The application relates generally to gas turbine engines and, more particularly, to a method and apparatus for providing rotor discs designed to mount blades thereto.
Conventional gas turbine engines include rotor blades which are removably mounted to respective rotor discs. The disc and blade fixings of a rotor assembly of gas turbine engines, particularly of the high pressure turbine rotor assembly, conventionally comprise an undulating or “firtree” shaped profile in order to meet the requirements of engine performance, weight reduction, secondary air consumption, disc/blade life considerations, etc.
The prior art is replete with attempts to reduce or compensate for the inherent stresses in the discs, created during the disc's manufacture, the formation of the blade fixing slots and/or the placement of the blade roots in the dovetail slots. However these solutions remain complicated and somewhat lacking.
Accordingly, there is a need to provide an improved method and apparatus for providing such discs.
There is provided a method for reducing residual stress in a disc of a bladed rotor for use in a gas turbine engine, the method comprising: determining circumferential locations of blade fixing slots to be formed on the disc, the slots being adapted to receive the roots of respective airfoil blades; determining a virtual profile of each of said blade fixing slots on the disc; and forming, prior to the blade fixing slots being formed in the disc, a narrow, axial pilot slot centrally of the virtual profile of each said blade fixing slot, the pilot slot extending radially inwardly from an outer periphery of the disc.
There is also provided a process for providing an annular disc utilized as a support for mounting blades in a rotor assembly for a gas turbine engine, comprising the steps of: a) determining the location of blade fixing slots to be formed in the disc; b) forming a pilot slot within the confines of each said blade fixing slot to be formed by selecting a cutting tool and passing it axially and radially through a portion of the disc circumferentially centered at each location of the blade fixing slots to be formed; c) limiting the width of each pilot slot to a relatively narrow dimension compared to the width of the blade fixing slot; and then d) cutting the blade fixing slots in the disc.
There is further provided a preform for an annular disc utilized as a support for mounting blades in a rotor assembly for a gas turbine engine, the preform comprising a plurality of equally spaced pilot slots extending axially and radially inwards from a periphery of the preform at circumferential locations on the preform corresponding to blade fixing slots to be formed in the disc, wherein the preform has reduced inherent stresses compared to discs of rotor assemblies in which dovetail slots have been formed without pilot slots.
Further details will be apparent from the detailed description and figures included below.
Reference is now made to the accompanying figures, in which:
Referring to
The rotor assembly 30 will now be described in greater detail with reference, in particular, to
The turbine rotor disc 32 includes a web section 33 extending radially outwardly from a hub (not shown) which is mounted to the rotating shaft of the high pressure spool assembly 20 of
The turbine rotor disc 32 further includes a plurality of dovetail slots 48 (only one shown in
Prior to assembling the rotor assembly 30, the disc 32 is formed by forging metal, such as forged or powder metallurgy nickel alloys for example, into an annulus with a peripheral surface 55 and a rim section 55. The thermal treatment as well as the spinning step may create stresses within the metal that can sometimes complicate the formation of the dovetail slots 48 as well as the retention relationship with the root section 38 of the blades 34.
The location and profile of each dovetail slot 48 is first virtually determined on the disc by a CNC program, and may be in practice physically marked on a surface of the disc 32. For instance, in
A further embodiment of the pilot slot 160 is shown in
It has been found that by providing pilot slots 62, 162 at the location of a dovetail slot 48 to be formed in the disc, that the stresses in the disc may be reduced. Once all of the pilot slots 62, 162 have been formed, circumferentially about the perimeter of the disc, the actual dovetail slots 48 may be cut along the outlines of the virtual firtree profiles 58, 158. The roots 38 of the blades 36 can then be inserted axially into the dovetail slots 48. In some examples, further treatment of the dovetail slots (e.g. for stress relief, etc.) may not be required.
Once all the pilot slots 60, 160 have been cut into the disc, the dovetail slots 48 can be cut or otherwise machines into the disc in the regions identified by the virtual firtree profiles. A wire EDM process may also be used to cut the dovetail slots 48 in the disc.
The above description is meant to be exemplary only, and one skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made to the embodiments described without departing from the scope of the invention disclosed. For example, the pilot slots 60, 160 may be of different profiles. However there is no co-relationship between the shape of the pilot slots 60, 160 and the profiles of the dovetail slots 48. Although wire EDM is described as suitable for providing the slot(s) in the disc, any suitable approach may be used to achieve this step. Still other modifications which fall within the scope of the present application will be apparent to those skilled in the art, in light of a review of this disclosure, and such modifications are intended to fall within the appended claims.
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