Geared turbo fan engines are capable of offering higher propulsive efficiencies when compared to conventional gas turbine engines. This is achieved by providing a gearbox which is located between the fan (at the front of the engine) and the drive shaft of the engine (which is itself driven by the turbine at the rear of the engine). Rotation of the drive shaft causes rotation of the gearbox which in turn causes rotation of the fan.
Depending on the gearbox being used the gear ratio can be selected to match the optimal rotational speed of the engine and/or to maximise the rotational speed of the fan. For example, epicyclic gearboxes provide extremely high gear ratios within a compact housing and are commonly used in geared turbo fan designs.
Operating a gearbox that is coupled to the drive shaft of a gas turbine engine can lead to extremely high rotational speeds and consequential heat generation. Even though epicyclic gearboxes can be highly efficient (in the order of 99.5% efficiency) the energy loss is dissipated as heat.
In order to cool the gearboxes, conventional arrangements use cold air in the bypass channel of the engine to cool the gearbox and remove and control the heat. This allows a gearbox to be conveniently cooled using the cold air in the bypass channel. An oil passage from the gearbox to a heat exchanger located proximate to the outer bypass channel of the engine is used to exchange heat from the oil in the gearbox to the cold air passing through the bypass channel. The gearbox can thereby be cooled.
Although such an arrangement increases the weight and complexity of the bypass channel, it advantageously allows for the convenient cooling of the gearbox using the cold abundant air that passes at high speed through the bypass channel of the engine. Such conventional arrangements have sufficient cooling capability to cool even large and higher ratio gearboxes.
The present disclosure is concerned with an improved geared turbofan engine and in particular to a front centre body (FCB) of such an engine. More specifically the disclosure is concerned with a cooling arrangement for geared turbo fan engines. Aspects are set out in the accompanying claims.
Disclosed herein is a counterintuitive way in which a gearbox in a geared turbofan engine may be cooled. The arrangement allows for the cooling of a gearbox, such as an epicyclic gearbox, in a more compact and efficient manner with fewer components and complexity. The arrangement also allows for a weight saving in respect of the cooling system for the gearbox which advantageously also reduces the overall weight of the engine.
Viewed from a first aspect there is provided a front centre body (FCB) structure for a geared turbofan engine, the FCB comprising a central hub and a coaxial shroud spaced from said hub and defining an annular passage between the hub and shroud for communicating air to a compressor, the body comprising a plurality of vanes extending across the passage from the hub to the shroud, wherein one or more vanes is/are provided with a fluid passage within the vane extending from and returning to a portion of the vane intersecting with the hub.
The fluid passages in the vanes provide a fluid path for a coolant allowing each vane to function as a heat exchanging structure capable of dissipating heat into the airflow passing on and around a vane. The annular passage is the inlet duct to the low pressure compressor.
Such a configuration is a substantial departure from conventional thinking about gas turbine engine design. It is very well known practice to introduce the coldest possible air into the compressors of the gas turbine. This maximises compression. According to an arrangement described herein, heat is deliberately introduced into the inlet duct of the compressor which is counterintuitive.
Advantageously each fluid passage may be contained within the respective vane. In doing so the vane does not act as a conduit through which a pipe merely passes but instead acts as a heat exchanger by virtue of the fact that the passage is contained within the vane to dissipate heat.
Each of the vanes may extend between the hub and the shroud and intersect with each at opposing radial ends of the vane. The vanes may be evenly circumferentially spaced around the hub. This advantageously allows for heat transfer around the circumference of the hub with each vane extending radially from the hub through the airflow entering the compressor.
Each vane may advantageously have a fluid inlet from the hub to the vane and a fluid outlet from the vane to the hub. The fluid passage may then be arranged in use to communicate a coolant from a gearbox of the geared turbofan engine through one or more vanes via a respective inlet and outlet. Thus, each passage within the vanes provides part of a coolant circuit for a gearbox. The coolant may be the gearbox oil itself or it may be a secondary circuit coolant which has gathered heat from the gearbox via a suitable heat exchanging arrangement in or on the gearbox.
The vanes may advantageously be hollow to minimise weight. Each vane has a peripheral wall having an outer surface against which air is configured to flow and an opposing inner surface facing into the hollow vane. The vanes act to guide air entering the engine into the compressor and consequently the high speed air impinges on the outer surface of the vane causing the vane to reduce in temperature. To take full advantage of the lower temperature of the wall of the vane, the fluid passage may be arranged to be proximate to the inner surface of the vane. This thereby maximises heat dissipation from the fluid path and into the airflow passing over the vane surface.
The fluid passage may have any suitable path within each vane. For example the path may alternate in direction from the hub towards the shroud and from the shroud towards the hub in a reciprocating or serpentine shape. This maximises the contact of fluid in the passage with the cold vane wall.
The fluid passages may be in contact with the inner surface of the vane wall to fully maximise contact and to cause heat dissipation by conduction into the vane wall. Furthermore, to further optimise heat dissipation, the fluid passages may be arranged at or towards the leading edge of the vane. At the leading edge the air impinges directly against the vane surfaces creating a cold zone along the leading edge of the vane. Thus, the fluid passages may be proximate or run along the leading edge portion of the vane.
Alternatively, or additionally, the fluid passages may be in the form of a cavity arranged within the wall of the vane. For example, at least one cavity may be provided between inner and outer surfaces of a vane to define at least one of the fluid passages within said vane. Such an arrangement provides a large surface area against which the coolant may flow. The cavity may advantageously extend from the leading edge of the vane towards the trailing edge of the vane. This may be applied on the pressure and/or suction sides of the vane. In effect either side surface of the vane may be used as a heat exchanging surface. Since air continuously impinges against and flows over the vane surfaces in flight, this provides a highly effective heat transfer surface.
To still further enhance the heat transfer properties of the inlet duct to the compressor the hub and shroud surfaces may also be used as heat exchanging surfaces. Specifically, the shroud may be provided with a circumferential cavity extending between a radially inward wall and a radially outward wall. The cavity may extend along all or part of the axial length of the annular passage. For example the cavity may extend towards the compressor from the leading edge of the inlet duct to the same distance as the trailing edge of the vane.
Similarly, the hub may be provided with a circumferential cavity extending between a radially inward wall and a radially outward wall. Again the cavity may extend along all or part of the axial length of the annular passage, for example from the inlet of the duct to the trailing edge of the vane. The cavity in the shroud and/or hub may conveniently extend between adjacent vanes.
In effect, a heat exchanger is created with 4 sides, the 4 sides enclosing the space between two adjacent vanes of the low pressure compressor inlet duct. This optimises the heat transfer property of the inlet guide vane structure.
All or a subset of the vanes, shroud and hub surfaces may be used for heat transfer depending on the cooling needs of the gearbox and the radial size of the hub and shroud (the larger the diameter of hub/shroud the larger the circumferential area and radial length of the vanes).
The coolant or fluid may be introduced into the vane at any suitable position. Advantageously, the coolant or fluid may be introduced at an upstream end of a vane and an outlet is at a downstream end of a vane. The hottest coolant can thereby be introduced towards the leading edge of the vane to maximise heat transfer.
The fluid passages and cavities forming the 4 heat transfer zones may advantageously be in fluid communication with each other such that coolant can flow through each passage/cavity to effect cooling. For example coolant may be simultaneously (or sequentially) introduced towards the leading edge of each vane, hub and shroud.
Additionally, or alternatively, fluid may be permitted to flow from one group of 4 cooling surfaces to an adjacent group circumferentially around the hub. This may enhance cooling of the coolant by cooling the coolant in stages.
Viewed from another aspect there is provided a geared turbofan engine comprising a structure as described herein.
Viewed from yet another aspect there is provided a geared turbofan engine comprising at least one inlet duct arranged in use to communicate air to a low pressure compressor, wherein the inlet duct(s) comprise a plurality of vanes and wherein one or more vanes is/are provided with an internal heat exchanger in thermal communication with a gearbox of said engine.
Viewed from a still further aspect there is provided a method of cooling a gearbox in a geared turbofan engine, said method comprising the steps of causing a coolant to collect heat from a gearbox of the engine and to dissipate the heat through at least one vane located in an inlet to a low pressure compressor of said engine.
As discussed above using the compressor inlet as a heat exchanger is inherently counterintuitive. However, the inventors have established that the amount of heat introduced, whilst being detrimental to the performance of the compressor, is not catastrophic to performance. In fact, the disadvantages of the decrease in performance are outweighed by the significant advantages the arrangement provides.
For example, the arrangement described herein provides a number of advantages including:
The cooling arrangement described herein may additionally be adapted to be in fluid communication with heat exchangers in or around the bypass channel of the engine. Fluid channels proximate to the airflow within the bypass channel may conveniently radiate heat from a cooling fluid to the high speed airflow in the bypass channel. By fluidly connecting the front centre body heat exchanger described herein with such a bypass channel arrangement additional cooling may be selectively operated in extreme temperatures. This augments the arrangement described herein to provide a high capacity cooling arrangement.
An invention described herein may extend to a gearbox control arrangement in which fluid controlling valves are operable to effect cooling in response to temperatures sensors within the gearbox or within the gearbox fluid.
One or more embodiments will now be described, by way of example only, and with reference to the following figures in which:
Any reference to prior art documents in this specification is not to be considered an admission that such prior art is widely known or forms part of the common general knowledge in the field. As used in this specification, the words “comprises”, “comprising”, and similar words, are not to be interpreted in an exclusive or exhaustive sense. In other words, they are intended to mean “including, but not limited to”. The disclosure is further described with reference to the examples described herein. It will be appreciated that the invention as claimed is not intended to be limited in any way by these examples. It will also be recognised that the disclosure covers not only individual embodiments but also combination of the embodiments described herein.
The skilled person will understand the principal components of a gas turbine engine and their operation. In summary the engine 1 comprises an air intake 2 which permits air to flow into the engine to the fan 3 located at the upstream end of the engine. All of the components are housed within the engine nacelle 4.
The engine comprises a bypass channel downstream of the fan and a central engine core which contains the compressors, combustors and turbines. The core of the engine is formed of a first low pressure compressor 5 and a second high pressure compressor 6. This multi-stage compressor arrangement takes air from ambient pressure and temperature to high temperature and pressure. Compressed air is then communicated to the combustion chamber 7 where fuel is injected and combustion occurs.
The combustion gases are expelled from the rear of the combustions chamber 7 and impinge first on a high pressure turbine 9 and then on a second low pressure turbine before leaving the rear of the engine through the core nozzle 11. Thrust from the engine is created by two gas flows: a first from the fan nozzle 8 (receiving thrust from the fan) and secondly from the exhaust gases from the core nozzle 11.
Turning to the operation of the engine, a geared turbofan (GTF) is distinguished from a normal gas turbine engine because the centrally located shaft 13, which runs along the length of the engine, is coupled at an upstream end to a gearbox 14. The gearbox allows the fan to rotate at a different speed to the compressor and allows the relative speeds of the fan and compressor to be optimised. Specifically the gearing ratio allows the fan to rotate at a lower speed than the compressor.
In order to save weight a convenient gearbox to use is an epicyclic gearbox, that is a gearbox with a centrally located sun gear and a plurality (normally 3) of circumferentially positioned planetary gears that are meshed with the central sun gear and rotate relative to the sun gear when the sun gear is itself rotated (in this case by the compressor shaft 13).
Depending on how the gearbox is configured (which will be well understood by someone skilled in the art) the output of the gearbox may be connected to the planetary gears (by means of a gear carrier) or alternatively to an annular gear surrounding the planetary gears (and also meshed thereto).
In the present case the output of the gearbox is coupled to the fan blade hub 15 which comprises a plurality of fan blades 3. In operation the low pressure shaft drives the gearbox which in turn drives the fan. Air is then driven through the engine through the bypass channel 8 and through the core (containing the compressors and combustors).
Although GTF engines are highly efficient, a drawback with their design is that the gearbox can become extremely hot and requires cooling. Cooling is conventionally achieved by means of a large oil reservoir, pump and cooling circuit. The cooling circuit fluidly connects the sump of the gearbox (that is the gearbox body containing the coolant and lubricant) to a heat exchanger which can dissipate heat from the coolant (typically an oil) and return the coolant back to the gearbox. Thus, the gearbox can be conveniently cooled using such a cooling circuit in combination with a pump. The heat exchanger may be conveniently located on an outer surface of the engine for example so as to benefit from the cold airflow the engine will experience at altitude when the gearbox is operating at maximum speed. This additionally removes heat from the engine which would otherwise increase the overall operating temperature of the engine. In a GTF engine the heat that is needed to be dissipated from the gearbox is substantially higher than normal requiring additional heat exchanging capacity within or around the bypass channel.
According to the present disclosure an unconventional approach is used wherein cooling is performed inside the engine and specifically inside the ducting used to supply air to the compressors.
As described below, according to the present disclosure heat is exchanged into the duct which introduces air into the engine core (or low pressure compressor). Convention in the industry says that it is hugely disadvantageous to engine performance to heat air entering the compressor. Consequently conventional arrangements use the conveniently abundant cold air that is available in and around the bypass channel.
Turning to
The GTF engine comprises an inlet duct 16 which receives air passing through the blades 3. The inlet duct 16 comprises a plurality of guide vane 17 illustrated by the hatched cross-section 17 in
Conventional gearbox cooling is achieved by using the cold air in the bypass channel 8 where air can be diverted into heat exchangers. In contrast the present disclosure provides cooling for the gearbox within the core section of the engine, and specifically in the air inlet guide vanes 17.
As illustrated schematically in
The flow of coolant from the gearbox, either directly or indirectly, to a heat exchanging arrangement within the guide vane 17 is, as described above, entirely counterintuitive.
As illustrated in
As airflow passes between the adjacent vanes and between the hub 21 and shroud 20 the air is caused to impinge on a number of surfaces maximising heat exchange. This is shown in
A—the hub outer surface;
B—the shroud inner surface;
C—the vane pressure side; and
D—the vane suction side.
Thus, heat exchange can occur on any of the faces of the duct facing the airflow.
Turning to
Referring to
To check the feasibility of this concept, the required cooling energy, i.e., the lost energy from the gearbox transmission is compared with the amount of available energy that can be facilitated in the FCB heat exchanger. The amount of available energy for cooling (Preq) is a function of the surface area (AFCB), the heat transfer coefficient (HTCeq) and the temperature difference between the hot and cold side (Toil−Tgas).
The question now becomes: How much surface area is required to keep the temperature of the oil below a certain threshold value. A reasonable maximum temperature of a typical oil is estimated to be 435 K. The heat transfer coefficient (HTC) is a function of the hot and cool medium and is estimated to be HTCgas=200 and HTCoil=3000 and the equivalent HTC thus become:
The power of the fan and the core temperature is taken from a representative geared turbofan (VINK, see
To assess if the required surface area of the heat exchanger is feasible it is compared to the preliminary layout of the VINK engine.
Ahub=0.793 m2
Ashroud=0.852 m2
Ablade=1.04 m2
⇒Aavail=2.69 m2
Aspects of the disclosure extend to a method of cooling a geared turbofan engine gearbox using the airflow within the inlet duct of such an engine.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1916989.5 | Nov 2019 | GB | national |
This application is a national stage of, and claims priority to, Patent Cooperation Treaty Application No. PCT/EP2020/082718, filed on Nov. 19, 2020, which application claims priority to Great Britain Application No. GB 1916989.5, filed on Nov. 21, 2019, which applications are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2020/082718 | 11/19/2020 | WO |