This invention relates to a tool for forming a rotor blade including an airfoil portion, and more particularly to a method for designing a tool and a tool path for forming a rotor blade including an airfoil portion.
Gas turbine engines include several sections. The engine may include a fan, and does include a compressor and turbine. The fan, compressor, and turbine sections all include a rotor carrying blades. Recently, the fan and compressor rotor and blades may be an integrally bladed rotor (“IBR”). An IBR is a disk-shaped rotor comprising a center hub portion, and a plurality of integral blades extending radially outwards from the hub. Each blade can have complex geometric dimensional requirements, such as the portion of a blade forming an airfoil. The rotor and airfoils are typically machined from a pre-form or block of material.
One method of forming an airfoil from the pre-form is to use a cup tool with an inner machining surface that forms a suction side of an airfoil blade and an outer machining surface that forms a pressure side of an airfoil blade, as described in U.S. Utility application Ser. No. 10/217,423. However, such a cup tool must be specifically created for a desired IBR to ensure that each rotor blade of the IBR is formed properly and that adjacent rotor blades are not undesirably gouged by the tool. Also, it is difficult to obtain an appropriate tool path that such a cup tool may follow to form an airfoil portion on each rotor blade of an IBR.
There is a need for a method for designing a tool and a tool path for forming a rotor blade including an airfoil portion.
A method of designing a tool for forming a rotor blade, including an airfoil, includes generating a computer model of a rotor blade including the airfoil shape, and determining a curvature and a radius of curvature at sections of the rotor blade. An inner diameter and an outer diameter of a circumferential forming portion of a tool operable to form the rotor blade, including the airfoil portion, may then be calculated. The forming portion of the tool is formed on both an inner peripheral surface and an outer peripheral surface of a cylindrical body portion of the tool. An outer radius of the forming portion should be less than a minimum curvature radius of an airfoil portion corresponding to a pressure side. An inner radius of the forming portion should be greater than a maximum curvature radius of an airfoil portion corresponding to a suction side.
A method of designing a tool path for forming a rotor blade including an airfoil portion includes generating a computer model of a cylindrical tool operable to form a rotor blade including an airfoil portion, and a computer model of a rotor having a plurality of the rotor blades. The computer model of the rotor and the computer model of the tool are used to generate a first tool motion corresponding to an airfoil suction portion and a second tool motion corresponding to an airfoil pressure portion.
These and other features of the present invention can be best understood from the following specification and drawings, the following of which is a brief description.
a illustrates how a tool forms an airfoil suction portion.
b illustrates how the tool of
a illustrates the tool of
b illustrates a cross section of the tool of
a illustrates a relationship between a cross section of the tool of
b illustrates a relationship between another cross section of the tool of
a illustrates three rotor blades 24a, 24b, and 24c and a tool 36 having a tool inner side 38a and a tool outer side 38b. The tool inner side 38a has an inner diameter dinner and an inner radius rinner. The tool 36 and the rotor blade 24b are positioned so that the tool inner side 38a contacts a first side of the rotor blade 24b. The tool 36 rotates so that the tool inner side 38a contacts the rotor blade 24b to remove excess portions of the rotor blade 24b to form a suction side 26b of the rotor blade 24b. The rotor blade 24b may be tilted to facilitate contact between the tool inner side 38a with the entire suction side 26b of the rotor blade 24b.
As shown in
The tool 36 could then be used to form rotor blade 24a or 24c into an airfoil, and could continue until every rotor blade 24 of an IBR was formed into an airfoil. While
a illustrates the tool 36. The tool 36 has a cylindrical body 40 and a circumferential forming portion 38 formed on both an inner peripheral surface 40a of the cylindrical body 40 and an outer peripheral surface 40b of the cylindrical body 40. As mentioned above, the forming portion has an inner side 38a and an outer side 38b. In one example the forming portion 38 performs a grinding function when contacting a rotor blade or pre-form.
A second step 84 is to form each rotor blade into an airfoil within a first tolerance. As shown in
As shown in
A third step 86 in the example IBR manufacturing process is to further form each rotor blade into an airfoil shape within a second tolerance that is narrower than the first tolerance. In this step a surface of each rotor blade is ground to have a smoother surface. If desired, a cylindrical tool with a forming portion having a finer grit size than the forming portion 38 used in the second step may be used. However, it is understood that the same forming portion 38 could also be used for the second and third steps.
A fourth step 88 is to generate a leading edge 30 and a trailing edge 32 for each rotor blade as shown in
The dimensions of the tool 36 will vary depending on the dimensions of a desired IBR and the dimensions of a desired rotor blade on the IBR. It is therefore necessary to design the tool 36 to accommodate the dimensions of a desired IBR.
A second step 94 is to perform a surface fit along all points for both a pressure and a suction side of the desired rotor blade. In one example, a non-uniform rational B-spline (“NURBS”) technique is used for the step 94. A computer model of the desired rotor blade is then generated in a third step 96. Step 96 also includes determining a curvature and a radius of curvature at each section of the desired rotor blade, for both a pressure and a suction side of the desired rotor blade. In one example, the curvature and radius of curvature are determined using software, such as MATLAB.
A fourth step 98 of designing the tool 36 involves calculating an inner and an outer diameter of the tool 36. An outer diameter of the tool 36 may be determined using equation #1 as shown below:
where douter is an outer diameter of the tool 36;
An inner diameter of the tool 36 may be determined using equation #2 as shown below:
where h1 is a distance between a center of the tool 36 and a point of contact between the tool 36 and the IBR 20 as shown in
As shown in
from equation #1 is the equivalent of router, and the value of
from equation #2 is the equivalent of rinner. Once a value for dinner and douter have been calculated, a check should be performed to verify that the values fulfill the conditions set forth in equation #3, equation #4, and equation #5 as shown below:
Step 98 also includes verifying that the tool 36 will not undesirably gouge an adjacent rotor blade during operation. This includes verifying that the tool outer radius router is less than ρmin, which is the minimum curvature radius of the pressure side 28 of a rotor blade 24. This also includes verifying that the tool inner radius rinner is greater than ρmax, which is the maximum curvature radius of the suction side 26 of a rotor blade 24. If both of these conditions are satisfied, then undesirable gouging can be avoided, and a design of the tool 36 may be completed.
Once the dimensions of the tool 36 have been designed, it is useful to generate a tool path that the tool may follow to form a rotor blade into an airfoil. Data for the tool path may be transmitted to a computer numerical control (“CNC”) machine which would then be able to operate the tool 36 to form a rotor blade or a plurality of rotor blades into an airfoil shape.
In addition to illustrating the example method 90 of designing the tool 36,
In a second step 104, a computer model of the IBR 20 is generated. In one example, CAD software is used to generate the computer model of the IBR 20. Input parameters of the computer model of the IBR 20 include coordinate data for a desired rotor blade, a quantity of desired rotor blades, a diameter of an IBR hub 22, an IBR thickness b, and a blending curve between the desired rotor blade and the IBR hub 22.
The computer model of the tool 36 and the computer model of the IBR 20 are then used to determine a tool path. In a step 106, the computer model of the tool 36 is moved to simulate contact between an active edge of the tool 36 and a first side of a rotor blade on the IBR.
At this point, a check 108 is performed to verify that the computer model of the tool 36 is not undesirably contacting an adjacent rotor blade. If there is undesirable contact, a diameter of the tool 36 must be modified, and one would return to step 94. However if there is no undesirable contact, then one would proceed to a distance check 110 between an active edge of the computer model of the tool 36 and a blade of the computer model of the IBR. If the distance is greater or equal to a threshold, then one would return to step 106. However if the distance is less than the threshold, then one would proceed to a step 112.
In a step 112, a set of coordinates for an active edge of the tool and a surface of the IBR are recorded in memory. In a step 114, a check is performed to determine if an entire side of the rotor blade has been completed. If the entire side is not complete, then an angle of the rotor surface is changed in a step 116, and steps 106-114 are repeated until an entire side of the rotor blade is complete. Then, in step 118 a check is performed to determine if both sides of the rotor blade are complete. If both sides are not complete, the tool is moved to simulate contact with a second side of the rotor blade in a step 120. However, it is understood that instead of moving the tool in step 120, the IBR could be moved. Steps 106-118 are then repeated until the tool has simulated contact with the entire second side of the desired rotor blade of the computer model of the IBR 20.
The tool coordinates could be used to generate a cutter location (“CL”) data file, which could then be further processed in step 122. In one example, step 122 comprises generating a data file for a CNC machine from the CL data file.
In one example, the threshold of step 110 is a first threshold, and once steps 106-120 have been performed and coordinate data is available for the tool simulating contact with the entire rotor blade, the steps 106-120 are performed again using a second threshold that is less than the first threshold. In this example, the first threshold corresponds to forming a rotor blade within a first tolerance, and the second threshold corresponds to forming the rotor blade within a second tolerance as described in the example IBR manufacturing process of
Once tool paths are determined for forming a rotor blade into an airfoil within a first threshold and a second threshold, a CNC machine may be instructed to repeat the tool paths for each blade of an IBR as described in
Although a preferred embodiment of this invention has been disclosed, a worker of ordinary skill in this art would recognize that certain modifications would come within the scope of this invention. For that reason, the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this invention.
This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/782,666, which was filed Jul. 25, 2007.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11782666 | Jul 2007 | US |
Child | 12603629 | US |