The present invention is concerned with the manufacture of a casing with a boss. More particularly, the invention concerns a novel casing design with weight and cost saving advantages and method of manufacture thereof.
Typical of the external features required on a casing are bosses. These are locally thick protrusions which facilitate the bolting of pipes, bleed valves and the like to the casing as required by internal machinery enclosed in the casing. A typical boss protrudes from an outer wall of the casing in an annular shape defining a through hole to the inside of the casing and an array of bolt holes encircling the through hole. Additional components such as pipes, valves and the like typically have flanges which match with the boss annulus and these components are secured to the casing by bolts passed through the flange and the boss.
In the particular case of gas turbine engines, casings must be able to withstand high loads and extremes of temperature and pressure. It is known to manufacture such casings from high performance alloys using a powder hot isostatic processing (PHIP) process.
In the PHIP process, coaxially aligned steel canister portions are arranged to define the geometry for the casing wall between them. To provide a boss on the outer wall of the casing, a shape defining the boss geometry is cut into a radially inner wall of a radially outer canister portion. High performance alloy powder is poured into the space between the canister portions under vacuum. The canister is then sealed, placed in a pressure vessel and heated to a high temperature in conditions of high pressure. This causes the powder to amalgamate into a solid structure having the geometry defined by the opposite facing walls of the canister portions. The canister portions can then be removed from the product, for example by machining and/or acid etching. Due to the high pressures imposed during the process, the resulting product dimensions are relatively smaller than the starting dimensions defined by the canister portions and its material very dense. The product at this stage is known as a nett shape PHIP condition of supply or PHIP COS. In order to make the finished casing, surfaces of the PHIP COS which, in use, will interface with other components are finished with appropriate machining processes. The process is cost effective minimising use and wastage of the expensive high performance alloy powder.
The minimum required height of the boss relative the casing surface is defined by two factors; firstly, it must be sufficient to meet the stress requirements on the boss when the casing and associated components are put to their intended use. Secondly, the boss and casing together must provide a sufficient depth to accommodate a thread length needed to receive bolts which attach components interfacing with the boss. It is not unusual for the thread length requirement to dictate a greater dimension than the stress considerations. For this reason, boss height across the entire boss exceeds the minimum height required for stress considerations. In some alternatives, the boss height is at a minimum for stress conditions but the entire casing wall is made thicker in the region of the boss to accommodate the required bolt threads.
In a first aspect, the invention provides a method for manufacture of a casing which has a boss, the method comprising:
providing two canister portions, a first defining an outer wall geometry of a casing including a boss and a second defining an inner wall geometry of the casing;
aligning the first and second canister portions coaxially and introducing the material from which the casing is to be manufactured into a void defined between the canister portions, the material being introduced in a powdered form and under vacuum conditions;
sealing the canister and subjecting the canister and powdered material to elevated temperature and pressure sufficient to cause amalgamation of the powdered material into a solid structure;
removing the canister portions to provide a nett shape condition of supply (COS) of the casing; and machine finishing one or more elements of the COS including the boss to provide the finished casing;
wherein the second canister portion includes an array of holes or recesses which, when the canister portions are aligned, face a recess on the first canister portion which defines the boss such that in the nett shape COS an array of pedestals is provided aligned with the boss and the dimension from an exposed end of a pedestal to an exposed surface of the boss is sufficient to receive a bolt thread of the minimum length required to secure a component to the boss.
The canister portions may be removed by machining and/or acid etching. The powder may be a metal powder, more particularly a metal alloy powder.
The first canister portion may define an annular geometry of the boss. The first canister may further comprise an array of protrusions in the annular geometry defining bolt holes or bolt hole outlines in the boss. The array of holes or recesses in the second canister portion may define pedestals which are spaced equally around an annulus which mirrors the annular geometry of the boss and may be arranged in axial alignment with some or all of the protrusions in the annular geometry. The number of holes or recesses may be equal to or less than the number of protrusions. The second canister portion may include holes and/or recesses of different depths. The holes and/or recesses have larger diameters than the protrusions such that the pedestals they define in the casing have sufficient wall thickness to securely accommodate bolts received through bolt holes provided through the boss. The holes or recesses may further define a fillet or chamfer from the casing wall.
Bolt holes and pedestals defined in the nett shape COS can be subsequently finished by drilling and tapping of screw threads to receive bolts when the casing is assembled with other components.
The geometry of the boss, pedestals and holes can be cut into nominally cylindrical canister walls. For example, plunge EDM may be used to provide some or all of the geometries. A single plunge EDM tool may define a single hole/recess or an array of holes/recesses. Fillets and chamfers may also be defined by tool geometry.
Use of the method, compared to prior art methods, reduces the weight of the casing and the cost of materials by an amount which more than offsets any added cost in providing the holes and/or recesses in the second casing to define the pedestals in the nett shape COS.
In another aspect, the invention provides a casing comprising a wall an annular boss on an outer face of the wall having a first array of bolt holes provided therein and a second array of pedestals extending from the inner face of the wall, each pedestal in the second array being in axial alignment with a bolt hole in the first array. The casing may be manufactured from a high performance metal or alloy. The casing may be a product of a PHIP manufacturing process. The casing may be configured for use in a gas turbine engine.
Embodiments of the invention will now be further described by way of example with reference to the accompanying figures in which;
With reference to
The gas turbine engine 10 works in the conventional manner so that air entering the intake 12 is accelerated by the fan 13 to produce two air flows: a first air flow into the high-pressure compressor 14 and a second air flow which passes through a bypass duct 21 to provide propulsive thrust. The high-pressure compressor 14 compresses the air flow directed into it before delivering that air to the combustion equipment 15.
In the combustion equipment 15 the air flow is mixed with fuel and the mixture combusted. The resultant hot combustion products then expand through, and thereby drive the high and low-pressure turbines 16, 17 before being exhausted through the nozzle 18 to provide additional propulsive thrust. The high 16 and low 17 pressure turbines drive respectively the high pressure compressor 14 and the fan 13, each by suitable interconnecting shaft. A casing 22 encases sits inside the nacelle 20 and encloses the moving parts of the combustor and turbine. Consumables such as fuel and oil are delivered to the engine through components attached to bosses on the casing.
Other gas turbine engines to which the present disclosure may be applied may have alternative configurations. By way of example such engines may have an alternative number of interconnecting shafts (e.g. three) and/or an alternative number of compressors and/or turbines. Further the engine may comprise a gearbox provided in the drive train from a turbine to a compressor and/or fan.
In accordance with the invention, at locations around the boss where the depth of the boss and casing wall 53 is insufficient to accommodate the required threads, an array 50 of pedestals 50a is provided on the inner surface of the casing wall 53. These pedestals 50 project radially inwardly of the casing and are positioned, with respect to the boss on the outer surface of the casing wall 53, in alignment with bolthole positions on the boss.
Thus, only in the regions necessary, the combined depth of the boss 74 and casing wall 63, 73 is increased to accommodate the bolt threads. Other bolts for the flange 74 are accommodated within the wall 63, 73 without emerging from the surface 63. The novel casing design therefor requires less material in the region of the boss than in prior art designs and is lighter in weight and less costly to manufacture.
The invention has particular application in the manufacture of gas turbine casings; however it is not limited to such use. The method of the invention is equally applicable to the manufacture of casings for any application where tapped holes are required to join component interfaces, especially where weight reduction and economy of manufacture are priorities.
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1510845.9 | Jun 2015 | GB | national |
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