As shown in
In one embodiment, the rotor shaft 12 may be made from a titanium alloy, for example, alpha and near alpha alloys, alpha-beta alloys, or unalloyed titanium. Some examples of the alpha-beta alloys may include Ti-6Al-4V, Ti-6Al-6V-2Sn, and Ti-6Al-2Sn-4Zr-6Mo, etc. The turbine rotor wheel 20 may be made from a titanium aluminide intermetallic alloy. Titanium aluminide intermetallic alloys may include TiAl or Ti3Al intermetallic compound-based alloys, for example, Ti-45Al-2Nb-2Cr, Ti-47Al-2Nb-2Cr, or Ti-48Al-2Nb-0.7Cr-0.3Si, etc. Titanium aluminide intermetallic compound-based alloys may be solid state solutions that may have Nb, Cr, Si or other solute atoms randomly distributed in the solvent, namely, titanium aluminide intermetallic compound, in which Ti and Al atoms may form a long-range ordered crystal structure. The rotor shaft 12 may be made from a titanium (Ti) alloy. Ti alloys may be solid solutions that have Al, V, and other solute atoms randomly distributed in the Ti solvent. The rotor shaft 12 may define a cavity 30 extending along the central axis A at the second end 18. In one embodiment, the cavity 30 may have a circular cross-section. The cavity 30 may employ any other configuration.
As shown in
The hub portion 62, the intermediate portion 50, and the shaft portion 44 may be coaxially aligned. The hub portion 62 of the turbine rotor wheel 60 may be bonded to the second end 54 of the intermediate portion 50, and the first end 52 of the intermediate portion 50 may be coupled to the second end 48 of the shaft portion 44.
In one embodiment, the shaft portion 44 may be made from a metal, for example, steel. The intermediate portion 50 may be made from a titanium alloy, for example, alpha and near alpha alloys, alpha-beta alloys, or unalloyed titanium. Some examples of the alpha-beta alloys may include Ti-6Al-4V, Ti-6Al-6V-2Sn, and Ti-6Al-2Sn-4Zr-6Mo, etc. The turbine rotor wheel 60 may be made from a titanium aluminide intermetallic alloy, for example, Ti-45Al-2Nb-2Cr, Ti-47Al-2Nb-2Cr, or Ti-48Al-2Nb-0.7Cr-0.3Si, etc. The intermediate portion 50 may define a cavity 70 extending along the central axis C′ at the second end 54 of the intermediate portion 50. Similar to, the above-described embodiment shown in
As shown in
The disclosed friction welding method may be used to bond a material made from a titanium aluminide intermetallic alloy to another material that may be made from a titanium alloy. Particularly, the disclosed friction welding method may be used to bond a TiAl turbine rotor wheel to a turbine rotor shaft to form a turbine rotor assembly used in, for example, a turbocharger. The turbocharger can be used in an engine system to improve transient response and thermal efficiency of the engine.
Bonding processes that involves very high temperatures may produce large temperature gradient near the bonding region and may cause high local thermal stresses in the joining region. TiAl intermetallic materials have limited ductility, and therefore, are prone to crack during or after the bonding process. In some applications, e.g. turbine wheel, the high local thermal stress near the joining region could be further enhanced because of specific component geometry or large component size, which poses a great challenge to the joining process. Preheating the TiAl intermetallic material to a predetermined temperature, e.g. 600° C., combined with the specified set of welding conditions as described in this disclosure, can decrease thermal stresses and, therefore, avoid cracking. In addition, the specified set of welding conditions with preheating as disclosed in this disclosure can minimize excessive diffusion/reaction, reduce the formation of brittle intermetallic phases at the interface and therefore, produce superior joining properties. The disclosed friction welding method can be used in turbine applications as well as large valve applications (for example, more than four inches (10.16 cm) in valve head diameter), where high local thermal stresses may be encountered because of special geometry or larger size.
An exemplary welding process for bonding a turbine rotor wheel 20 to a rotor shaft 12 to form a turbine rotor assembly 10 as shown in
The rotary friction welding may include two stages, a friction stage at steps 106, 108, and 110 and a forging stage at step 112. In the friction stage at the step 106, the rotor shaft 12 may be held by a chuck in a rotating machine, and the turbine rotor wheel 20 may be held by a chuck in a machine that may hold the turbine rotor wheel 20 in a stationary manner and that may linearly move the turbine rotor wheel 20 along the central axis. The hub portion 22 of the turbine rotor wheel 20 and the rotor shaft 12 may be coaxially aligned, with the hub portion 22 facing the second end 18 of the rotor shaft 12. While the rotor shaft 12 held by the rotating chuck is rotated at a high speed, the turbine rotor wheel 20 held by the chuck may be moved toward the rotor shaft 12, and the hub portion 22 of the turbine rotor wheel 20 may be pressed onto the second end 18 of the rotor shaft 12 at a predetermined friction pressure for a predetermined time duration at the step 108. The time duration may also be expressed in burn-off distance which may vary with the alloy used.
In one embodiment, in the friction stage, the rotor shaft 12 may be rotated at a predetermined rotational speed, for example, 800 revolutions per minute (rpm). The rotational speed may also correspond to a linear speed between about 0.3 m/s and about 5 m/s at the outer circumference of the hub portion 22. The turbine rotor wheel 20 and the rotor shaft 12 may be pressed against each other at a predetermined pressure, for example, about 10 megapascal (MPa) to 200 MPa for a predetermined time, for example, about 5 to 60 seconds. In another embodiment, the friction stage may include two sub-stages. In the first sub-stage, the turbine rotor wheel 20 and the rotor shaft 12 may be pressed against each other by a first predetermined pressure, for example, about 20 MPa to 60 MPa for about 5 to 30 seconds. In the second sub-stage, the turbine rotor wheel 20 and the rotor shaft 12 may pressed against each other by a second predetermined pressure of about 50 MPa to 200 MPa for about 0.5 to 5 seconds. The pressure and time may be different according to the size, weight and shape of the turbine rotor wheel 20 and the preheat temperature of the turbine rotor wheel 20 before the rotary friction welding process. The rotating chuck may be then rapidly braked to stop the rotation of the rotor shaft 12 at step 110.
The forging stage may start after the rotation of the rotor shaft 12 is stopped. In the forging stage at the step 112, the two end surfaces 26 and 28 may be pressed against each other firmly by a predetermined forge pressure, for example, at least about 200 MPa, for a predetermined time duration depends on component size, for example, about 5 to 60 seconds.
In the friction stage, the friction between the end surfaces 26 and 28 may generate heat, and the end surface 28 of the hub portion 22 of the turbine rotor wheel 20 and the end surface 26 of the second end 18 of the rotor shaft 12 may plastically deform. In both the friction stage and the forge stage, materials from the hub portion 22 and the second end 18 may flow into the cavity 30 and at least partially fill the cavity 30. The cavity 30 may help to reduce the probability of thermal cracking because the temperature gradient in radial direction may be reduced as the center part generally has a low linear speed and therefore may be heated up slower by friction than the outer circumference. The cavity 30 may also increase joint properties because it may reduce the thickness of diffusion/reaction layer, which can minimize the formation of intermetallic phases. The arrangement of the cavity 30 may also reduce burrs generated at the outer circumference of the rotor shaft 12 and the hub portion 22 during the process of welding the second end 18 of the rotor shaft 12 with the hub portion 22 of the turbine rotor wheel 20, and therefore, it may also reduce the mechanical work needed to remove the burrs afterwards.
In one embodiment, the bonded portion of the turbine rotor assembly 10 may be provided with a post-weld heat treatment to release stress generated in the friction welding process in the bonded portion. For example, the bonded portion of the turbine rotor assembly 10 may be heated to a predetermined temperature, for example, about 400° C., to release stress generated during the friction welding process.
The exemplary turbine rotor assembly 100 as shown in
Several advantages over the prior art may be associated with the method of bonding a first material made from a titanium aluminide intermetallic alloy to a second material made from a titanium alloy by friction welding described in the subject application. It can be used successfully on turbine applications as well as large-scale valve applications. The arrangement may avoid cracking in the joint or in the titanium aluminide intermetallic alloy component caused by excessive local thermal stress. The disclosed method may also provide successful friction welding on applications with special geometry. The method may utilize specified sets of welding conditions as disclosed above designed to work with preheating to minimize the formation of brittle intermetallic phases in order to provide superior joint quality. It may also avoid damaging the titanium aluminide intermetallic alloy component, increase operation robustness and reduce production cost by limiting the preheating temperature to a predetermined temperature range, for example, below about 800° C. Furthermore, the arrangement of the cavity at the end of the rotor shaft or the intermediate portion to be bonded to the turbine rotor wheel may increase joint properties effectively and may reduce the mechanical work needed to remove burrs generated in welding the turbine rotor wheel with the rotor shaft.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made to the friction welding method. Other embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the disclosed friction welding method. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as exemplary only, with a true scope being indicated by the following claims and their equivalents.
This invention was made with government support under the terms of Contract No. DE-AC05-00OR22725 awarded by the Department of Energy. The government may have certain rights in this invention.