None apply.
None apply.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an air cooled airfoil used in a gas turbine engine, and more specifically to the cooling air passages leading to an outer surface of the airfoil, the cooling air passages having a coating therein that melts away depending upon the temperature of the cooling air passing there through in order to open the cooling passage and allow for more cooling air flow.
2. Description of Related Art Including Information Disclosed Under 37 CFR 1.97 and 1.98
Blades and vanes in gas turbine engines include cooling air passages leading to an outer surface of the airfoil that requires cooling. These cooling air passages are typically located in specific locations on the airfoil where extreme high temperatures exists during operation of the engine. Certain regions of the surface require larger amounts of cooling air than other areas that require less cooling air. When designing the size of the cooling air passages, the designer typically sizes the passages to be able to supply the amount of cooling air to cool the airfoil surface under the worst case situation of highest possible heat load. This design temperature, in all likelihood, will not be reached under normal operation of the engine. Also, the heat load varies on surfaces of the airfoil, so not every surface requires the same amount of cooling air flow. Thus, the amount of cooling air passing through the passage and onto the external surface of the airfoil is more than is needed to adequately cool that area of the airfoil. Thus, cooling air flow is wasted and overall engine performance and efficiency is reduced.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,408,610 issued to Caldwell et al on Jun. 25, 2002 shows in
U.S. Pat. No. 6,416,279 issued to Weigand et al on Jul. 9, 2002 shows in
U.S. Pat. No. 6,485,255 issued to Care et al on Nov. 26, 2002 shows a COOLING AIR FLOW CONTROL DEVICE FOR A GAS TURBINE ENGINE in which a single shape memory metal valve is disposed in a cooling passage upstream of the many cooling air passages that open out onto the outer surface of the airfoil. In the Care invention, the valve varies the air flow depending upon temperature, but all of the cooling air passages opening onto the airfoil surfaces are controlled by this single valve. The passages exposed to the hottest surface of the airfoil are regulated by the same valve and supply airflow as the openings exposed to the coolest airfoil surface.
While all of the above mentioned prior art inventions disclose various methods to regulate the flow of cooling air onto a surface of the airfoil, none show a method or apparatus that can vary the flow of cooling air through the individual passages based upon the heat load at that individual cooling air passage.
The present invention provides for a method of and an apparatus for regulating a flow of cooling air through the individual passages that discharge cooling air onto the outer surface of the airfoil based upon the heat load of the individual cooling air passages, and all without using and mechanical devices. This is accomplished by providing a coating in the cooling air passages, the coating being of such composition that it will oxidize at a specific temperature and melt away from the passage, thereby increasing the diameter of the cooling air passage to allow increase flow in cooling air. When the passage is sized to small to provide adequate cooling flow to the external surface of the airfoil, the temperature of the metal at the cooling passage will increase, resulting in an increase in the temperature of the air flowing through the passage. This higher air temperature flowing through the cooling passage will melt away the coating until the passage opens enough to allow the proper amount of cooling air to flow, cooling the external surface and lowering the metal temperature around the passage. When the cooling flow reaches a proper temperature, no more melting away of the coating occurs, and the proper size of the passage is reached to ensure that only the necessary flow of cooling air occurs at that specific passage.
An airfoil for a gas turbine can be a rotating blade or a stationary vane. Both blades and vanes make use of cooling holes extending from a passage within the blade or vane, and extending out to a surface of the blade or vane. Cooling air flows through these holes to cool the external surface of the blade or vane, the external surface being exposed to high temperature gas flow through the gas turbine engine. The material in which an exterior surface of the airfoil is made from must have a high melting temperature to withstand the high gas temperature impacting against the airfoil surface.
For use with the disclosure of the present invention, a critical temperature is defined herein. In the design of an airfoil and a cooling system for the airfoil, a material for the airfoil surface is used that has a high melting temperature. Since the gas stream flowing through the turbine and acting against the airfoil surface is generally higher than the melting temperature of the material, cooling holes are used to deliver a cooling fluid (usually air) to the exterior surface of the airfoil. The heat applied to the airfoil surface will transfer to the material surrounding the cooling hole or passage in which the cooling fluid flows. The heat will then transfer from the material surrounding the cooling hole and into the cooling fluid. The airfoil designer would design the cooling hole of such size that the temperature of the cooling fluid flowing through the cooling hole will be at or below a critical point. If the cooling fluid temperature is above this critical point, then the external surface of the airfoil is above a desired temperature in which thermal damage could result during continuous normal operation of the engine.
Not all surfaces of the airfoil are exposed to the same temperature of gas. As such, the temperature of the metal airfoil itself will vary throughout the airfoil. The temperature of the metal near the leading edge cooling hole will be higher than the temperature of the metal near a cooling hole toward the trailing edge of the airfoil. However, all of the cooling holes are generally of the same diameter. Thus, cooling holes near relatively low temperature external gas flow have more cooling air flowing through the cooling hole than is required to cool the external surface of the airfoil near this cooling hole. A lot of power is lost in pumping extra cooling air through these holes.
The cooling holes are coated with a material that will oxidize when a certain temperature of the cooling air flowing through the hole is reached (the critical temperature as defined above) in order that the coating material will decrease in thickness, and therefore increase the hole diameter such that more cooling air can pass through the hole. Thus, oxidation of the coating material in the cooling hole is dependent upon the temperature of the air flowing through the hole. When a high temperature gas makes contact with the external surface of the airfoil, the metal temperature of the airfoil near a certain cooling hole will increase. The temperature of the metal all along the cooling hole will increase, with the metal near the outer surface of the airfoil being higher in temperature than the metal near the inner surface of the airfoil. The high metal temperature around the hole will cause the air flowing through the hole to also increase in temperature. The coating material would be chosen such that the material oxidizes when the air flowing through the cooling hole exceeds a certain critical temperature such that more cooling air would be needed on the surface of the airfoil. Thus, the higher metal temperatures near a cooling hole causes the coating material to oxidize, and therefore the oxidation opens the cooling hole to allow more cooling air to flow. More cooling air lowers the metal temperature of the airfoil around the cooling hole. When the metal temperature around the cooling hole reaches the desired temperature limit, the temperature of the cooling air flowing through the cooling hole will be below the critical temperature, and no further oxidation of the coating will occur. Thus, the diameter of the specific cooling hole will be set such that no more than the intended cooling flow will pass through the cooling hole.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5022817 | O'Halloran | Jun 1991 | A |
6241469 | Beeck et al. | Jun 2001 | B1 |
7131818 | Cunha et al. | Nov 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060263217 A1 | Nov 2006 | US |