The application related generally to gas turbine engines and, more particularly, to a structure having a connector joining two rotary components to one another.
It was known to structurally join rotary components to one another using a spigot fit, i.e. an arrangement where a male portion of a first one of the rotary components was press-fitted into a female portion of a second one of the rotary components, with an annular, radial interference fit being formed therebetween. Over the use of fasteners, for instance, such an arrangement can provide the benefit of greater simplicity. However, such arrangements were not suitable for all conditions. Indeed, there is a limit to the amount of interference which can be achieved upon press fitting, and in some conditions of use, the deformation between the rotary components in conditions of use can be unequal, and the growing of the first rotary component relative to the second rotary component can lead to progressively diminishing interference of the fit therebetween, and ultimately to the formation of a gap and to the loss of the structural joint. There thus remained room for improvement.
In one aspect, there is provided a rotary assembly comprising a first and second rotary components structurally joined to one another via a connector, a first radial fit between the connector and the first rotary component, the first radial fit forming an interference fit at a first operating condition of the rotary assembly and forming a gap at a second operating condition, a second radial fit between the connector and the first rotary component, the second radial fit forming an interference fit at the second operating condition and forming a gap at the first operating condition, the rotary assembly being further configured to form a radial interference fit between the connector and the second rotary component in both the first and the second operating conditions.
In another aspect, there is provided a gas turbine engine comprising a first and second rotary components structurally joined to one another via a connector, a first radial fit between the connector and the first rotary component, the first radial fit forming an interference fit at a first operating condition and forming a gap at a second operating condition, a second radial fit between the connector and the first rotary component, the second radial fit forming an interference fit at the second operating condition and forming a gap at the first operating condition, the gas turbine engine being further configured to form a radial interference fit between the connector and the second rotary component in both the first and second operating conditions.
In a further aspect, there is provided a method of operating a gas turbine engine having a first radial fit between a connector and a first rotary component and a second radial fit between a connector and the first rotary component, the connector structurally joining the first rotary component to a second rotary component, the method comprising: in a first operating condition, providing an interference fit at the first radial fit, and a loose fit at the second radial fit; transitioning from the first operating condition to a second operating condition, including gradually reducing the interference fit of the first radial fit, the first radial fit forming a gap at the second operating condition, and gradually reducing the gap of the loose fit, the second radial fit forming an interference fit at the second operating condition; maintaining at least one radially-oriented interference fit between the second rotary component and the connector throughout the transitioning.
Reference is now made to the accompanying figures in which:
The compressor section 14 can include, for instance, a plurality of rotors and stators. The rotors can be formed of separately manufactured rotor discs and blades which are assembled to form the rotor, such as via a dovetail engagement for instance, or be provided in the form of integrally bladed rotors, to name two relatively common examples.
Integrally bladed rotors, in particular, are subjected to a significant amount of design testing, which can be performed using a device referred to as a test rig, such as a cold flow test rig for instance. In such a test environment, it can be desired to test a rotary assembly including two adjacent rotors at different inter-rotor spacings. In this context, it can be useful to provide a plurality of connectors designed to be assemblable to the two adjacent rotors in a manner to structurally join the two adjacents rotors to one another for a given test, during which the test rig rotates the rotary structure with a first inter-rotor spacing. Following a given test, the connector can then be removed, and replaced with a connector having a different axial thickness, to test the same rotors again, but with a different inter-rotor spacing.
A similar effect can occur if the first rotary component 22 and the connector 26 have a different thermal growth coefficient and the second operating condition is at a higher temperature than the first operating condition, for instance, or simply if they have a different level of elasticity (e.g. Young's modulus). In the transition to the second operating condition, the growth of the first rotary component 22 leads to progressively lesser interference in the first radial fit 28. However, simultaneously, it also leads to a progressively lesser gap in the second radial fit 30, and eventually to progressively increasing interference fit in the second radial fit 30. At the second operating condition, the interference fit of the first radial fit 28 can be completely lost, and replaced with a gap, but the structural joint between the connector 26 and the first rotary component 26 can nonetheless be maintained via the second radial fit 30.
It will be noted here that the radial direction, or relative orientation, of the first rotary component 22 and of the connector 26 is inversed from the first radial fit 28 to the second radial fit 30, and that the initial gap of the second radial fit 30 is designed to be sufficiently small to allow it to become an interference fit in the second operating condition. Moreover, throughout the transition, a third radial fit 32 is maintained in an interference fit condition, between a radially-outwardly facing cylindrical face of the connector 26 and a radially-inwardly facing cylindrical face of the second rotary component 24. In this embodiment, this was achieved while avoiding to subject the connector 26, or any of the two rotary components 22, 24, to critical deformation stresses which could have led to a failure, such as a crack formation.
The design of the fit was achieved using ANSYS software, a finite element type analysis software, which can allow to simulate the conditions, and resulting stresses, using a computer and virtual models of the components of the rotary assembly. It will be noted that the initial interference fit conditions themselves, at the first radial fit and the third radial fit, impart stresses, and thus deformation into the components, including the connector, which must be taken into account in designing such a structural joint. However, simulations performed using the ANSYS software led to the conclusion that using such a three radial fit solution to join two rotary components using a connector, could lead to a workable solution, and such a workable solution may be of use in a test rig or in a gas turbine engine environment, for instance. Though the calculations are more complex than modeling single radial fits, the ANSYS software was nonetheless able to perform them.
The varying conditions during the transition are schematized in the graph shown in
In a gas turbine engine environment, the first condition can be an engine idle condition, for instance, and the second condition can be a full thrust condition, for instance.
The above description is meant to be exemplary only, and one skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made to the embodiments described without departing from the scope of the invention disclosed. For example, the radial fits can be positioned in different configurations than those illustrated in the examples, and can be axially spaced apart from one another, for instance. In some embodiments, each radial fit can include more than one set of engaging cylindrical surfaces. Moreover, and if different growth phenomena are present for instance, it can be preferable to use more than two radial fits between the connector and any one of the two rotary components, such as a second one which becomes engaged due to thermal growth and a third one which becomes engaged due to centripetal acceleration, for instance. If applied in a gas turbine engine context, the connector and dual radial fit-based structural joining concept presented above can be applied between various gas turbine engine components, such as between a coverplate and a disc, between two discs, between a disc and an impeller, between attachments, etc. Still other modifications which fall within the scope of the present invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art, in light of a review of this disclosure, and such modifications are intended to fall within the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5622475 | Hayner et al. | Apr 1997 | A |
20140369840 | Pinkney | Dec 2014 | A1 |
20150369061 | Sandoval et al. | Dec 2015 | A1 |
20170184118 | Lueddecke | Jun 2017 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20200256203 A1 | Aug 2020 | US |