The invention relates to a gas turbine having at least one stationary stator blade and at least one rotor blade which can be rotated during operation.
Work on the efficiency of modern gas turbines never stops. An increased efficiency can always be achieved in this case by an increased operating temperature. Here, the operating temperature continuously approaches the limits of the thermostability of the blade materials being used. In order to avoid overloading, the temperature of individual components of a gas turbine is monitored. By way of example, pyrometers are used for this purpose which detect the thermal radiation of individual components, lead it to a detector and evaluate it there, thus determining the temperature of the component. A multiplicity of temperature measurement points and temperature measuring devices are used so as to be able to measure local variations in the temperature.
Owing to their fixed position relative to the burners, the stationary blades, called stator blades, have larger inhomogeneities in the temperature distribution than the rotor blades, which rotate during operation. The temperature distribution in the stator blades is therefore of great interest. To date, the temperature of the stator blades has been measured in a punctiform manner with the aid of a limited number of stationary thermoelements.
It is an object of the present invention to specify a gas turbine in the case of which the temperature distribution in the stator blades can be more accurately detected.
This object is achieved by a gas turbine as described herein.
The gas turbine according to an embodiment comprises at least one stationary stator blade and at least one rotor blade which can be rotated during operation. Also present is at least one optical waveguide, which is embedded in a first rotor blade and is aligned such that thermal radiation of a first stator blade can be detected by the optical waveguide.
The gas turbine according to an embodiment also comprises an evaluation device for evaluating thermal radiation. The evaluation device is configured to determine the temperature of at least the first stator blade, it being possible to determine the temperature along a path from which the thermal radiation is detected in the course of the rotation of the first rotor blade and thus of the optical waveguide.
The region of the stator blade whose thermal radiation is recorded is in this case a function of the optical waveguide and of the distance of the optical waveguide end from the stator blade.
Differently put, in an embodiment the pyrometer, which is represented by the optical waveguide, rotates together with a rotor blade and is directed toward a stator blade. The temperature of the stator blade can therefore advantageously no longer be determined only at fixed points at which thermal elements are provided, but at any point on a circular track which results from the movement of the rotor blade relative to the stator blade. The temperature distribution of the stator blade can thus be detected much more accurately than previously.
In one refinement and development of an embodiment, the first rotor blade comprises a photodetector for converting the thermal radiation into electrical signals. In this case, the photodetector is expediently coupled to the optical waveguide in order to be able to detect the thermal radiation, which comes from the first stator blade, after passage through the optical waveguide. The photodetector can, for example, be fed in this case by wireless energy transfer. Alternatively, the photodetector can be fed by means of a battery. The pyrometer is advantageously implemented thereby substantially in the rotor blade itself. The data determined can then be recorded and/or passed on by telemetry or by a corotating data plotter.
In a further refinement and development of an embodiment, the optical waveguide is guided into the shaft of the first rotor blade and terminates there. It is possible through this configuration for the recorded thermal radiation to be output in the direction of stationary parts of the gas turbine. Said radiation can be more simply recorded and further processed there. It is then advantageous when the end of the optical waveguide in the shaft is provided with a collimator. In accordance with an advantageous refinement of an embodiment, it is possible hereby for the emerging thermal radiation to be emitted in an axial parallel beam. This enables the radiation to be recorded as far as possible without attenuation after traversing a short air gap.
In an advantageous refinement of an embodiment, the radiation coming from the collimator is detected with the aid of a detection device, wherein the reception range of the detection device is formed over so large an area that substantially all radiation coming from the collimator can be detected. The comparatively large area of the configuration of the detection device enables the thermal radiation to be detected and further processed without attenuation. The accuracy of the measurement is thereby ensured.
In order to separate the detection device from the ambient light, and thus to reduce or to avoid a recording of the ambient light, it is advantageous to provide a cover or sleeve in the region of the detection device.
In one refinement of an embodiment, the detection device is an optical waveguide, in particular an optical waveguide with a comparatively large cross section, or a bundle of optical waveguides. The optical waveguide/waveguides serves/serve to pass on radiation in a stationary part of the gas turbine to a photodetector. The use of optical waveguides as detection device enables the detector to be implemented in a thermally less stressed region of the gas turbine.
Alternatively, the detection device can also directly be the photodetector. Said photodetector is then preferably provided with a sufficiently large detector area in order, in turn, to provide as far as possible for attenuation-free recording of the thermal radiation.
In one advantageous refinement and development of an embodiment, a lens collimator is provided in the region of the end of the optical waveguide reaching the first stator blade. Alternatively, the optical waveguide can be configured in a tapered fashion at its appropriate end. It is thereby possible to control the region of the surface of the stator blade from which thermal radiation is recorded.
Preferred, but in no way limiting exemplary embodiments of the invention are now explained in more detail with the aid of the figures of the drawing, in which the features are schematized. In the drawing:
A glass fiber 13 is embedded in the rotor blade 11. It runs therein from an end situated on the surface of the rotor blade 11 into the shaft 17. The end situated on the surface of the rotor blade 11 points in the direction of the stator blades 12. Provided at the end of the optical waveguide 13 there is a lens collimator 14.
The other end of the glass fiber 13 lies on a surface of the shaft 17. The glass fiber 13 terminates there with a second collimator 18. The second collimator 18 is configured in this case such that the output radiation emerges in an axial parallel beam. The radiation thus output enters a photodetector 20 whose receiving surface has a large area by comparison with the cross section of the glass fiber 13.
During operational running, a region 16 of a stator blade 12 emits thermal radiation in accordance with its temperature. In this case, the region 16 is small by comparison with the size of the stator blade 12. The thermal radiation enters the glass fiber 13 via the lens collimator 14. It is led there up to its other end and enters the photodetector 20 through the second collimator 18 and the following air gap. The electrical signals initiated by the radiation 19 are evaluated, and the temperature of the region 16 is thereby determined.
The rotor blade 11 rotates during operational running. The glass fiber 13 necessarily co-rotates in this case. The region 16 of the stator blade 12 that is under consideration thereby travels around the shaft 17 on a circular track. Since said movement is relatively quick, it is possible at practically any time to consider the temperature of each region 16 of the stator blade 12 which lies on the circular track. All that this requires is to wait until the rotor blade 11 has passed once over the desired region 16. The temporal resolution of the evaluation in this case determines which angular section of the circular path will ultimately be regarded as region 16.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102011077908.6 | Jun 2011 | DE | national |
This application is the U.S. National Stage of International Application No. PCT/EP2012/060209 filed May 31, 2012, and claims the benefit thereof. The International Application claims the benefit of German Application No. DE 102011077908.6 filed Jun. 21, 2011. All of the applications are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2012/060209 | 5/31/2012 | WO | 00 | 12/15/2013 |