Field of the Invention
The invention relates to rotating machinery spools and, particularly, to composite spools.
Description of Related Art
Spools are used in a great many types of rotating machinery to support rotating features of the machinery. One exemplary type of rotating machinery is gas turbine engines having spools such as rotors, drums, and disks. It is known to use composite spools for rotating machinery to reduce weight of the spools and the machinery. Composite rotors or disks for gas turbine engines are known in the art. Turbofan gas turbine engines generally include a forward fan and booster compressor, a middle core engine, and an aft low pressure power turbine. Gas turbine engine rotors or disks generally have been manufactured of metallic materials usually as single items machined from a solid metal billet or as several elements welded together. Features machined into the metal disks and rotors include dovetail slots to receive dovetail roots of fan, booster, compressor, and turbine blades. Metal disks and rotors are relatively heavy. Metals have a lower specific strength and have very little inherent damping as compared to composite materials. The major benefit of composite spools such as disks and drums and rotors is to significantly reduce the weight and mass moment of inertia of the spool. While composites offer good strength and stiffness properties with respect to metals, they may lack robustness in tribological performance.
Composite integrally bladed rotors for use in gas turbine engines have been disclosed in several patents such as U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,747,900, 4,786,347, and 7,491,032. Composite integrally bladed rotors are subject to large forces which must be taken into account in designing the construction of the rotor to preserve its integrity. In the rotor disc, the major forces are exerted in circumferential directions so an ability to absorb hoop stress is important, whereas in the airfoil blades radially exerted forces predominate. Composite material used in such rotors typically include a resin (such as epoxy) which has low inherent strength. The composite material has a specific strength higher than that of metal due to the inclusion of fibers normally of the same material embedded in a matrix of the composite material. The fibers are known to be strongest in tension so the direction of the forces in the finished component will, at least in part, determine its strength. In some instances, the structural design of the component has been influenced by the need for fiber orientation.
It is highly desirable to have a design and method for manufacturing rotating machinery spools that are light-weight, strong, and robust.
A hybrid metal and composite spool includes one or more metal rings on an outer diameter or an outer surface of a composite spool shell of the spool. The hybrid metal and composite spool may include features in the one or more metal rings.
The spool may include a shrink bonded joint between the one or more metal rings and the composite spool shell. One or more annular adhesive layers may be between the one or more metal rings and the composite spool shell. A shrink bonded joint including the annular adhesive layers may be between the one or more metal rings and the composite spool shell.
The features may include dovetail slots in the metal rings.
The metal rings may include at least one single seal tooth ring with an annular radially extending tooth. The metal rings may include at least one multi-tooth seal tooth ring having at least two annular axially spaced apart teeth radially extending away from an annular base connecting the at least two annular axially spaced apart teeth.
The metal rings may include forward and aft dovetail slot metal rings, an axially aftwardly extending annular tooth attached to the forward dovetail slot metal ring, and an axially forwardly extending annular tooth attached to the aft dovetail slot metal ring.
A method for fabricating a hybrid metal and composite spool includes fabricating one or more metal rings with features therein, positioning the one or more metal rings in place on an outer surface and/or an inner surface of an uncured composite spool shell of the spool before curing the shell, and curing the shell with the one or more metal rings positioned in place on the outer surface and/or the inner surface. The one or more metal rings may be bonded to the uncured composite spool shell by applying one or more annular adhesive layers between the one or more metal rings and the composite spool shell before the curing.
An alternative method for fabricating a hybrid metal and composite spool includes fabricating one or more metal rings with features therein, heating the one or more metal rings to a temperature at least sufficient to slide the rings over a cured composite spool shell, sliding the heated one or more metal rings in place on an outer surface of the cured composite spool shell of the spool, and allowing the one or more metal rings to cool and shrink onto the cured shell. One or more annular adhesive layers may be applied on the cured composite spool shell before sliding the heated one or more metal rings in place over the one or more annular adhesive layers.
The foregoing aspects and other features of the invention are explained in the following description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings where:
Illustrated in
Illustrated in
In typical operation, air 26 is pressurized by the fan 14 and produces an inner air flow 15 channeled through the booster 16 which further pressurizes the inner air flow 15. The pressurized air is then flowed to the high pressure compressor 18 which further pressurizes the air. The pressurized air is mixed with fuel in the combustor 20 for generating hot combustion gases 28 that flow downstream in turn through the HPT 22 and the LPT 24.
A flow splitter 34 surrounding the booster 16 immediately behind the fan 14 includes a sharp leading edge 32 which splits the fan air 26 pressurized by the fan 14 into a radially inner stream (inner air flow 15) channeled through the booster 16 and a radially outer stream (bypass air flow 17) channeled through the bypass duct 36. A fan nacelle 30 surrounding the fan 14 is supported by an annular fan frame 33. The booster 16 includes alternating annular row of booster blades and vanes 38, 42 extending radially outwardly and inwardly across a booster flowpath 39 in a booster duct 40.
The annular row of booster blades 38 are suitably joined to the fan 14. The booster 16 is located forward of the fan frame 33 and is disposed radially inboard of the flow splitter 34. The booster spool 43 carries the booster blades 38 mounted in metal rings 44 on an outer diameter OD or outer surface OS of a composite spool shell 46 of the booster spool 43. The booster spool 43 is drivenly connected to the low pressure turbine 24 by the low pressure drive shaft 25. The booster spool 43 disclosed herein is an example of a hybrid metal and composite spool or rotor.
Referring to
The metal rings 44 with the dovetail slots 54 may be generally referred to as dovetail slot metal rings and represent one type of metal ring that may be mounted on either the outer surface OS or the inner surface IS of the composite spool shell 46 of the booster spool 43. Illustrated in
Illustrated in
An exemplary method for fabricating the hybrid metal and composite spool 43 includes positioning the metal rings 44 in place on the outer surface OS and/or the inner surface IS of the uncured composite spool shell 46 of the spool 43 before curing the shell. A shrink bonded joint 50 between the metal rings 44 and the uncured composite spool shell 46 may be used in the case of an external ring. The shrink bonded joint 50 may include an annular adhesive layer 49 between the metal rings 44 and the uncured composite spool shell 46. This will provide for an initial compressive interfacial force at the adhesive joint at zero RPM and room temperature. As rotational speed is increased, the compressive force will be reduced and perhaps transitions to a tensile force that is still within the capabilities of the adhesive joint. An adhesive may be placed between the metal rings 44 and the outer surface OS and/or the inner surface IS of the uncured composite spool shell 46 before the curing as illustrated in
The shrink fit joint may be made several ways. One method is to have the one or more metal rings 44 in place at the time the composite spool shell 46 molded and cured at elevated temperature. Since the coefficient of thermal expansion is greater for the metal rings than the composite spool shell, the external metal rings will shrink at a greater rate than the composite during cool down leaving a beneficial compressive interface. Another method includes heating the metallic rings 44 to a temperature which would allow sliding the rings over an already cured composite spool shell 46 and then allowing the rings to cool and shrink onto a film or layer of adhesive applied to the outer diameter OD or outer surface OS of the composite spool shell 46. Judiciously selecting the sizes of the components will result in the ability to adjust the compressive force to the desired level.
Various methods may be utilized to inject resin into a woven composite preform of the composite spool shell 46. Injecting the preform with resin may be performed using resin transfer molding (RTM) or vacuum-assisted resin transfer molding (VARTM) while the preform is laid up on a tool system. Alternatively, a more conventional autoclaving process may be used. When the preform is placed in the mold, various mold parts or sections hold the preform in place to properly form the composite spool shell 46.
RTM methods use RTM molds to delivers smooth surface finish on both sides of the part and can produce complex, detailed, near-net shapes at a high rate with minimal post-production trimming and/or machining The resin is delivered under pressure with the mold pieces clamped together (or held together in a press) and, thus, parts are consistent, repeatable, dimensionally stable and well-consolidated, with relatively high fiber content and excellent void control. For high-performance parts made with higher-viscosity toughened resins, molds are usually heated and resin injection pressure is controlled with a meter/mix injection machine. Raw material costs are generally less than those for hand lay-up because dry preforms are used rather than traditional prepregs. Cycle time can range from two to three hours which is shorter than typical autoclave cure cycles.
The composite preform for the composite spool shell 46 may be made from unitape, woven cloth, braid or a combination of any fiber architectures. Unitape is a unidirectional tape material and resin matrix. A discussion of this and other suitable materials may be found in the “Engineering Materials Handbook” by ASM INTERNATIONAL, 1987, 1989 or later editions. The composite materials discussed herein may be made from the non-metallic type made of a material containing a fiber such as a carbonaceous, silica, metal, metal oxide, or ceramic fiber embedded in a resin material such as Epoxy, PMR15, BMI, PEEK, etc. The fibers are unidirectionally aligned in a tape that is impregnated with a resin and formed into a part shape. Later, it is cured via an autoclaving process or press molding to form a light-weight, stiff, relatively homogeneous article having laminates or plys within. The plies are generally all made from a unidirectional fiber filament ply material, preferably a tape, as it is often referred to, arranged circumferentially around the composite preform for the composite spool shell 46.
The method may include machining interfacial surfaces of the metal rings 44 after the positioning and before or after the curing. This allows bonding in place of a metal ring 44 that is near-net shape. In subsequent operations the precise interfaces would be machined probably using the mounting hub of the spool as a datum. This approach would ensure excellent positioning and orientation of the features.
The present invention has been described in an illustrative manner. It is to be understood that the terminology which has been used is intended to be in the nature of words of description rather than of limitation. While there have been described herein, what are considered to be preferred and exemplary embodiments of the present invention, other modifications of the invention shall be apparent to those skilled in the art from the teachings herein and, it is, therefore, desired to be secured in the appended claims all such modifications as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
Accordingly, what is desired to be secured by Letters Patent of the United States is the invention as defined and differentiated in the following claims:
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