This application is a continuation of International Patent Application No. PCT/EP2006/068235, filed on Nov. 8, 2006 and claims benefit to SWISS Application No. CH 02053/05, filed on Dec. 22, 2005. The entire disclosure of both applications is incorporated by reference herein.
The present invention relates to the field of turbine engineering. It relates to a process for producing a welded rotor of a low-pressure steam turbine.
It has long been known to produce rotors of steam turbines by joining a plurality of forgings along the rotor axis by welding. The individual forgings are in this case assigned to different temperature stages and can accordingly consist of different materials. In the past, various processes have been developed and proposed for the welding of forgings consisting of different materials, as described for example in U.S. Pat. No. 4,962,586, U.S. Pat. No. 6,152,697, U.S. Pat. No. 6,753,504 or EP 0 964 135.
Steel of type 2,3Cr2,2NiMo, having the chemical composition (on average) of 0.22% of C, 0.20% of Mn, 2.30% of Cr, 2.20% of Ni, 0.72% of Mo, remainder Fe, and a minimum yield strength of 700 MPa has hitherto been used as material with the highest strength for such welded rotors of low-pressure turbines. However, if the rotor blades in the end stage of the low-pressure turbine are to be lengthened to lengths in the range of over 100 cm, a stronger material is required for the outer forgings 11, 14.
Substituting the 2,3Cr2,2NiMo steel for a steel of higher strength without altering the associated post-weld stress-relief anneal process (PWHT, Post-Weld Heat Treatment), however, would lead to a high hardness of the heat-affected zone (HAZ) and therefore an increased risk of stress corrosion cracking (SCC). On the other hand, an increase in the PWHT temperature with a view to reducing the hardness in the heat-affected zone would reduce the strength of the forgings and of the welding deposit used. Local post-weld stress-relief annealing of the finished welded join at a higher temperature with a view to reducing the hardness in the heat-affected zone is likewise not possible, since the proximity of the blade attachment to the welded join would lead to the blade attachment overheating.
An aspect of the present invention is to provide a method for producing a welded rotor of a low-pressure steam turbine which addresses the difficulties of previous processes and allows steels of higher strength which may be used without problems for the end stages of a low-pressure steam turbine, and may allow the use of longer rotor blades in the end stage.
An embodiment of the present invention provides that in a first step a first forging made from a steel with a minimum yield strength of approximately 700 MPa and a second forging made from a heat-treated 3.5 NiCrMoV steel with a typical chemical composition (on average) of 3.5% of Ni, 1.5% of Cr, 0.35% of Mo, 0.10% of V, 0.25% of C, remainder Fe, are provided, that in a second step a build-up layer of a welding deposit is applied to the connection surface of the second forging by means of build-up welding, that in a third step the applied welding deposit and the associated heat-affected zone are made softer by first local post-weld stress-relief annealing, that in a fourth step the first and second forgings are joined together to form a welding location, and the welding location is filled with welding deposit to form a welded join, and that in a fifth step the welded join is subjected to a second post-weld stress-relief anneal.
The present invention is to be explained in more detail below on the basis of exemplary embodiments in conjunction with the drawing, in which:
According to a configuration of the invention, the first forging consists of a steel of type 2,3Cr2,2NiMo with a chemical composition (on average) of 0.22% of C, 0.20% of Mn, 2.30% of Cr, 2.20% of Ni, 0.72% of Mo, remainder Fe.
In particular, the welding deposit used to fill the welding location may be NiCrMo steel with a chemical composition (on average) of max. 0.13 C, 0.3-0.8 Cr, 0.6-2.5 Ni, 0.4-0.8 Mo, max. 0.15 Co, max. 1.5 Mn, 0.5 Si, remainder Fe. In this case, the second post-weld stress-relief anneal carried out is in particular the standard post-weld stress-relief anneal for the welding deposit and the 2,3Cr2,2NiMo Steel at approximately 590° C.
In the context of the invention, however, it is also possible for the first forging to consist of a 3.5 NiCrMoV steel with a typical chemical composition (on average) of 3.5% of Ni, 1.5% of Cr, 0.35% of Mo, 0.10% of V, 0.25% of C, remainder Fe.
If, according to another configuration of the invention, the build-up layer is applied only to the outer edge of the connection surface. This may result in a shortened time for the post-weld stress-relief anneal.
a shows an enlarged illustration of an excerpt from the forging 14 from
After the build-up layer 20 has been applied, the welding deposit of the build-up layer 20 and the associated heat-affected zone (HAZ) are subjected to a stress-relief anneal. This is indicated in
After the stress-relief anneal, the forgings 13 and 14 which are to be connected are joined together to form the weld location 21 (
Finally, a standard stress-relief anneal (PWHT) at 590° C. is carried out on the welding deposit 22 and the 2,3Cr2,2NiMo steel (
An advantage of the present invention is that a rotor with a forging for the end stage with a minimum yield strength of 800 MPa is provided. Another advantage is that an acceptable hardness of the heat-affected zone results at the critical surface of the welded join (a higher hardness below the surface does not constitute any risk with regard to stress corrosion cracking). Another advantage is that there is no reduction in the strength in the forgings and in the welding deposit.
A welded join between a forging made from 2,3Cr2,2NiMo steel and a forging made from 3.5 NiCrMoV steel has been described in connection with
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02053/05 | Dec 2005 | CH | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP2006/068235 | Nov 2006 | US |
Child | 12144137 | US |