1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to the manufacture of metal turbomachine blading, more particularly of components having internal cavities and holes or orifices allowing these cavities to communicate with the outside of the blading.
2. Description of the Related Art
Such blading is generally manufactured by casting individual blading components each constituting a blading sector, using a lost wax casting technique that is well known per se. This technique goes through a stage of producing a model in wax or some other equivalent material which comprises an internal component that forms a casting core and features the cavities of the blading. In order to form the model, use is made of an injection mold for the wax in which the core is placed and into which the wax is injected. The wax model is then dipped several times into casting slip consisting of a suspension of ceramic particles in order to produce a shell mold. The wax is eliminated and the shell mold is baked. The blading is obtained by casting molten metal which then occupies the voids between the interior wall of the shell mold and the core.
In a turbomachine low-pressure guide vanes stage, some of the blades or vanes have an internal cavity and a series of holes causing this cavity to communicate with the outside of the blade. This cavity and this series of holes allow temperature detection probes, known as EGT (exhaust gas temperature) probes, to be fitted. By way of example, for low-pressure guide vanes of a turbomachine of the type found in the prior art, comprising 18 blading segments or sectors, one blade in each sector comprising 8 blades is provided with an internal cavity and with a series of holes.
The temperature probes in this particular region of the turbomachine are used to monitor correct operation and engine wear.
Using the current technique, the cavity in this blading that is to accept a temperature probe is produced by fitting cores equipped with upper and lower tenons which, when the metal is cast, form orifices in the exterior platform and in the interior platform of the component; the orifice in the exterior platform is intended to accept or be in communication with the temperature probe, while the orifice in the interior platform serves only to hold the core in place while the metal is being cast and therefore requires the fitting of a blanking plate, which is brazed on during the finishing operations on the blading sector.
The holes providing communication between the cavity of the airfoil of the blade that accepts the probe and the outside of the blading are produced by drilling/machining (notably by spark erosion or electrical discharge machining (EDM)) after the component has been cast.
This approach therefore entails an additional operation which, furthermore, generates a scorched region around the hole where the mechanical properties are inadequate.
It is an objective of the present invention to provide a method for manufacturing metal blading components that avoids these disadvantages.
To this end, the invention proposes a method of manufacturing a metal blading sector for the low-pressure guide vanes of a turbomachine of which at least one blade comprises an internal cavity intended to accept or communicate with a gas detection probe and at least one hole formed in the wall constituting a passage for gas from the low-pressure zone of the turbomachine toward said cavity and the probe through the fitting, into a casting mold, of a core corresponding to said cavity and the casting of a molten metal in the cavity of said casting mold. This method is characterized in that said core comprises, for each hole for communication with said cavity, a protrusion penetrating the internal surface of the mold and constituting the only element holding the core in position in the casting mold.
According to the invention this detection probe preferably constitutes a temperature detection probe, more specifically a temperature detection probe of the EGT probe type.
According to another preferred aspect of the invention, the method is more particularly carried out using a lost wax casting technique, by producing a shell mold in which the core is fitted, the shell mold constituting the casting mold.
According to yet another preferred feature of the invention, the base of the protrusions of the casting mold is “radiused” or rounded, producing a fillet at the base of the casting hole, thus making it possible to avoid the formation of cracks or other micro-fissures that cannot be detected during manufacturing process controls, at the time of casting.
According to yet another preferred aspect of the invention, the casting core comprises several protrusions (for example between 3 and 8 protrusions, preferably 5) which constitute the only elements holding the core in position in the casting mold, whereas an orifice intended for introducing a probe into the cavity in at least one blade of the blading component is obtained by drilling said component in the prolongation of the cavity.
In this way, a blading component is obtained that has a blade with a cavity and several holes (for example between 3 and 8 holes, preferably 5).
According to a particularly advantageous embodiment of this last preferred aspect of the invention, it is possible to produce just one model of blading components/blading sectors for the entire guide vane assembly, whereas only those blading sectors that are intended to accept a probe are pierced in the prolongation of the cavity. That makes it possible to realize significant savings from the production process and stock control standpoints.
The novel method according to the invention has the following advantages over the method of the prior art:
Further details and features of the invention will become apparent from reading the description of two embodiments of blading sectors for turbomachine low-pressure guide vane assemblies, which have been given by way of nonlimiting examples, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
a and 2b schematically depict two stages in the manufacture of a blading sector using the present-day technique;
a and 4b schematically depict the manufacture of a blading sector according to the invention;
The figures illustrate the manufacture of a blading sector 1 for a turbomachine low-pressure guide vane assembly as depicted in
As illustrated in
The upper orifice 5 allows the fitting of an EGT probe that measures temperature for the cockpit alarm, whereas the lower orifice 6 has to be resealed by brazing a plate 8′ over it.
The core 2 according to the present-day technique requires, on account of its length, a lower exit to hold it in the shell mold. This has, as disadvantages, the fact that the orifice 6 thus generated has to be replugged and that the core 2 comprises a delicate protrusion 2′, depicted in
It is an object of the invention therefore to limit the breakage of cores at the protrusions, to cease having to replug the orifice 6 and to eliminate the operation of piercing the holes 9 after the component has been cast.
As
The holes 19 that cause the cavity 13 to communicate with the outside of the blade 4—known as the EGT (Exhaust Gas Temperature) holes—are therefore obtained by casting.
This then eliminates the delicate part of the core formed by the protrusion emerging in the region of the lower platform, and at the same time eliminates the need for the orifice thus generated to be replugged and avoids the operation of piercing the EGT holes using electrical discharge machining. The appearance of heat-affected zones (scorched zones) around the holes and that may lead to impaired mechanical behavior are avoided. In addition, the presence of holes along the airfoil makes it possible for the core to be eliminated more simply, by chemical attack, from the metal component in the absence of an exit in the region of the lower platform.
The invention therefore involves using a core 20 which is shorter than the core 2 of the prior art and comprises protrusions or “spikes” 22 by means of which it is held in position. These are, for example, made of ceramic, but the spikes could also be formed of quartz tubes incorporated into the core when it is injection molded.
As illustrated more particularly by
The shape of the holes 19 thus obtained by casting metal in the mold has a corresponding fillet/rounded portion 19′, as illustrated in
According to an alternative form of the invention (which has not been depicted in the figures), the core 20 may also be produced without an exit in the upper platform 17; in such an instance, the core is held in position in the mold only by the protrusions 22 and no upper orifice 15 is formed.
This alternative form means that a single model of guide vane blading sectors can be manufactured; thus, only those items of this single sector that are intended to accept a probe are modified, by piercing an orifice 5′ in the upper platform 17, to communicate with the cavity 13.
This then realizes additional savings from the production process and stock control standpoints.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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08 54845 | Jul 2008 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR2009/051415 | 7/16/2009 | WO | 00 | 1/7/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2010/007322 | 1/21/2010 | WO | A |
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