The present invention relates to a hot gas path assembly for a turbomachine, in particular for a gas turbine. It relates, furthermore, to a turbomachine in which an assembly according to the invention is used.
The efficiency of an axial-throughflow gas turbine is influenced, inter alia, by leakage streams of the compressed gas that occur between rotating and nonrotating components of the turbine. The gap occurring between the tips of the moving blades and the casing walls surrounding the moving blades plays an appreciable part in this. Efforts are therefore aimed at keeping the gaps as small as possible. In the event of deviation from the design point, a brushing of the moved components against the static components can easily occur. For this reason, use is often made of brushing- and/or abrasion-tolerant structural elements, such as, for example, honeycomb seals, honeycombs or else porous ceramic or metallic structures or felts, which serve as counterrunning surfaces of the sealing tips of the moving blades and are partially cut into by these during a running-in phase. Use of such brushing-tolerant sealing elements reduces serious machine damage in the event of minor brushing events, since the brushing is absorbed by the soft structure of the counterrunning surface, without the blades being damaged.
Both the tips of the moving blades or guide vanes and the honeycomb seals used are exposed to very high temperatures when the gas turbine is operating in the hot-gas mode.
It is therefore known, for example from U.S. Pat. No. 3,365,172, to act upon the sealing tips of the moving blades through honeycomb seals with cooling air. For this purpose, the carrier for the honeycomb seals is pierced through with small cooling air bores that are supplied with cooling air via a peripheral annular chamber.
JP 61149506 shows a similar embodiment, in which the honeycomb seals are carried by a layer of porous metal that is contiguous to a supply chamber for cooling air. In this embodiment, too, the cooling air is delivered to the blade tips through the honeycomb seals.
The routing of cooling air through porous sealing elements is likewise known from U.S. Pat. No. 6,171,052. In this case, the porous sealing elements are transpiration-cooled by the cooling air when the latter flows through them. U.S. Pat. No. 4,013,376 discloses a configuration in which the counterrunning surface of the blades is designed to be both impact-cooled and transpiration-cooled. U.S. Pat. No. 3,728,039 likewise discloses transpiration-cooled porous rings as counterrunning surfaces of blades. In this case, the feed of cooling air to the ring is segmented. The ring itself is produced in one piece.
One problem with a multiplicity of configurations is that, when, due to brushing, damage to the gas-permeable elements occurs or even a region is torn out completely, the coolant pressure collapses, and overheating and finally the failure of the entire sealing arrangement occur. Likewise, when, in a region, the porosity is blocked due to deformation induced by brushing or else due to dirt, the coolant flows around this region of the sealing element. The cooling of the latter is no longer ensured, and local overheating occurs. Due to the overheating, the region affected may burn up. The cooling air then flows out through the large hole which has thus arisen, and the previously unaffected regions are no longer cooled. The component as a whole consequently fails over the entire circumference.
A further challenge that arises is to use the available cooling air as efficiently as possible, since, by virtue of a saving of cooling air, considerable power output and efficiency potentials can be exploited.
The present invention relates to a hot gas path assembly of the type initially mentioned, that avoids the disadvantages of the prior art. In particular, the hot gas path assembly is to be designed in such a way that the cooling air is utilized as efficiency as possible and that, in the event of damage to a region of the sealing element, the cooling of the regions not directly affected remains essentially unimpaired. In other words, potentially occurring damage is to remain restricted as far as possible to the location of the primary damage-triggering event.
The core of the invention is, therefore, on the one hand, to connect two cooling points in series in a cooling air path, in such a way that the flowing cooling air is utilized in succession in order to perform two cooling tasks. In one embodiment of the invention, by means of the same cooling airstream, the stator of a gas turbine is cooled both in the region of a guide vane row and in the region of a moving blade row, and, at the same time, the moving blade tips or the moving blade cover band are acted upon by the same cooling air. In this way, the maximum permissible cooling air heating is achieved, and the cooling potential of the cooling air is utilized to the maximum. On the other hand, the subdividing wall is designed in such a way that the cooling air flow paths of individual segments arranged next to one another in the circumferential direction of the machine are hermetically separated from one another downstream of an impact-cooling element. An impact-cooling element is provided with a multiplicity of comparatively small orifices, via which a cooling airstream is guided at high velocity onto the cooling side of the component to be cooled. Impact-cooling plates are often used. By virtue of this function, the impact-cooling elements cause a comparatively high pressure loss, and the essential throttle point, which also essentially brings about the metering of the coolant flowing through, is located in the respective coolant path. With an appropriate division of the pressure drops, the pressure loss coefficient of the impact-cooling element being greater, preferably by at least a factor of 2, than the pressure loss coefficient of the flow cross-sections arranged downstream of said impact-cooling element, the overall throughflow is determined in a first approximation solely by the impact-cooling element. From the configuration according to the invention, this means that, when, in a segment, damage to the gas-permeable element, in particular a sealing element, occurs, the flow conditions of the coolant are not changed dramatically, and the segments not primarily affected by the damage event are still supplied sufficiently with cooling air.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, a plurality of gas-permeable elements are arranged next to one another in the circumferential direction. The multipiece, laterally, in particular circumferentially, segmented design of the sealing ring ensures, furthermore, that a local damage event also remains restricted mechanically to the segment directly affected. This is fulfilled all the more when individual sealing ring segments are arranged and fastened in such a way that as substantial a mutual mechanical decoupling as possible is achieved. Preferably, at least one individual gas-permeable element is arranged in each segment. As has already been set forth, the assembly according to the invention is very particularly appropriate when the gas-permeable element is an integral part of a contactless seal of a turbine machine, in particular between a guide vane and the rotor and, very particularly, between a moving blade and the stator.
In one embodiment of the invention, the gas-impermeable element is arranged upstream of the gas-permeable element in the direction of the hot gas flow. In this case, it is advantageous if the gas-impermeable element has a further redundant coolant orifice that issues on the hot gas side of the assembly. Preferably, the coolant orifice issues upstream of the gas-permeable element, as near as possible to the gas-permeable element. In this case, the coolant orifice is as far as possible designed in such a way that coolant emerging there flows as parallel as possible to the hot gas side surface of the gas-permeable element, in such a way that a cooling film arises there. This has the following major advantages: when the flow cross-sections of the gas-permeable element of the respective segment no longer allow an unimpeded throughflow due to the contamination or deformation, on the one hand, a coolant flow for the impact-cooling bores or impact cooling nozzles of the impact-cooling element continues to be ensured, and the cooling of the gas-impermeable element is ensured. At the same time, the air flowing out of the coolant orifice is laid as cooling film over the gas-permeable element and thus ensures a minimum cooling of this element, even though, because of the reduced throughflow, the transpiration-cooling effect of the air flowing through the element is diminished or is canceled completely. It is advantageous, in this case, if the flow cross-section of the gas-permeable element and of the coolant orifices are dimensioned, in design terms, such that the pressure loss of the coolant orifice is greater than that of the gas-permeable element in such a way that, in design terms, preferably less than 50% and, in particular, less than 30% of the overall coolant flows through the coolant orifice, and the remainder is conducted as transpiration coolant through the gas-permeable element. When the pressure loss of the latter increases on account of the effects described above, the coolant is displaced into the coolant orifice and the proportion of film cooling increases. As set forth above, in this case, the overall coolant mass flow remains constant in the first approximation when the pressure loss across the impact-cooling bores predominates.
As already indicated, the assembly according to the invention is suitable very particularly for use in turbomachines, the gas-permeable elements forming a peripheral ring for contactless sealing relative to an opposite blade ring. Preferably, the gas-impermeable elements also form a peripheral ring; this ring is preferably arranged upstream of the ring of gas-permeable elements in the direction of the hot gas throughflow of the turbomachine. In a preferred embodiment, the gas-impermeable elements are impact-cooled heat accumulation segments. In a further preferred embodiment, the impact-cooled gas-impermeable elements carry turbine blades, in particular guide vanes. Then in particular, the assembly according to the invention is arranged in the stator of the turbomachine.
In a preferred embodiment, above all when the assembly is an integral part of the turbomachine, the separating webs or subdividing walls for subdividing the segments run parallel to the profile chords of blades arranged in the flow duct and, in particular, on the gas-impermeable elements.
In one embodiment, the assembly consists of a number of subassemblies that are arranged laterally, in particular circumferentially, next to one another and which are constructed in such a way that each subassembly comprises gas-impermeable element and a gas-permeable element. Essentially, then, an impact-cooling element is arranged, spaced apart, on the hot gas side of the subassembly, opposite the gas-impermeable element, and a cover element is arranged opposite the gas-permeable element. Between the cover element and the impact-cooling element, on the one hand, and the gas-permeable and gas-impermeable element, on the other hand, is formed a space in the form of a ring segment or a gap essentially in the form of a ring segment, for the coolant. According to the invention, a subassembly of this type comprises at least one subdividing wall for the fluid-separating subdivision and/or delimitation of the annular gap in the lateral direction, in particular in the circumferential direction. In one embodiment, the subassembly carries at least one turbine blade; the subdividing wall then runs preferably parallel to the profile chord of this blade.
Preferably, an annular assembly should be subdivided in a circumferential direction into at least four segments capable of being acted upon by coolant independent of one another. By a relatively large number of segments being formed, the reliability of the cooling in the event of damage to the individual portions of the gas-permeable elements is increased.
Gas permeable and in this case, in particular, brushing-tolerant elements that may be considered are, in addition to honeycomb structures, honeycombs, inter alia, porous structures produced for example by foaming and consisting of metallic or ceramic materials or felts or fabrics consisting of metallic or ceramic fibers.
In an advantageous embodiment of the present device, furthermore, means for acting upon at least some of the segments by coolant independent of one another are provided. This may be implemented by means of a device that controls the supply of cooling medium to the individual segments via respective supply ducts independent of one another. In this way, an inhomogeneous temperature distribution can be compensated over the circumference of the flow duct during the operation of the turbomachine, in that individual segments are supplied with correspondingly adapted quantities of cooling medium. This is suitable, furthermore, for implementing a regulation of the gap width.
Even when the following exemplary embodiments assume an annular design or a design in the form of a ring segment of the assembly, in particular in a turbomachine, and very particularly in a gas turbine, the person skilled in the art readily recognizes that the invention also can be applied, for example, to plane geometries, in which case the segments then are not arranged next to one another in the circumferential direction, but laterally.
The present cooling and sealing arrangement is explained below by means of exemplary embodiments in conjunction with the figures but which, in detail,
Elements not necessary for understanding the invention have been omitted. The exemplary embodiments are to be understood instructively and are to serve for a better understanding, but not a restriction of the invention characterized in the claims.
A further embodiment of the invention is illustrated in
In an actual implemented turbomachine, the assembly according to the invention is advantageously constructed from a plurality of subassemblies arranged next to one another in a circumferential direction, thus appreciably simplifying the handling of the invention. Such a subassembly is illustrated by way of example in a perspective view in
Finally,
Statements made here on annular geometries or geometries in the form of a ring segment can readily be transferred by a relevant person skilled in the art to plane geometries, in which case lateral segments are arranged next to one another instead of circumferential segments.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2279/01 | Dec 2001 | CH | national |
This application is a continuation of the U.S. National Stage designation of co-pending International Patent Application PCT/CH02/00686 filed Dec. 12, 2002, the entire content of which is expressly incorporated herein by reference thereto.
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Number | Date | Country |
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0 957 237 | Nov 1999 | EP |
1 124 039 | Aug 2001 | EP |
1 162 346 | Dec 2001 | EP |
61-149506 | Jul 1986 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040258517 A1 | Dec 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/CH02/00686 | Dec 2002 | US |
Child | 10865749 | US |