The present invention relates, within the field of turbomachines, to a compressor rotor made of a drum and of vanes mechanically secured thereon.
Axial compressors are well known as such and are used in turbomachines, inter alia.
These low or high-pressure compressors comprise several stages of rotary vanes, also called rotor vanes, that are separated by rectifier stages which aim to reposition the velocity vector of the fluid leaving the preceding stage before sending it towards the following stage.
The rectifier stages are essentially made of fixed vanes, also called stator vanes, connecting an outer collar to an inner collar, both concentric and defining the air flow zone or aerodynamic vein.
The stages of rotor vanes are attached to a drum. A compressor drum is generally a hollow body that is symmetrical in revolution relative to its rotation axis, which corresponds to the axis of the turbomachine. The general shape of the hollow body is oval or cone-shaped depending on the shape of the flow.
Nowadays, the drum and the rotor vanes are generally made of a titanium alloy (TA6V) and the drum comprises circumferential recesses in which the feet of the vanes are fastened by a system of bolts. One such construction is illustrated in FIG. 1 of document EP 1 111 246 B1.
Traditional architectures with recesses do however have several drawbacks that can be listed as follows:
Document GB 1,163,752 presents an alternative to the fastening system with recesses in the rotor of an axial flow machine. The vane comprises a blade provided with a threaded member that engages in the rotor hub in order to allow the vane to be fastened to the hub.
The present invention aims to provide a solution that allows to overcome the drawbacks of the state of the art.
The present invention more particularly aims to provide a new drum architecture and an original system for fastening the vane thereto.
The present invention also aims to provide a drum deprived of its recesses and thus aims to provide a new rotor construction allowing to reduce radial and axial clearance consumption.
The present invention also aims to produce a new rotor construction allowing to optimize the choice of materials for the different elements (drum, vane) and therefore to very substantially reduce the mass.
The present invention relates to a rotor stage of a compressor drum for an axial turbomachine comprising a row of rotor vanes each provided with a platform, and a wall generally symmetrical in revolution relative to the rotation axis of the turbomachine and forming a hollow body, said wall comprising a partition wall and a support zone that is raised relative to the partition wall in a direction oriented towards the outside of the hollow body, said support zone comprising a central portion and side walls connecting the central portion to the partition wall of the drum, said platform of each of said vanes being assembled to said central portion by means of one or more fastening elements.
According to particular embodiments of the invention, the rotor stage comprises at least one or a suitable combination of the following features:
The present invention also relates to a compressor drum for an axial turbomachine comprising at least one rotor stage as described above.
A partial cross-section view (upper half) and an axial view, respectively, of a compressor drum as in the state of the art 1 and as in the invention 2 (in gray) are superimposed in
The drums 1,2 comprise a wall 3 that is generally symmetrical in rotation around a rotation axis, the wall 3 thereby forming an oval or cone-shaped hollow body. The wall 3 comprises a partition wall defining the general shape of the drum. According to the traditional architecture, the wall 3 also comprises recesses 4 intended to receive the feet of the rotor vanes. According to the present invention, the wall 3 comprises support zones 5 instead of the recesses 4. The drums 1,2 also traditionally comprise sealing elements 6 arranged between the rotor vane stages and intended to be positioned opposite the abradables of the inner collars (not shown).
The rotor architecture as in the invention and as partially shown in
The support zone 5 of the wall 3 that is seen in
According to a first preferred embodiment of the invention, the central portion 8 comprises, on its face outside the hollow body, a hollow portion 10 and rounded edges 11 connecting it to the side walls 7. The hollow portion 10 serves as a housing for the platform 12 of the rotor vane 9, as will be described below, and is preferably provided with a flat bottom. The rounded edges 11 surrounding the hollow portion 10 are located at the line 13 that delimits the aerodynamic vein (see
According to a second embodiment of the invention (not shown), the central portion 8 does not have a housing and the platform of the vane covers the entire central portion. According to this embodiment, the inner face of the central portion may comprise a protruding portion or may be provided without one. Preferably, the inner face of the central portion is provided with a placement area for the sector. Still preferably, the placement area is planar and cooperates with a sector that is also planar. According to this second embodiment of the invention, the central portion may comprise, on its outer and inner faces, rounded edges connecting it to the side walls.
According to the first and second embodiments of the invention, one or more orifices are formed through the thickness of the central portion 8 in order to allow each platform 12 to be fastened to the central portion 8. According to the first embodiment of the invention, the orifice(s) are formed through the thickness of the hollow portion 10 of the central portion 8.
The rotor vane 9 as in the invention comprises a blade 17 and a fastening platform 12 situated in a plane that is substantially perpendicular to that of the blade. According to the first embodiment of the invention, the dimensions of the platform and of the vane blade are such that the platform 12 is housed in the hollow portion 10 while the foot of the vane blade rests partially on the rounded edges 11 surrounding the housing (see
In order to ensure the fastening of the platform 12 to the support zone 5, different alternatives are possible. According to one preferred alternative, the platform 12 is provided with one or more rod(s) intended to be inserted respectively in the orifice(s) formed through the thickness of the central portion 8 and allowing the support zone 5 to be fastened to the platform 12 of the vane by one or more bolted clips, one or more lockbolts, or one or more rivets. Preferably and as illustrated in
As mentioned above, and preferably, the inner face of the central portion 8 comprises a placement area 16 for an additional piece 15, also called a sector. This piece is provided with one or more orifices intended to be placed opposite the orifice(s) formed through the thickness of the central portion. The sector allows to avoid damaging the central portion of the support zone when a force is applied on the assembly of the fastening element(s). In the example illustrated in
According to the present invention, the rotor vanes are, for example, made of a titanium alloy (TA6V) or of MMC (Metal Matrix Composite) aluminum. The drum as in the invention is made of an organic matrix composite material or of a metal material such as, for example, a conventional titanium alloy (TA6V).
The rotor as in the invention is lighter owing to its architecture, allowing to reduce the mass of the vane foot and to eliminate the recesses. This new architecture also allows to introduce new materials (composite drum, MMC aluminum vanes) that would not be compatible with a traditional design and thus allows an even more substantial mass reduction.
This drum profile allows to bring the partition wall of the drum closest to the aerodynamic vein, thereby minimizing the mass of the vane as mentioned above, the drum therefore no longer needs to bear this mass. This drum profile also allows to free up space for the feet of the stator vanes and for the inner collars.
This fastening system allows to guarantee the positioning of the vane in all operating cases, including at low rotation speeds and even stopped, unlike the traditional design where the vanes have a positioning latitude that in particular creates rocking phenomena, which consume axial and radial clearance. Eliminating the rocking of the vanes and, as a result, decreasing the axial clearance consumption allows to improve the compactness of the booster and hence the total mass of the motor.
The architecture as in the invention also allows to reduce the radial clearance consumption owing to the elimination of the periodic masses of the bolts and their balancing masses used in the traditional architecture with recesses and causing the drum to become oval. The decrease in the ovalization of the rotor allows to improve aero performance via a reduction of the radial clearance as well as to reduce their variation on a same stage.
It also allows to facilitate the assembly and clearance monitoring through the simpler to implement and more stable fastening of the vanes.
It also allows to increase the own frequencies of the system, which limits the risks of harmful vibratory phenomena (drum mode, rotor-stator interaction).
The use of composite materials for the drum of the compressor rotor allows to optimize the orientation of the fibers so as to maximize the circumferential stiffness. This results in an increase of the lifetime strength as well as in a decrease in the radial clearance consumption (less swelling of the drum than with a metal material owing to the maximization of the stiffness).
The use of composite materials for the drum also allows to minimize the rotating mass of the drum and, as a result, to reduce the amount of material needed (thickness) thereon.
The use of composite materials for the drum also allows to reduce the manufacturing costs owing to a very substantial decrease in material requirements, the mass ratio of the purchased material/piece being particularly unfavorable in the case of a titanium drum starting from a large forged piece and requiring substantial machining, unlike composite pieces.
The assembly simplicity also allows to reduce the assembly and monitoring times.
Lastly, the architecture as in the invention also provides the possibility of lightening the fan system and primarily the fan disc, owing to the decrease of the stresses on it coming from the drum, due to the lightening of the low-pressure rotor.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10166959 | Jun 2010 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2477954 | Blanc | Aug 1949 | A |
2685405 | Stalker | Aug 1954 | A |
2925250 | Whitehead | Feb 1960 | A |
3609059 | Wagle | Sep 1971 | A |
5118257 | Blakeley et al. | Jun 1992 | A |
20030143078 | Benedetto et al. | Jul 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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1111246 | Jun 2001 | EP |
1163752 | Sep 1969 | GB |
2299834 | Oct 1996 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110318185 A1 | Dec 2011 | US |