Method for the repair of a compressor rotor designed in blisk technology

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 8677621
  • Patent Number
    8,677,621
  • Date Filed
    Monday, July 16, 2007
    17 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, March 25, 2014
    11 years ago
Abstract
With a method for the repair of compressor rotors designed in blisk technology the damaged stage is severed from the rotor, and a new blisk is joined to the rotor by electron-beam welding. For stress relieving the rotor is subjected to local thermal treatment by means of a current produced in the weld area by electro-magnetic induction.
Description

This application claims priority to German Patent Application DE 10 2006 033 299.7 filed Jul. 17, 2006, the entirety of which is incorporated by reference herein.


This invention relates to a method for the repair of a compressor rotor designed in blisk technology and having a plurality of blisks joined to form a one-piece assembly in which a severely damaged stage is replaced by a new one and the rotor is subsequently subjected to thermal treatment.


On gas turbine engines, as is generally known, compressors are used which include several rotor stages which are joined to form a one-piece assembly and are each designed in blisk technology, with the rotor blades being integral with the disk. Severely damaged blades or blade portions are usually cut off and replaced by new repair elements attached in a welding process. In order to reduce the stresses produced in the weld-near area, the entire compressor drum, or only the internally stressed weld zone of the repaired blade, must be subjected to thermal treatment. Thermal treatment of the entire compressor may, however, result in distortion of the latter, entailing costly mechanical rework. Also, previously removed coatings must be re-applied and the surface re-hardened. For performance of a local heat treatment confined to the respective weld area, costly capsule techniques are known preventing the non-damaged parts of the blisk from being heated.


Since effort and cost for the repair of severely damaged compressors is particularly high in connection with a local thermal treatment, one or several of the blisks joined to each other by welding are in this case removed, or severed, from the compressor and replaced by new blisks fitted in a welding process. In this case, the compressor having several blisks joined to each other by welding must, however, be subjected to thermal treatment in a furnace which leads to the disadvantages described above.


In a broad aspect, the present invention provides for a significant reduction of the work effort for the repair of severely damaged compressors.


It is a particular object of the present invention to provide an improved method for construction and repair in accordance with the features described herein. Useful developments of the invention will be apparent from the present description.


The essential idea of the present invention is that a new blisk is electron-beam welded to the compressor rotor as replacement for the destroyed blisk (or during new construction) and that both the weld and the confined adjacent zones affected by the weld heat are subjected to a stress-relieving treatment using inductively generated heat. The induction parameters can be set such that the current induced into the component for heat generation is actually confined to the welding area and the temperature required for stress relieving is produced in this area only. Coatings previously applied to the compressor rotor need not be stripped prior to thermal treatment and, therefore, not be re-applied in a subsequent process. Re-treatment of the blades for surface hardening is similarly not required. Finally, localized thermal treatment provides for minimum distortion of the rotor, as a result of which the otherwise required costly mechanical rework will similarly no longer be necessary, or only to a lesser extent. Locally confined generation of heat enables the repair process to be repeated more frequently. The heat required for the thermal treatment is produced locally peripherally along the weld joint.


The method is applicable to both the repair and the manufacture of blisk rotors. Advantageous here are the dispensability of the cost-intensive thermal treatment of an entire rotor assembly in a furnace and the rapidity of the local thermal treatment which is even integratable into the welding process.







This invention is more fully described in the light of a preferred embodiment.


On a compressor whose rotor is constructed from blisks joined to each other and features a plurality of damaged blades in a stage, the affected blisk is severed from the compressor drum and replaced by a new disk with integral blades (blisk) which is joined to the compressor drum by electron-beam welding. After welding the replacement disk to the compressor rotor (rotor subassembly) and not before or during welding, only the weld joint and the areas adjacent to the weld joint which are strongly heated in the welding process are subjected to local thermal treatment by inductive heating, in that a current is induced into the weld joint and a confined bi-lateral area of the rotor using a magnetic field produced on the periphery of the joint, thus generating the temperature required for thermal treatment of the material. The parameters for the locally confined thermal treatment can be well set so that the compressor rotor will generally distort only slightly and rework due to thermal distortion will not be necessary, or to a minor extent only. Furthermore, surface re-coating necessary after furnace heat treatment of the entire rotor and/or surface re-hardening, for example by glass bead peening, of the non-locally heat-treated areas is now obsolete. Upon thermal treatment, inspection of the weld joint and, if applicable, mechanical rework in the weld joint area is performed. The method is applicable to all compressor rotors, both in blisk and conventional technology (disk/blade).

Claims
  • 1. A method for repairing a compressor rotor designed in blisk technology and having a plurality of blisks joined together to form a one-piece assembly, comprising: severing from the rotor and removing an entire damaged stage of a blisk having integral blades, the severing being performed away from the integral blades;replacing the entire damaged stage of the blisk with an undamaged blisk stage;joining the undamaged blisk stage to the rotor by electron-beam welding; andsubsequently to the electron-beam welding and not before or during the electron-beam welding, subjecting only a weld joint and a locally confined area adjacent to the weld joint which has been affected by a heat of the weld to local stress-relieving thermal treatment by a current induced into the component by electro-magnetic induction for heat generation, the current induced into the component for heat generation being confined to the weld joint and the locally confined area adjacent to the weld joint such that a temperature required for the stress-relieving thermal treatment is produced only in the weld joint and locally confined area adjacent to the weld joint, peripherally along the weld joint, away from the integral blades.
  • 2. A method in accordance with claim 1, wherein the weld joint is inspected and subjected to mechanical rework, if necessary.
  • 3. A method for manufacturing blisk rotors designed in blisk technology and having a plurality of blisks joined together to form a one-piece assembly, comprising: joining an entire stage of a blisk having integral blades to a rotor sub-assembly by electron-beam welding along a peripheral joint away from the integral blades; andsubsequently to the electron-beam welding and not before or during the electron-beam welding, subjecting only a weld joint and a locally confined area adjacent to the weld joint which has been affected by a heat of the weld to local stress-relieving thermal treatment by a current induced into the component by electro-magnetic induction for heat generation, the current induced into the component for heat generation being confined to the weld joint and the locally confined area adjacent to the weld joint such that a temperature required for the stress-relieving thermal treatment is produced only in the weld joint and locally confined area adjacent to the weld joint, peripherally along the weld joint, away from the integral blades.
  • 4. A method for repairing a compressor rotor designed in blisk technology and having a plurality of blisks joined together to form a one-piece assembly, comprising: severing from the rotor and removing an entire damaged stage of a blisk having integral blades, the severing being performed away from the integral blades;replacing the entire damaged stage of the blisk with an undamaged blisk stage;joining the undamaged blisk stage to the rotor by electron-beam welding; andonly after the electron-beam welding, subjecting only a weld joint and a locally confined area adjacent to the weld joint which has been affected by a heat of the weld to local stress-relieving thermal treatment by a current induced into the component by electro-magnetic induction for heat generation, the current induced into the component for heat generation being confined to the weld joint and the locally confined area adjacent to the weld joint such that a temperature required for the stress-relieving thermal treatment is produced only in the weld joint and locally confined area adjacent to the weld joint, peripherally along the weld joint, away from the integral blades.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
10 2006 033 299 Jul 2006 DE national
US Referenced Citations (25)
Number Name Date Kind
2317092 Allen Apr 1943 A
2440933 Cunningham, Jr. May 1948 A
2637521 Constantine et al. May 1953 A
3067490 Luthy et al. Dec 1962 A
3626140 Peyrot Dec 1971 A
3876335 Forcinal et al. Apr 1975 A
3967919 Coulon et al. Jul 1976 A
4017212 Gordienne et al. Apr 1977 A
4063062 Kuhnen Dec 1977 A
4086690 Bernasconi May 1978 A
4743165 Ulrich May 1988 A
5106010 Stueber et al. Apr 1992 A
5414929 Floser et al. May 1995 A
5466910 Ebeling et al. Nov 1995 A
6049979 Nolan et al. Apr 2000 A
6145194 Munson et al. Nov 2000 A
6152697 Konishi et al. Nov 2000 A
6324831 Izadi et al. Dec 2001 B1
6375421 Lammas et al. Apr 2002 B1
6568077 Hellemann et al. May 2003 B1
7370787 Bacon et al. May 2008 B2
7416393 Richter Aug 2008 B2
7473475 Matheny et al. Jan 2009 B1
20050127138 Bacon et al. Jun 2005 A1
20050186080 Chivers et al. Aug 2005 A1
Foreign Referenced Citations (4)
Number Date Country
10 2004 002 965 Aug 2005 DE
102004002965 Aug 2005 DE
1153699 Nov 2001 EP
2079659 Jan 1982 GB
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry
European Search Report dated Jun. 14, 2010 from counterpart European patent application.
Related Publications (1)
Number Date Country
20080040924 A1 Feb 2008 US