The application relates generally to gas turbine engine combustors and, more particularly, to a sealing arrangement for liner heat shields.
The cooling of a gas turbine engine combustor downstream end portion has always been challenging. As the hot combustion products exit the combustor and approach the first stage of turbine vanes, high static pressure regions are created particularly at the vanes leading edge near the vane platforms. Those high static pressure regions result in the formation of vane bow waves also known as horseshoe vortices. Such horseshoe vortices tend to prevent cooling air from flowing over the vane platform and may even drive the hot combustor gases back toward the combustor end walls, thereby resulting in localized overheating problems.
Accordingly, there is a need to minimize or reduce the horseshoe vortex effect at the leading edge of the turbine vane immediately downstream of the combustor outlet end.
In one aspect, there is provided a combustor for discharging a flow of combustion gases to a first stage of turbine vanes of a gas turbine engine, the turbine vanes having airfoils extending across a first stage turbine vane passage, the combustor comprising a combustor liner shell circumscribing a combustion chamber, said combustion chamber having an outlet end adapted to be disposed immediately upstream of the first stage of turbine vanes for directing a flow of combustion gases thereto, at least one circumferential array of heat shield panels mounted to an interior side of the combustor liner shell at said outlet end, the heat shield panels having an exterior side disposed in a spaced-apart facing relationship with the interior side of the combustor liner shell to define a gap therewith, cooling holes defined in said combustor liner shell for directing a coolant in said gap, and a circumferential sealing rail integral to the combustor liner shell and protruding inwardly from a trailing edge portion of the interior side of the combustor liner shell to a rail-less trailing edge area of the exterior surface of the heat shield panels to seal said gap at said outlet end of said annular combustion chamber.
In a second aspect, there is provided a gas turbine engine combustor exit arrangement comprising radially inner and radially outer combustor liner shells defining an annular combustion chamber, a first stage of turbine vanes provided at an outlet of said annular combustion chamber for receiving a flow of combustion gases therefrom, each turbine vanes comprising an airfoil extending between inner and outer vane platforms, the inner and outer vane platforms bounding a turbine vane passage, inner and outer circumferential arrays of heat shield panels respectively mounted to an interior side of the radially inner and radially outer combustor liner shells and bounding said outlet, the heat shield panels having an exterior side disposed in a spaced-apart facing relationship with the interior side of the radially outer and radially inner combustor liner shells to define respective inner and outer gaps therewith, cooling holes defined in the radially outer and radially inner combustor liner shells for directing coolant in the outer and inner gaps, a circumferential rail extending from the interior side of the radially outer and radially inner combustor liner shells at said outlet for sealing engagement with an exterior side of the heat shield panels, wherein the interior surface of the heat shield panels of the inner and outer circumferential arrays define inner and outer waterfall with an associated one of the inner and outer turbine vane platforms, the inner and outer waterfalls being generally limited to a thickness of the heat shield panels.
In a third aspect, there is provided a method of cooling a downstream exit end portion of a gas turbine engine combustor, the method comprising: minimizing a waterfall at a combustor/vane interface by providing an end wall circumferential sealing rail on a liner shell of the combustor for sealing-engagement with a rail-less trailing end of a combustor heat shield at a location disposed at or closely radially outside of a vane passage boundary, and providing for effusion cooling of the heat shield.
Further details of these and other aspects of the present invention will be apparent from the detailed description and figures included below.
Reference is now made to the accompanying figures, in which:
As shown in
As shown by arrow 32, the combusting mixture is driven downstream within the combustor chamber 22 through a downstream or outlet section 34 to a combustor outlet 36 disposed immediately upstream of the first stage of high pressure turbine vanes 37.
The radially inner and outer liner shells 24 and 26 are provided on their hot interior side (hot-facing the combustion chamber) with heat shields. The heat shields can be segmented to provide a thermally decoupled combustor arrangement. For instance, forward and rear circumferential arrays of heat shield panels 38 and 40 can be mounted to the hot interior side of the radially outer liner shell 24, while forward and rear circumferential arrays of heat shield panels 42 and 44 can be mounted to the hot interior side of the radially inner liner shell 26. Nuts 46 can be threadably engaged onto threaded studs 48 extending integrally from the cold exterior side of the heat shield panels 38, 40, 42 and 44 to fixedly retain the same on the interior side of the outer and inner liner shells 24 and 26. The heat shield panels 38, 40, 42 and 44 are held with their exterior side (cold-facing away from combustion chamber) facing and spaced-apart from the interior side of the associated outer and inner liner shells 24 and 26, thereby defining a gap 50 therebetween.
Pressurized cooling air is introduced in the gap 50 between the liner shells 24 and 26 and the heat shield panels 38, 40, 42 and 44 to cool down the heat shield panels. Impingement holes 52 can, for instance, be defined through the outer and inner liner shells 24 and 26 to direct jets of cooling air through the gap 50 against the back or exterior side of the heat shield panels 38, 40, 42 and 44. Effusion holes 54 can be defined through the heat shield panels 38, 40, 42 and 44 to provide convection cooling while the air flows through the holes 54 and then film cooling over the hot interior side of the heat shield panels. The holes 54 are so angled as to be aligned in a generally downstream direction with regard to the combustion flow 32 through the combustor 16.
Axially and circumferentially extending sealing rails (see for instance circumferential rails at 56 in
Referring more particularly to
The provision of the rear sealing rail 64 on the combustor liner shell 24 allows minimizing the waterfall step (i.e. the distance or height difference) between the interior side of the rear heat shield panels 40 and the radially outer vane platform surface 70 to roughly the thickness of the heat shield panels 40. Reducing the waterfall or step down at the combustor/vane interface is beneficial in that it allows to minimize the vane bow wave or horseshoe effect which is known to be particularly important at the turbine vane leading edge 72 near the inner an outer platforms of the first stage of turbine vanes. When the flow of combustion gases approaches the turbine vane leading edge 72, it stagnates at the vane leading edge, thereby giving rise to localized high static pressure zones. This results in high pressure gradients and complex three-dimensional flows. The three-dimensional flows tend to wrap around the leading edge 72 of the turbine vanes 37 in a U-shape with one leg extending along the pressure side of the vanes 37 and one leg extending along the suction side of the vanes 37. The pressure gradients make it difficult to cool down the turbine vane platforms and the downstream end of the combustor 16, including the rear heat shield panels 40, 44 and the combustor liner shell, because the pressure difference of the cooling fluid relative to the hot combustion fluid is no longer sufficient in order to ensure a continuous flow of cooling fluid over the interior surface of the rear heat shield panels 40 and 44 and the vane platform surfaces 70. Indeed, the cooling flow will tend to be directed towards region of lower static pressure. This may even result in hot gas ingestion in the rear compartmentalized regions of the gap 50 between the heat shield panels 40, 44 and the combustor liner shell 24, 26 where the pressure of the hot combustion gases is locally greater than the pressure of the cooling fluid. Local penetration of hot combustion gases into the gap 50 or even into the cooling-fluid film on the interior surface of the heat shield panels 40, 44 may result in non-negligible local overheating problems.
As shown in
The provision of the rear circumferential sealing rail 64 on the combustor outer liner shell 24 also allows building a heat shield without having to worry about cooling the last circumferential sealing rail. The sealing rail 64 of the liner shell 24 is not directly exposed to the interior of the combustion chamber 22 and as mentioned herein before cooling air leakage will naturally occur between the rail 64 and the trailing end of the heat shield panels 40.
In view of the foregoing, it can be appreciated that minimizing the horseshoe vortex effect, facilitate cooling of the vane platform and of the downstream end portion of the combustor, thereby improving the service life of the rear heat shields and of the first stage turbine vanes.
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 invention is not limited to straight-through combustors, but is rather applicable to all type of thermally decoupled combustors. 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.
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