1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to compact, expendable gas turbine engine, and more specifically to a gas turbine engine having a rear-mounted main bearing that is cooled by air supplied by the compressor, the air then being discharged into the combustor for mixing with the fuel.
2. Description of the Related Art Including Information Disclosed Under 37 CFR 1.97 and 1.98
Small gas turbine engines of the kind used in Unmanned Air Vehicles (UAV) such as a small cruise missile or drone are well known in the art. These turbines produce a thrust from less than 100 lbs to several hundred lbs. Because these turbine engines must fit within a small space, they tend to be very compact and run at high rotational speeds. One problem with prior art small gas turbine engines is the location of at least one of the main bearings that support the rotor shaft. It is preferred to locate one of the main bearings near the compressor and another of the main bearings near the turbine or combustor exit. However, the bearing near the combustor exit is exposed to very high temperatures.
Another problem with these small engines is the lack of space for storage of a bearing lubrication. These small engines must have a long storage life, and be ready to operate on a short notice. Consequently, bearings must run with little or no lubrication. Fuel lubrication, dry lubrication and grease packed bearings are typical.
To overcome this problem, the prior art small gas turbine engines locate the two bearings in the front portion of the compressor such as shown in US Patent Application Publication No. 2004/0216445 A1 entitled Combined Stage Single Shaft Turbofan Engine by Jones et al published on Nov. 4, 2004. The advantage of locating the bearings away from the hot combustor section of the turbine is that the bearings are cooler and easily lubricated, and the rotor can be a single rotor module that can be balanced as built. The disadvantages are the heavy overhung mass that results in rotor dynamics problems, slow starting, and little combustor space. Bearing lube (typically fuel) passes into the engine flow path, but no more than half can burn since it does not enter the combustor in the right place. This bearing arrangement is also limited to low bearing air flows.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,727,378 entitled Gas Turbine Engine issued to Seymour on Mar. 17, 1998 shows a small gas turbine engine in which the main bearings are located forward of the turbine and combustor, but with the rear-most bearing located between the compressor outlet and the turbine inlet, in which a portion of the compressor outlet is directed over an end plate that forms a passage for cooling air. The diverted portion of air from the compressor thus provides cooling for the rear-most bear, but the air does not pass through the bearing, and the air is discharged into the turbine downstream of the combustor. This non-contact cooling air does not provide adequate cooling for the present invention, and wastes the compressed air by discharging it into the turbine without producing any power
U.S. Pat. No. 5,526,640 issued to Brooks et al on Jun. 18, 1996 entitled Gas Turbine Engine Including A Bearing Support Tube Cantilevered From A Turbine Nozzle Wall shows a gas turbine engine with a bearing support tube and two main bearings, where both fuel and air are passed through the bearing support tube to cool and lubricate both bearings. However, the air flow through the tube is very low, and all of the fuel supplied to the combustor is delivered through the tube. The low air flow of the Brooks et al invention does not provide adequate cooling or conditioning for the bearings exposed to high temperatures from the combustor, and the large amount of fuel used for lubricating requires seals and other added structure for the bearings to prevent fuel from leaking.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,381,471 issued to Szydlowski on May 7, 1968 and entitled Combustion Chamber For Gas Turbine Engines shows a nozzle located between the combustor and the turbine, and where a portion of the compressor discharge is directed around the back end of the combustor and through the nozzle to cool the nozzle, the air flow through the nozzle then being directed into the combustor for burning. Szydlowski does not use any air flow to cool a bearing.
It is therefore a principal object of the present invention to provide for a small gas turbine engine having a small size that will fit within a small space in a UAV. It is further object of the present invention to provide for a small gas turbine engine with improved fuel efficiencies and low weight in order to increase the range and loiter time of the UAV. It is another object of the present invention to provide for a small gas turbine engine that has a long storage life and that does not require lubrication of the bearings. It is an additional object of the present invention to provide for a small gas turbine engine with a main bearing located near the turbine in order to provide a more stable bearing support for the gas turbine engine. These objects and others will be described below in the detailed description of the invention and the accompanying drawings.
The first embodiment of the present invention is a small gas turbine engine used in a cruise missile or UAV in which space is limited, in which a main bearing is located near the combustor and turbine portion of the engine that is exposed to the high temperatures of the engine, in which the cooling air for the bearing (being a substantial fraction of the total engine air flow) is diverted from the compressor and directed through the bearing to maintain the inner and outer races at similar temperatures, the cooling air then being redirected into the combustor for burning therein. The cooling air diverted from the compressor is also passed through the turbine nozzles to cool them before passing into the bearing. By cooling the bearing, the inner and outer races are maintained at similar temperatures to avoid loss of radial clearance during operation.
The combustor can be configured without wall cooling skirts or holes by using backside cooling which maximizes the volume for burning. Wall cooling is achieved via external convection, and/or near-wall protective and thermal barrier coatings as required. The combustor may have wall cooling where required. If external convection is not adequate, then the preferred wall cooling method is “effusion” (closely spaced, angled, small holes through the liner walls).
The present invention is a small gas turbine engine primarily used in Unmanned Arial Vehicles (UAV) such as a small cruise missile or drone in which a rear bearing used to support the rotor shaft and located in the hot section of the turbine is cooled with cooling air diverted from the compressor, the cooling air passing through the bearing inner and outer races to maintain the races at similar temperatures to prevent radial clearance from developing in the bearing, the cooling air then being discharged into the combustor to be burned with fuel.
The roller balls 16 are made of ceramic silicon nitride to reduce the centrifugal loads due to their lower density compared to steel. Roller balls of this material have a high hardness which results in excellent wear resistance and longer life for the bearing. The outer race 14 and inner race 12 are made of materials such as 440C which are tempered at 600 degrees F. and above, or Stellite 6B and MP159 which allows for a long shelf life after storage in a humid environment without rusting.
The bearing of the present invention uses no cage to retain the roller balls. Eliminating the cages reduces the friction, reduces heat generation, and increases bearing life. Elimination of the cages removes the bearing cage failure mode entirely. The bearing internal clearance is in the range of 0.0005 inches to 0.0012 inches. The cooling passages in the races are arranged to cool or condition both races to about the same temperature. If the inner race reaches a temperature much higher than the temperature of the outer race, the distance between contact points for the roller balls on the races will decrease, and the stress will increase, leading to faster wear. If the inner race temperature becomes much lower than the outer race temperature, then the bearing contact distance increases, resulting in excessive contact angles and non-ideal bearing stiffness. The pre-swirl cooling passages 22 in the outer race are angled with respect to the rotational axis of the bearing from zero degrees to about 30 degrees, and preferably in the range from 10-20 degrees.
The concept here is to pre-swirl the cooling air to a tangential velocity approximately equal to the tangential velocity of the bearing's inner race. This ensures that the inner race receives a lower relative temperature for cooling than the outer ring, providing effective clearance control. Additional cooling can be achieved by vortexing to the inner ring passages 18 through the radial passages 20. An entrance chamber 23 is formed at the beginning of the inner race radial passages 20. Leakage of cooling air can be reduced by controlling the gap clearances (25a, 25b) to within a range of 0.001 inches to 0.0002 inches. By providing cooling air to both the inner and outer race of the bearing, the temperature difference of the races remains within an acceptable limit to prevent radial clearance from developing between the two races due to temperature differences. A radial clearance beyond a certain limit will cause the bearing assembly to quickly destroy itself.
In operation, the bearing is mounted in an engine in which air 8 flows toward the bearing 10 as seen in
The number of passageways and size of the passageways can vary depending on the cooling requirements of the bearing. Larger passageways will allow for greater volume of cooling fluid. So would an increase the number of passageways. However, using larger size or greater number of passageways could decrease the rigidity of the races.
The bearing life is increased by providing for a special coating on the races. A coating of Tungsten Disulfide or Titanium Sulfide is applied which reduces the coefficient of friction compared with oil, and also reduces heat generation in the bearing. This coating also acts as a self-lubricant for the bearing rolling contact surface. Grease with a grease retainer can also be applied to the bearing to add additional lubrication. Suitable commercially available grease is DSF-5000 available from Schaefer Mfg. Co., of St. Louis, Mo. 63104. Also, a combination of fuel and oil, oil only, or fuel only, or VPL can also be used for lubricating the bearing.
A second embodiment of the bearing of the present invention is shown in
The airflow through the engine and bearing 10 is shown by the arrows in
A portion of the bypass air flow is diverted through the hollow section 60 of the guide nozzles 58 located downstream from the combustor exit and upstream of the turbine blades 64. The guide nozzles 58 perform the well known function of guiding the combustor exhaust gas stream onto the turbine blades 64. The air flow acts to cool the guide nozzles. The air flow through the guide nozzles 58 then passes through cooling holes 74 and 76 in the inner shroud 66 and into the rear bearing 10.
The rear bearing 10 includes a plurality of cooling air passages in the inner race and the outer race as described in
Rotation of the rotary cup injector 53 of the present invention provides fuel break-up and allows for a low pressure gradient (compared to the higher pressure supplied by the compressor) to promote air flow from the compressor outlet and through the two air supply paths leading into the combustor 80 from the points upstream of the rotary cup injector and from the point downstream of the rotary cup injector (which passes through the guide nozzles 58 and the bearing 10) as well as injecting the fuel into the two burn zones of the combustor 80. Because of its fuel break-up efficiency, the rotary cup injector allows for the fuel feed pressure to be maintained at the lowest possible level.
Passing a portion of the air flow from the compressor into the bearing as described above acts to cool the bearing races such that no significant thermal temperature difference between the inner race and outer race of the bearing develops (which can cause radial spacing between the two race surfaces to increase), and therefore prevents the bearing from breaking apart. Passing the cooling air from the bearing back into the combustor improved the performance by not ejecting the heated cooling air out of the engine. Thus, the engine efficiency is kept high.
The present invention therefore discloses two embodiments for a small gas turbine engine that uses a bearing located in the rear portion of the engine near the combustor exit and the turbine portion of the engine that represents the highest temperature region of the turbine engine. Locating one of the two main rotor shaft bearings in this location—as opposed to locating both main bearings forward of the compressor as disclosed in the Patent Application Publication US 2004/0216445 A1—allows for a better rotary support structure for the rotary shaft while providing necessary cooling for the bearing to allow for the bearing to be located in this region of the engine. Providing for a higher rate of air flow through the bearing (7%-20% of the compressor discharge flow in the present invention) also provides enough air flow to adequately cool and control the bearing race clearance as opposed to the Brooks et al U.S. Pat. No. 5,526,640 invention that uses a very small amount of air to cool the bearing, and also uses fuel to cool the bearing which results in a more complex bearing structure by requiring seals because of the fuel flow. An improved small gas turbine engine is therefore possible using the air cooled bearing of the disclosed present invention.
This application is a Continuation of a Co-pending U.S. Regular application Ser. No. 11/219,617 filed on Sep. 3, 2005.
The U.S. Government has a paid-up license in this invention and the right in limited circumstances to require the patent owner to license others on reasonable terms as provided for by the terms of Contract No. W31P4Q-05-C-R003 awarded by the US Army.
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2479573 | Howard | Aug 1949 | A |
3200580 | Millar | Aug 1965 | A |
3898793 | Nakamura et al. | Aug 1975 | A |
4000608 | Chute | Jan 1977 | A |
4156342 | Korta et al. | May 1979 | A |
5526640 | Brooks et al. | Jun 1996 | A |
6966191 | Fukutani et al. | Nov 2005 | B2 |
20050235651 | Morris et al. | Oct 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11219617 | Sep 2005 | US |
Child | 12487903 | US |