Circumferential shaft seals are widely used in shaft sealing applications to prevent liquids from leaking into the gas side. Usually gas-side pressure is maintained higher than liquid-side pressure.
At low gas pressure conditions, anywhere from 5 psi and below and including negative pressures, circumferential seals can weep, namely leak liquids from the liquid side into the gas side.
Leakage of liquids into the gas side adversely affects performance of the equipment where the seal is used. In case of an aircraft engine, oil leakage across the seal into a hot air side may cause oil coking or an engine fire.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,423,879; 5,145,189 and 6,143,843 are known and believed representative of the prior art relevant to the patentability of this invention.
Standard circumferential seals tend to weep/leak liquids from the liquid side of the seal to the region on the gas side of the seal at low gas-side pressure conditions, namely anywhere from 5 psi and below, including at negative pressures. This invention seeks to provide hydrodynamic seals that prevent or at least minimize such liquid weepage/leakage at such pressure conditions.
Prevention of oil weepage/leakage into the hot air side of an aircraft engine prevents the possibility of an engine fire. If the same air side is connected to an aircraft cabin to maintain cabin pressure, the prevention of oil leakage into the air side eliminates risk of the odor of oil in the cabin, eliminates the worry of maintaining the oil level in the bearing sump, and eliminates environmental hazards.
At certain operating conditions, hydrodynamic seals according to the invention can lift the rotating shaft or runner so that the seal runs on a thin film of gas, as contrasted to running on the bore surface. Compared to a bore-rubbing circumferential seal, the hydrodynamic seals according to the invention, when running on a film of gas, generate less heat. Less heat generation means less cooling oil is needed. As the seal runs on a thin film of gas, there is no rubbing between the seal bore and the runner or the shaft because there is essentially no contact. Hence, there is no significant seal bore wear. This provides extended seal wear life compared to a standard circumferential seal contacting the runner.
The inclined pumping groove seal in accordance with aspects of this invention has grooves with shallow depths positioned on the bore of a circumferential seal.
The high pressure generated by hydrodynamic seals in accordance with the invention reduces seal loading on rotating shafts. In the practice of this invention, generated high pressure is preferably directed into a dead ended circumferential groove or into the segment joints, to prevent the liquid from leaking into the gas side.
Hydrodynamic seals are designed to generate higher pressures than the pressure on the supplied gas side of the seal. During a low or reverse gas pressure condition, the hydrodynamic seals according to the invention generate adequate high pressures due to relative shaft rotation against the stationary seal ring bore. This increases gas pressure differential across the seal ring. Increasing the gas side pressure above the threshold of the liquid weepage/leakage pressure level, by such hydrodynamic pressurization, prevents the liquid from leaking into the gas side.
There are several hydrodynamic seal-ring approaches disclosed in this patent application. These seals generate high gas pressures across seal rings and prevent fluids from leaking into the gas side.
Hydrodynamic pumping groove seals at least greatly reduce and desirably prevent weepage or leakage of liquids into the region on the gas side of the seal, at low air side to oil side pressures, as well as when negative pressure exists on the air side.
The inclined pumping groove seal includes several shallow inclined grooves on the bore of otherwise standard circumferential segments. These inclined grooves connect to a dead end circumferential groove.
Generated pressure increases with increasing shaft speed. Since performance of the inclined pumping groove seal is shaft rotation direction dependent, the directional orientation of the inclined pumping grooves is as shown on
When orienting the inclined pumping groove direction, based on the direction of shaft rotation, in a position reverse from what might otherwise be considered the standard orientation, the locations of the tongue and sockets of the segments also reversed in accordance with the invention, as shown in
The inclined pumping groove seal generates high pressures across the seal bore and the segment joints to prevent liquid from leaking into the gas side, i.e., the inclined pumping groove seal brings the gas side pressure above the threshold liquid weepage/leakage pressure levels.
At certain speed and pressure conditions, the inclined pumping groove seal develops lift force. This force, if sufficient, allows the seal to run on a film of gas, by having a minute clearance between the carbon bore and either the rotating runner or the shaft. The high-pressure gas generated by the pumping action of the inclined pumping grooves passes through this minute clearance at sufficient velocity to push the liquid back and keep the liquid from entering the gas side.
The structure of hydrodynamic shallow pocket seals in accordance with the invention is much the same as the hydrodynamic inclined pumping groove seal mentioned in above, but the bore configuration is different.
A seal ring with hydrodynamic pockets generates high pressure. The generated high gas pressure is released in the dead end circumferential groove and, if required, into the segment joints by adding holes or slots from the dead end circumferential groove into the joints. The holes and the slots are same as the ones shown in
A bleed slot can be added through the thin pocket dam to release the generated high pressure directly into the outlet groove, as shown in
Depending on the application, the inlet and the outlet grooves can be angled toward the direction of shaft rotation, as shown in
Depending on the application, each segment may even have pockets with various depths (multidepth pockets), instead of all pockets being the same depth. The advantage of having segments with multidepth pockets is that in the event the very shallow pocket wears down or even off due to rubbing wear, the other pockets will pump the gas and generate high pressures until they wear down or even wear off, one at a time.
The hydrodynamic grooves generate gas pressure in the bore of the seal to reduce or prevent liquid weepage into the gas side of the seal chamber at low or reverse pressure conditions.
Circumferential seals are used on gas turbine engines to seal the oil used to lubricate the bearings on the main shaft. The seals prevent oil from entering the hot air chambers of the engine and retain the bearing oil for lubrication.
In prior practice, a bleed slot was added on the seal face of the socket, allowing high pressure gas to enter the joint under normal conditions when the gas side of the seal was at higher pressure than the liquid side. This approach has limitations. When the pressure differential across the seal drops to zero, or worse yet reverses, liquid enters the joints and leaks through the bleed slots into the gas side.
With providing a bleed hole connected to a hydrodynamic groove, gas pressure continues to blow into the joints even at low or reverse pressure conditions, preventing liquid weepage. The hydrodynamic grooves generate pressure in the seal bore with shaft rotation.
Gas enters the hydrodynamic groove on the left side of the segment through the deep axial bore groove. With shaft rotation, the shallow hydrodynamic groove generates gas pressure, increasing from left to right, due to the viscosity of the gas and shear forces on the molecules. Pressurized gas is contained in the pressure chamber and is vented into the socket through intersecting radial and circumferential holes.
The axial bore groove intersects the circumferential bore groove. The circumferential bore groove does not receive gas pressure from a hydrodynamic groove.
The axial bore groove does not intersect the circumferential bore groove. Gas pressure generated in the three narrow hydrodynamic grooves enters the deep circumferential bore groove. Again, gas leakage across the bore dam prevents liquid weepage from entering the gas side of the seal at low or reverse pressure.
The socket is at the left side of the segment in this design instead of on the right. An optional bleed hole is shown, at the end of the circumferential bore groove, to abate liquid weepage from the joints.
This patent application claims the benefit of the priority under 35 USC 119 of provisional U.S. patent application Ser. No. 60/815,782, filed 21 Jun. 2006 in the names of Thurai Manik Vasagar, Alan D. McNickle (now deceased), and Glenn Marke Garrison, and assigned to Stein Seal Company.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60815782 | Jun 2006 | US |