The present invention relates to a method for producing a metal part for a turbine engine, and more particularly the wheel blade for a turbine of a turbojet or a turboprop engine of an aircraft.
To produce such a part, it is known to successively:
Some cylindrical blanks may have different micro-structures as regards their respective centres and their periphery. This may result in different micro-structures within the same blade.
This is specifically the case for parts made from a TiAl-based metal alloy.
In the present technique, some other blanks are obtained by lost-wax foundry using a ceramic mould, wherein the metal alloy is cast. Developing such single-use mould is difficult. Additionally, interactions between the molten metal and the ceramics may result in casting defects on the surfaces of the blanks, and lost-wax may cause geometrical defects in the blanks, if quality is bad.
Besides, machining (at least) one part in a blank raises difficulties in positioning the part in the blank. The position of such part must be compatible with the practices of foundry, machining, and those of the field which the part is intended for.
The present invention makes it possible to remedy at least a part of the above-mentioned drawbacks, in a simple, efficient and economical way.
According to a first definition, the solution provided here consists in that the blank obtained by casting is a solid polyhedron having first and second sides in which the third and fourth sides extend between the first and second sides, flaring apart from the first side towards the second side, first at a first angle and subsequently, from a break of slope, at a second larger angle, and said at least one part is machined in the blank.
To reach the solution provided here, know-how from various areas of competence (foundry, machining) had to be mobilized. The shapes of the blanks and mould cavities resulting therefrom have a pertaining morphology.
As regards the mould used, it is recommended that it thus comprises at least one mould cavity, preferably one per blank, with such cavity thus having first and second sides in which the third and fourth sides extend between the first and second sides, flaring apart from the first side towards the second side, first at a first angle and subsequently, from a break of slope, at a second larger angle,
The mould will preferably be rotating, for the simultaneous moulding of several blanks by centrifugation. The mould will then be connected to means providing rotation about a central axis of rotation and will comprise several mould cavities radially extending about said central axis.
Such technology makes it possible to produce TiAL blanks, more particularly for turbine engine blades.
In the field of turbine engines, the method which the mould is intended for can be applied to the moulding of blades, i.e. parts each having a longitudinal axis, and along such axis, a root at one end, a heel at a second end, and a curved section vane which extends there between.
In this application, it is recommended, (whether combined or not), and so that each blank approaches at least a part of the constraints applied to filling, hardening, stripping and machining of the part, so that the latter complies with the expected characteristics:
The moulding cavity will be adapted accordingly.
The mould, which is, for instance a permanent mould wherein the alloy is cast, will preferably be made of metal, which shall make it possible to limit the contamination of the blank material by that of the mould.
Other characteristics and advantages of the invention will appear upon reading the following description given as a non-restrictive example and while referring to the appended drawings where the
The device 1 comprises a closed sealed enclosure 5 whereto a partial vacuum is applied. A TiAl-based metal alloy ingot 7, for example, is fixed at one end of an electrode 9 which is connected to a terminal of a power source, the other terminal of which is connected to a crucible 11 accommodated in the enclosure 5. When the ingot 7 gets closer to the crucible 11, electric arcs are formed between the crucible and the ingot, which causes the melting of the ingot which then falls down to the bottom of the crucible (VSM Vacuum Skull Melting). When melting of the ingot is completed in the crucible, the metal alloy is poured into a preferably metallic and permanent mould 13.
Such mould 13 makes it possible to cast the alloy by centrifugation. For this purpose, the mould is rotated about an axis A using an engine 15.
The mould comprises several recesses or cavities, such as 17a, 17b, here, which radially extend about the axis A, which is vertical here. The alloy to be cast is brought to the centre and the rotation of the mould distributes it into the cavities. It is recommended for the cavities to be regularly spaced about such axis.
The axis A will preferably be vertical and the axis (such as 170a, 170b here) in each cavity will be horizontal. In
The centrifugal forces generated by the rotation of the mould force the molten alloy into such cavities to fill same.
When cooling is completed, the mould 13 is disassembled and the cast parts are extracted.
The shape of the cavities 17a, 17b . . . will of course match that of the parts. The following information regarding the parts or the blanks will thus also apply to the cavities in the mould.
In
The part 19, here a blade for a turbine engine, will be machined in the blank in its solid state.
In the preferred embodiment illustrated which favours an optimized machining, as regards the quality of the end parts and the material used, the blank 3 is somehow defined by a first and a second pyramid, respectively 21a, 21b, with each one being truncated in a common plane.
The second pyramid is an extension of the first pyramid on the smaller base 210b of the second pyramid which exactly overlaps the larger base 210a of the first pyramid.
As shown, in the complete blank, the first and second pyramids are thus only one.
In order to still optimize the high quality of the end parts and the lowest consumption of material possible, it is specifically recommended, as best illustrated in
It is reminded that a trapezoid is a quadrilateral, with two parallel opposing sides called bases.
The blank 3 may have a plane 23 of symmetry perpendicular to the first and second sides 30a,30b.
To preserve the overall balance of the blank shape and the desired material saving, as regards the production of such blade 19, it is recommended that the sides 30a,30b are mutually parallel.
Besides, it is recommended:
As regards the values to be provided for the other angles mentioned:
As for the break of slope 18, it should be positioned at less than 85%, and preferably less than 75%, from the shortest distance L2 between the first and second sides 30a,30b, starting from the first side 30a (L1/L2=0.85, and preferably less than 0.75, with L1: shortest distance between the first side 30a and the break of slope 18).
It can be noted from
The above-mentioned rules for designing the blank will enable the filling of the mould and an appropriate hardening, an optimised positioning of the part 19 to be machined in the blank and an overall volume of such blank so defined as to minimise machining times.
As regards this part 19, it can be seen in the figures that if the part is a blade, it will have (
The blade vane will advantageously be machined, with the convex face thereof (
It should also be noted that the heel (or external platform) 192b is provided to be machined facing, and close to the side 30b, whereas the internal platform 193b is close to the opposing side 30a.
If, as preferred, the blanks 3 are cast by centrifugation into a rotating mould, such as mould 13, a shell mould will preferably be used.
As regards the mould cavities, the following is recommended, as illustrated in
As already mentioned above, the concerned mould thus comprises (at least) a cavity 17b for moulding the blank which has first and second sides 171a,171b in which the third and fourth sides extend between the first and second sides 171c,171d, flaring apart from the first side towards the second side, first at a first angle and subsequently, from a break of slope 180, at a second larger angle.
As mentioned above, it is also recommended that:
In the example, the opening giving access to the (each) cavity, reference 23b, is positioned on the trimmed lateral side 171b towards which the larger base of the larger pyramid will be moulded. The opposing side 171a defines a closed bottom for the cavity.
The mould enclosure consists (at least) of two shells 25a,25b, with each one integrating a part of the concerned mould cavity, here 17b.
The metal alloy enters the cavity through the opening 23b (refer to the arrow in
In a particular embodiment, each blank may have a length L2, between the sides 30a,30b ranging from 20 to 500 mm, and a length L3 on the side 30a ranging from 10 to 100 mm.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1363344 | Dec 2013 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FR2014/053246 | 12/9/2014 | WO | 00 |