This description applies to a machine stator and particular assembly and disassembly methods that can be used with it.
The field of this invention is rotating machines in which the stator carries stages of fixed vanes called guide vane stages that alternate with circular stages of mobile blades on the rotor. The assembly and disassembly of such machines is usually complicated due to nesting of vane stages, which makes maintenance operations particularly long and expensive. This is why the external stator casing in the stator structure shown in
It is very easy to disassemble this particular stator since all that is necessary is to unbolt the flanges 2 and to separate the two half-shells 1 by a simple radial movement. The angular sectors 4 may also be easily extracted from the grooves 3, and the rotor blades are completely exposed. However, there is still the disadvantage that it is not very precise to assemble the half-shells 1 and clearances of a few hundredths or a few tenths of a millimetre have to be left in the machine which reduces its performances by being the source of gas leaks. It should be noted also that the strip 6 stops only the complete assembly of guide vane stages 5; which does not prevent the angular sectors 4 from moving and causing vibrations. This is why other stator constructions are also attractive.
Another design is described in document U.S. Pat. No. 5,564,897 in which the casing is composed of circular shells assembled to each other by screws and that are assembled one after the other. Grooves in which the stands of the vane stages penetrate are used to insert the blades by a radial movement between the shells, and the assembly is then made by an axial movement bringing the shells towards each other. The blades are retained by hooks projecting on both faces and entering into rebates formed in the opposite faces of the grooves. Finally, axial orientation pins stop blade movements in the tangential direction in the grooves.
However, the machine described in document U.S. Pat. No. 5,564,897 has a fairly simple structure, and the particular assembly arrangement is preferably intended for a low pressure compressor. Machines for aircraft are more complex, and maintenance is necessary particularly for the high pressure compressor, and more particularly for stages close to the combustion chamber that are subjected to high pressures and temperatures. But unfortunately this is the position at the heart of the machine at which it is most difficult to extract blades and vanes for repair. With known arrangements, the machine stator has to be disassembled at the front and back of this highly stressed area, and the machine rotor also has to be removed. The design in U.S. Pat. No. 5,564,897 is not applicable as such for at least two reasons: the shells cannot be moved freely in the axial direction unless the machine is disassembled—for reasons which we will be described in detail later; and the vanes are not well retained when the shells are not assembled, which probably means that a holding tool has to be used which will be a problem in this case since the tools cannot be used without sufficient access to the vanes so that they can be inserted and removed.
The invention proposed here provides a means of extracting stator vanes by a radial movement after an axial movement to move away the circular shells assembled to form the casing, as described in prior art, but the arrangement is innovative in that this result can be obtained even for high pressure compressor vanes in the combustion chamber or another area with difficult access in a complex and fairly small aeronautical turbomachine.
One essential means is that the vanes remain retained by one of the shells even when displacement of a nearby shell has freed them: the vane roots are provided on one side with curved hooks that penetrate into a complementary shaped rebate, closed partially by a radially oriented lip that retains the hooks in the rebate. An axial expansion spring is housed at the bottom of the rebate to press on the hook and to maintain it, and the rest of the vane, in a fixed position: no external tooling is then necessary to guarantee correct reassembly of the stator.
Other aspects, details and characteristics of the invention will now be described with reference to the following figures:
and FIGS. 3 to 5 illustrate steps in its assembly.
The casing 11 described herein is placed on the downstream side of a high pressure compressor of a turbomachine, in contact with the combustion chamber that is not shown in detail but which is present in the adjacent zone 45 beyond the shock absorber ring 14. Therefore, the front of the turbomachine corresponds to the left of
Grooves 19 and 20 along the direction towards the inside of the stator and shared by the back shell 13, and the front shell 12 and the shock absorber ring 14 respectively, are located under the pairs of flanges 15 and 16 respectively. The grooves 19 and 20 resemble the grooves shown in the design in
Before going to describe the method of assembling and disassembling the stator, it is worth mentioning that the back shell 13 and the shock absorber ring 14 are each provided with a radial orientation lip 31 around their rebate 25, partially enclosing the rebate from the outside and being provided with a notch 32 slightly wider locally than the curved hooks 24 of the angular sectors of the guide vanes, and that this lip 31 is used to retain the hook 2 in a rebate 25 and also to support the casing element near the front, near its connecting flange 15 or 16, by adjusting itself within a concentric portion of this element. Finally, the front shell 12 comprises a rib 33 near the front, the end of which is curved to press on a hook 34 of the outside cover 10.
We will now describe
The first assembly step consists of inserting the back guide vane stage 22 in its place, between the useful blade stages 38 and 39 by a centripetal movement of its angular sectors making them pass one after the other through the notch 32, after which they are moved in the angular direction along the rebate 25. As is usual, they are displaced by a half-sector when the half-sector has been installed so that none of them extends completely in front of the notch 32. When the back guides stage 22 has been completely assembled, the back shell 13 may be moved backwards to insert the hooks 27 in the rebate 28 and press in contact with the lip 31: this state is shown in
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR03/01415 | 5/7/2003 | WO | 11/26/2004 |