engine, an air-conditioner condenser, and perhaps additional heat exchangers. These fans are generally enclosed by a shroud which serves to reduce recirculation and to direct air between the fan and the heat exchangers. Typically, these fans are powered by an electric motor which is mounted to the shroud.
The fans are typically injection-molded in plastic, a material with limited mechanical properties. Plastic fans exhibit creep deflection when subject to rotational and aerodynamic loading at high temperature. This deflection must be accounted for in the design process.
Although some engine-cooling fans have rotating tip bands connecting the tips of all the blades, many are free-tipped—i.e., the tips of the blades are free from connection with one another. Free-tipped fans have several advantages when compared to banded fans. They can have lower cost, reduced weight, better balance, and advantages due to their reduced inertia, such as lower couple imbalance, lower precession torque, and faster coast-down when de-powered.
Often free-tipped fans are designed to have a constant-radius tip shape, and to operate in a shroud barrel which is cylindrical in the area of closest clearance with the fan blades. In other cases, the tip radius is non-constant. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,595,744 describes a free-tipped engine-cooling fan in which the blade tips are shaped to conform to a flared shroud barrel.
Free-tipped fans are designed to have a tip gap, or running clearance, between the blade tips and the shroud barrel. This tip gap must be sufficient to allow for both manufacturing tolerances and the maximum deflection that may occur over the service life of the fan assembly. In practice, this gap is generally at least 0.5 percent, but less than 2 percent of the fan diameter, and more typically approximately 1 percent of fan diameter.
The presence of a tip gap has numerous adverse effects on performance. One effect is that as the gap increases the fan must operate at higher speeds to achieve a given operating point. This is due to the fact that the blade loading—the pressure differential between the pressure and suction sides of the fan blade—is reduced in the vicinity of the gap. Other effects are reduced fan efficiency and increased fan noise, particularly when the system resistance is high. These adverse effects can limit the applicability of free-tipped fans to applications where the system resistance is relatively low. Thus, there is a need for a free-tipped fan which minimizes adverse performance effects caused by the tip gap.
One approach is to design the fan so as to counteract the effect of the tip gap on the fan loading. For example, U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2011/0211949 describes a fan with improved tip loading in the presence of a tip gap. This fan can improve fan performance, but the efficiency and noise of the fan may still be compromised by the gap.
Another approach is to design the tip of the fan in such a way that the flow of air through the gap is minimized. Various methods have been proposed in the past, with varying success. The challenge is to modify the blade shape in such a way that the flow through the tip gap is minimized, without adding geometric details which contribute additional parasitic drag or increase the noise of the fan.
In one aspect, the invention provides a free-tipped axial fan assembly comprising a fan and a shroud, the fan having a plurality of blades, each blade having a leading edge, a trailing edge, and a blade tip. The shroud comprises a shroud barrel surrounding at least a portion of the blade tips, the assembly having a running clearance between the shroud barrel and the blade tips. The fan has a blade tip radius R equal to the maximum radial extent of the blade tips measured at the blade trailing edge, and a diameter D equal to twice the blade tip radius R. Each of the blades has a sectional geometry which at each radius has a chord line and a thickness distribution, said thickness varying from the blade leading edge to the blade trailing edge, said thickness having a maximum value at a position of maximum thickness. A non-dimensional thickness distribution is defined at each radius to be the distribution of thickness divided by maximum thickness as a function of chordwise position. The maximum thickness of each of the plurality of blades exhibits a significant increase in a region adjacent the blade tip.
In one aspect of the invention, the shroud barrel is flared, and the blade tips are shaped to conform to the flared shroud barrel, and the blade tip leading edge is at a larger radius than the blade tip trailing edge. In this aspect of the invention, the maximum thickness, the trailing-edge thickness, and the thickness distribution at any distance from the blade tip within the region adjacent the blade tip are taken to be the maximum thickness, the trailing edge thickness, and the thickness distribution of a blade with a maximum thickness, a trailing-edge thickness, and a thickness distribution which does not vary with radial position, the intersection of which by a surface of revolution offset by said distance from the surface of revolution swept by the blade tip is identical to that of the blade.
In another aspect of the invention, the fan has constant-radius blade tips.
In another aspect of the invention, the maximum thickness at each blade tip is at least 100 percent greater than the maximum thickness of a blade section which is offset from the blade tip by a distance equal to 0.10R.
In another aspect of the invention, the maximum thickness at each blade tip is at least 200 percent greater than the maximum thickness of a blade section which is offset from the blade tip by a distance equal to 0.10R.
In another aspect of the invention, the maximum thickness at each blade tip is at least 100 percent greater than the maximum thickness of a blade section which is offset from the blade tip by a distance equal to 0.05R.
In another aspect of the invention, the maximum thickness at each blade tip is at least 200 percent greater than the maximum thickness of a blade section which is offset from the blade tip by a distance equal to 0.05R.
In another aspect of the invention, the maximum thickness at each blade tip is at least 100 percent greater than the maximum thickness of a blade section which is offset from the blade tip by a distance equal to 0.025R.
In another aspect of the invention, the maximum thickness at each blade tip is at least 200 percent greater than the maximum thickness of a blade section which is offset from the blade tip by a distance equal to 0.025R.
In another aspect of the invention, there is a smooth transition in thickness between an inner portion of the blade and the region of significant maximum thickness increase adjacent the blade tip.
In another aspect of the invention, the thickness increases monotonically to the blade tip within the region of significant maximum thickness increase adjacent the blade tip.
In another aspect of the invention, the increase in maximum thickness follows approximately the square of the distance from a position corresponding to a beginning of the thickness increase.
In another aspect of the invention, the non-dimensional thickness distribution at the blade tip is similar to the non-dimensional thickness distribution at the beginning of the thickness increase, with the exception of the trailing edge region, where the blade tip has a relatively small non-dimensional trailing-edge thickness.
In another aspect of the invention, the non-dimensional thickness distribution at the blade tip has a position of maximum thickness which is closer to the trailing edge than that of the non-dimensional thickness distribution at the beginning of the thickness increase.
In another aspect of the invention, the trailing-edge thickness of the blade tip is approximately equal to the trailing-edge thickness of the blade section at a position corresponding to a beginning of the thickness increase.
In another aspect of the invention, the tip gap is greater than 0.005 times the fan diameter D and less than 0.02 times the fan diameter D.
In another aspect of the invention, the fan is injection-molded plastic.
In another aspect of the invention, the thickened region adjacent to the blade tip is hollow.
In another aspect of the invention, the shroud barrel is flared, the blade tips are shaped to conform to the flared shroud barrel, the fan is injected-molded, and the thickened region adjacent to the blade tip is hollowed in such a way that action in the molding die is not required.
In one aspect, the invention provides a free-tipped axial fan assembly comprising a fan and a shroud, the fan having a plurality of blades, each blade having a leading edge, a trailing edge, and a blade tip. The shroud comprises a shroud barrel surrounding at least a portion of the blade tips, the assembly having a running clearance between the shroud barrel and the blade tips. The fan has a blade tip radius R equal to the maximum radial extent of the blade tips measured at the blade trailing edge, and a diameter D equal to twice the blade tip radius R. Each of the blades has a sectional geometry which at each radius has a chord line and a thickness distribution, said thickness varying from the blade leading edge to the blade trailing edge, said thickness having a maximum value at a position of maximum thickness. A non-dimensional thickness distribution is defined at each radius to be the distribution of thickness divided by maximum thickness as a function of chordwise position. The maximum thickness of each of the plurality of blades exhibits a significant increase in a region adjacent the blade tip and the maximum thickness increases continuously from an end of the region furthest from the blade tip to either a sharp blade tip edge or a point where edge-rounding of the blade tip begins.
Other aspects of the invention will become apparent by consideration of the detailed description and accompanying drawings.
a is a schematic view of a free-tipped axial fan assembly, showing a constant-radius blade tip and a cylindrical shroud barrel. The free-tipped axial fan assembly is configured as an engine-cooling fan assembly.
b is a schematic view of a free-tipped axial fan assembly, showing a blade tip which conforms to the shape of a flared shroud barrel. The free-tipped axial fan assembly is configured as an engine-cooling fan assembly.
c is a schematic view of a free-tipped axial fan assembly, showing a blade tip which conforms to the shape of a flared shroud barrel, where the blade trailing edge is rounded at the blade tip.
a shows an axial projection of a fan with a constant-radius blade tip, with definitions of various geometric parameters.
b shows an axial projection of a fan with a blade tip which conforms to a flared shroud, with definitions of various geometric parameters.
c shows an axial projection of a fan with a blade tip which conforms to a flared shroud, where the blade trailing edge is rounded at the blade tip.
a is a cylindrical cross-section of a fan blade, taken along line A-A of
b is a cylindrical cross-section of a fan blade with definitions of other geometric parameters.
c is a detail of the leading-edge region of a fan blade.
d is a detail of the trailing-edge region of a fan blade.
a-4c are schematic views of leakage flow around blade tips of different geometries.
a, 5b, and 5c show plots of maximum thickness as a function of radius for a prior-art fan and two fans according to the present invention, in the case of a constant-radius blade tip.
a and 6b are schematic views showing the increase in maximum thickness as a function of distance from the blade tip in the case of a fan according to the present invention with a blade tip that conforms to a flared shroud barrel.
a is an axial view of the suction side of a fan according to the present invention whose blade tips conform to a flared shroud barrel, which is also shown.
b is an axial view of the pressure side of the fan of
c is a meridional section through the blade and shroud barrel, at an angle corresponding to the point of maximum thickness at the blade tip, as indicated in
d is a detailed view of the tip region of
e and 7f are views of a prior-art fan which correspond to
g is an axial view of the pressure side of a single blade of the fan according to the present invention.
h an axial view of the pressure side of a single blade of the prior-art fan.
a and 8b show blade thickness distributions, for two fans according to the present invention, at different positions within the region of increased thickness.
a and 9b are axial views of the pressure side of a single blade of two fans according to the present invention whose blade tips conform to a flared shroud barrel, where the thickness distributions in the region of increased thickness at the tip are shown in
a and 10b illustrate details of a fan according to the present invention whose blade tips conform to a flared shroud barrel where the blade tips are hollowed out.
Before any embodiments of the invention are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the following drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways.
a shows a free-tipped axial fan assembly 1. In the illustrated construction, the free-tipped axial fan assembly 1 is an engine-cooling fan assembly mounted adjacent to at least one heat exchanger 2. In some constructions, the heat exchanger(s) 2 includes a radiator 3, which cools an internal combustion engine (not shown) as fluid circulates through the radiator 3 and back to the internal combustion engine. In alternatively-powered vehicles, the fan assembly 1 could be used in conjunction with one or more heat exchangers to cool batteries, electric motors, etc. A shroud 4 guides cooling air from the radiator 3 to a fan 5. The fan 5 rotates about an axis 6 and comprises a hub 7 and a plurality of generally radially-extending blades 8.
Although the fan 5 may be in a “puller” configuration and located downstream of the heat exchanger(s) 2, in some cases the fan 5 is a “pusher”, and located upstream of the heat exchanger(s) 2. Although
a shows each blade tip 10a to be at a constant radius, and the shroud barrel 11a to be generally cylindrical in the region of close proximity to the blade tips 10a. This example shows the blade tips 10a in close proximity with the shroud barrel 11a along their entire axial length. In other cases, the blade tips 10a are allowed to protrude from the barrel 11a, so that only the rearward portion of each blade tip 10a has a small clearance gap with the shroud barrel 11a.
a is an axial projection of the free-tipped fan of
b illustrates a free-tipped axial fan assembly that is configured as an engine-cooling fan assembly similar to that of
b shows an axial view of the free-tipped fan of
c illustrates a free-tipped axial fan assembly that is configured as an engine-cooling fan assembly similar to that of
c shows an axial view of the free-tipped fan of
Unless specifically noted otherwise, the description below and the accompanying drawings refer generally to any of the types of fans shown in
a shows cylindrical cross-section A-A at radius r of the fan shown in
b shows the blade section with zero blade angle. The meanline arclength is defined as “A”. The blade thickness “t” at any position “a” along the mean line 105 is the distance between the upper surface 107 and the lower surface 106, measured normal to the mean line at that position. The thickness can be specified as a function of position along the mean line (meanline position, a/A), or as a function of chordwise position, x/c, where “x” is the position along the chord line intersected by a line normal to the chord line that passes through position “a” along the mean line. The blade thickness t can vary from the leading edge 101 to the trailing edge 102 and has a maximum value tmax, which occurs at a position atmax along the meanline, or xtmax along the chord line. A non-dimensional thickness distribution can be defined as the distribution of t/tmax as a function of meanline position a/A or chordwise position x/c. For small values of fmax, these two distributions are very nearly the same, and will be referred to indiscriminately in the following.
c shows a detail of the leading edge region of the blade. The leading edge is typically rounded with a radius rle, as shown.
When a fan is operating, there exists a high pressure on the pressure side of the blade, and a low pressure on the suction side of the blade. At the tip of a free-tipped fan, this pressure difference causes there to be a leakage flow from the pressure side to the suction side. This leakage flow reduces the pressure difference across the blade tip, and causes a tip vortex to form adjacent to the suction surface. This tip vortex is shown schematically in
Various attempts have been made to reduce the amount of leakage. One obvious approach is to reduce the size of the tip gap. But manufacturing tolerances, wide-ranging environmental conditions, and anticipated blade creep all contribute to a required tip gap typically between 0.005 and 0.02 times the fan diameter D. Another approach is to attach a rotating tip band to the blade tips. This can be very effective, but banded fans can be more costly and less desirable due to their increased weight and inertia. “Partial” bands or “winglets” can be used, but it is difficult to design such extensions to the blade which do not increase fan noise due to misalignment of the geometry with the onset flow and the introduction of additional sources of “edge noise”.
One approach which has been found to reduce the adverse effects of a tip gap is to increase the thickness of the fan blade, as indicated in
The current invention is shown schematically in
In the case of a fan which has a constant-radius blade tip where the blade has the same distribution of non-dimensional thickness t/tmax as a function of chordwise position x/c or meanline position a/A,
Although
In the case of a fan whose blade tips conform to a flared shroud barrel, a preferred embodiment of the invention has a blade thickness distribution that varies not as a function of radius but as a function of distance from the blade tip. This is desirable because the flow near the shroud is roughly parallel to the shroud surface, encountering the blade leading edge at a radius larger than that at which it encounters the trailing edge. If the thickening of the blade occurs as a function of distance from the blade tip, the flow near the shroud experiences a blade shape whose thickness form is similar to the design thickness distribution. Were the thickness increase to occur as a function of radial position, the flow would encounter a relatively thick blade at the leading edge and a relatively thin blade at the trailing edge, giving rise to a blade surface pressure distribution significantly different from the design distribution. This, in turn, might give rise to less desirable boundary layer characteristics, and additional noise.
a shows an axial view of the suction side of a fan according to the present invention whose blade tips conform to a flared shroud barrel, which is also shown. The thickness increase is a function of distance from the blade tip. This fan has an increased thickness distribution in the region within 0.025R of the blade tip, and a thickness at the blade tip approximately three times the thickness at the start of the thickness increase.
One embodiment of the present invention is a fan whose blade tips conform to a flared shroud barrel and where the thickness increase is a function of distance from the blade tip, where the blade tips are hollowed out. This embodiment is shown in
Each of the embodiments of the present invention shown in the figures exhibits a significant increase in the blade thickness adjacent the blade tip. For example, a 100 percent or greater increase in maximum thickness may occur within a distance of the blade tip of 10 percent, 5 percent or even 2.5 percent of the blade tip radius. In some cases, a 200 percent or greater increase in maximum thickness may occur within a distance of the blade tip of 10 percent 5 percent or 2.5 percent of the blade tip radius.
Each of the embodiments of the present invention shown in the figures exhibits a blade thickness which increases monotonically or continuously from the start of the thickness increase to the blade tip. An advantage of this monotonic increase is that it typically leads to a sharp edge at the entrance to the leakage path, which may reduce the leakage flow rate. However, in other embodiments the increase in blade thickness may not be monotonic. In particular, the edges of the blade tip may be rounded slightly to reduce their sharpness. This may be advantageous for reasons of tooling, molding, or part handling. Even in the case of a blade tip with rounded edges (
A fan according to the present invention differs from a prior art fan only in that it has a revised thickness distribution. The blade angle and camber of the blade is unaffected. As a result, the overall performance of the fan at its design point is largely unaffected, except for an increase in efficiency, a decrease in noise, and a slight speed reduction. Other approaches to reducing flow through the tip gap often modify one side of the blade more than the other. These approaches in effect modify the mean line of the blade. Such a modification will in general change fan performance in a way that may not be anticipated, therefore requiring design iterations in order to achieve the original design point.
Another advantage of the present invention is that no additional geometric features are added to the fan, such as winglets, fences, or partial bands. When such additional geometries are added to a fan, parasitic losses and additional noise can be introduced which can offset the gains in efficiency and noise that are obtained from the reduction of flow through the tip gap.
U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2011/0211949, the contents of which are incorporated by reference herein, discloses a change in blade camber and blade angle which acts to counteract the effect of the tip gap on the blade tip loading. Since the present invention does not involve any changes to the blade camber or blade angle, a fan can beneficially incorporate the claimed features of that application as well as the claimed features of the present invention.
Fan assemblies having properties according to one or more aspects of the present invention can be forward-skewed, back-skewed, radial, or of a mixed-skew design. Similarly, fan assemblies according to one or more aspects of the present invention can have any number of blades, any distribution of blade angle, camber, chord, or rake, and may be of either a pusher or a puller configuration.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/779,186 filed Mar. 13, 2013, the entire contents of which are incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61779186 | Mar 2013 | US |