This invention relates generally to turbine engines, more particularly to methods and apparatus to facilitate generating power from a turbine engine.
A conventional gas turbine engine generally includes a compressor and turbine arranged on a rotating shaft(s), and a combustion section between the compressor and turbine. The combustion section burns a mixture of compressed air and liquid and/or gaseous fuel to generate a high-energy combustion gas stream that drives the rotating turbine. The turbine rotationally drives the compressor and provides output power. Industrial gas turbines are often used to provide output power to drive an electrical generator or motor. Other types of gas turbines may be used as aircraft engines, on-site and supplemental power generators, and for other applications.
In an effort to improve the efficiency of gas turbine engines, pulse detonation engines (PDE) have been purposed. In a generalized PDE, fuel and oxidizer (e.g., oxygen-containing gas such as air) are admitted to an elongated combustion chamber at an upstream inlet end. An igniter is utilized to detonate this charge (either directly or through a deflagration-to-detonation transition (DDT)). A detonation wave propagates toward the outlet at supersonic speed causing substantial combustion of the fuel/air mixture before the mixture can be substantially driven from the outlet. The result of the combustion is to rapidly elevate pressure within the chamber before substantial gas can escape inertially through the outlet. The effect of this inertial confinement is to produce near constant volume combustion.
The PDE can be positioned as an augmentor or as the main combustor or both. Only recently has pulse detonation been purposed for use in the main combustor. One main challenge in developing pulse detonation engines having a pulse detonation combustor (PDC) is understanding and overcoming the effects of high-pressure pulses (decaying blast waves) on turbine performance and life of the engine. Furthermore, such pulse detonation engines generally do not have turbine designs that are optimized to produce steady and spatially uniform flow fields.
Typically, a PDC cycles through a variety of processes such as, for example, a fill process, a high pressure detonation wave, a supersonic blowdown, a subsonic blowdown, and a purge process. At least one challenge in optimizing pulse detonation engines is to design the geometry of the turbine blades to facilitate extracting the maximum amount of power from each PDC cycle. Consequently, coupling the operation of each turbine blade to a respective PDC process may be critical to reducing flow losses, increasing engine efficiency, and to increasing power.
In one aspect, a turbine disk assembly is provided. The assembly includes cylindrical member coupled to a rotatable shaft. The assembly further includes a plurality of turbine blades that extend radially outward from said cylindrical member. The turbine blades include at least two different geometrical shapes, a first of the geometrical shapes is configured to facilitate extracting power from a first pulsed detonation combustor product stream. A second of said geometrical shapes is configured to facilitate extracting power from the product stream that follows and is different from the first pulsed detonation combustor product stream.
In another aspect, a method for increasing power for a gas turbine engine is provided. The method includes providing a cylindrical member axially coupled to a turbine engine drive shaft, and adjacently extending a plurality of turbine blades from the member. Each turbine blade includes at least two different geometrical shapes, a first of the geometrical shapes is configured to facilitate extracting power from a first pulsed detonation combustor product stream and a second of the geometrical shapes is configured to facilitate extracting power from the product stream and is different from the first pulsed detonation combustor product stream.
In a further aspect, a turbine engine is provided. This includes a pulse detonation combustor for cyclically expelling a respective detonation product stream including at least one pulse detonation chamber and a plurality of operation processes. The engine also includes at least one turbine disk assembly including at least one stage and in flow communication with the at least one pulse detonation combustor. The disk assembly is configured to extract power from each of the respective detonation combustor product streams within each of the plurality of operation processes.
In operation, air flows through fan 14, booster 16, and high pressure compressor 18, being pressurized by each component in succession. The highly compressed air is delivered to PDC 20. Airflow from PDC 20 drives turbines 22 and/or 24 before exiting gas turbine engine 10. A portion of the air flowing through either of fan 14, booster 16, and high-pressure compressor 18 can be diverted to use as cooling air for hotter portions of the engine or associated support structures such as an airframe. A portion of the air passing through fan 14 particularly may be diverted around the other engine components and mixed with the downstream exhaust stream to enhance thrust and reduce noise.
As used herein, the term “pulse detonation combustor” (“PDC”) is understood to mean any combustion device or system wherein a series of repeating detonations or quasi-detonations within the device generate a pressure rise and subsequent acceleration of combustion products as compared to pre-burned reactants. The term “quasi-detonation” is understood to mean any combustion process that produces a pressure rise and velocity increase that are higher than the pressure rise and velocity produced by a deflagration wave. Typical embodiments of PDC include a means of igniting a fuel/oxidizer mixture, for example a fuel/air mixture, and a confining chamber, in which pressure wave fronts initiated by the ignition process coalesce to produce a detonation wave. Each detonation or quasi-detonation is initiated either by an external ignition, such as a spark discharge or a laser pulse, and/or by a gas dynamic processes, such as shock focusing, auto-ignition or through detonation via cross-firing. The geometry of the detonation chamber is such that the pressure rise of the detonation wave expels combustion products from the PDC exhaust to produce a thrust force, or to generate work by imparting momentum to a moving component of the engine. As known to those skilled in the art, pulse detonation may be accomplished in a number of types of detonation chambers, including detonation tubes, shock tubes, resonating detonation cavities and annular detonation chambers. As used herein, the term “tube” includes pipes having circular or non-circular cross-sections with constant or non-constant cross sectional area. Exemplary tubes include cylindrical tubes, as well as tubes having polygonal cross-sections, for example hexagonal tubes.
In the exemplary embodiment, PDC 20 includes a plurality of pulse detonation chambers 30 extending therethrough. Each chamber 30 is configured to expel a respective pressure-rise combustion (or “detonation”) product stream during a respective pulse detonation cycle downstream towards turbine 22.
In the exemplary embodiment, turbine 22 includes at least, but not limited to, a single disk assembly or stage 40 positioned in coaxial relation (with respect to longitudinal centerline axis 12 shown in
In the exemplary embodiment, member 42 includes a plurality of turbine vanes or blades 44 couple circumferentially to and extending radially from member 42 in a distinct plane. In alternative embodiments, turbine blades 44 are coupled circumferentially to and extend radially from member 42 in staggered planes. In the exemplary embodiment, turbine blades 44 extend substantially perpendicular with respect to axis 12 and a member perimeter 46. In alternative embodiments, turbine blades 44 may extend at any angle with respect to axis that allows turbine blades 44 to function as described herein or be configured with varying angle in the radial direction.
In the exemplary embodiment, each turbine blade 44 includes at least two different geometrical shapes each shaped to extract power from a different pulse detonation combustor product stream during PDC operation cycles. In another embodiment, each turbine blade 44 includes a plurality of different geometrical shapes each shaped to extract power from a different pulse detonation combustor product stream during PDC operation cycles. PDC operation cycles include, for example and without limitation, a fill process, a high pressure detonation wave, a supersonic blowdown, a subsonic blowdown, and a purge process.
In one embodiment, blades 44 are positioned such that adjacent blades 44 have different geometrical shapes. Specifically, and in the exemplary embodiment, member 42 includes turbine blades 44 that have at least two distinct geometrical shapes, namely a detonation geometrical shape 50 configured to extract power from the detonation portion of the PDC cycle and a purge geometrical shape 52 configured to extract power from the purge portion of the PDC cycle. The time unsteady nature of the PDC cycle can be sub-divided into more than two portions and the geometric shape of each turbine blade 44 can be optimized to ideally extract the most power from the portion of the cycle that it is subjected to. In alternative embodiments, each adjacent blade 44 has the same geometrical shape. In the exemplary embodiment, turbine blades 44 having different geometrical shapes are in the same plane. In alternative embodiments, turbine blades 44 having different geometrical shapes are in different planes.
In the exemplary embodiment, member 42 also includes at least one transition blade 54 coupled circumferentially about member 42 and positioned between each turbine blades 44. Specifically, each transition blade 54 is positioned between at least two turbine blades each having a different geometrical shape. Each transition blade 54 includes a transition geometrical shape shaped to reduce non-uniform flow fields between each of said at least two different geometrical shapes. In the exemplary embodiment, blade 54 is shaped to reduce the non-uniform flow fields between detonation geometrical shape 50 and purge geometrical shape 52. The following transition blade 54 is shaped to reduce the non-uniform flow fields between said purge geometrical shape 52 and the following detonation geometrical shape 50. Blades 54 can be shaped to a particular application depending on which PDC operation process transition is selected. In the exemplary embodiment, turbine blades 44 and transition blades 54 is in the same plane. In alternative embodiments, turbine blades 44 and transition blades 54 are in different planes.
In the exemplary embodiment, turbine 122 includes a disk assembly 140 positioned in coaxial relation (with respect to longitudinal centerline axis 12 shown in
In the exemplary embodiment, a plurality of turbine blades 44 (shown in
In another embodiment, each member 144, 146, and 148 includes a plurality of turbine blades 44 coupled circumferentially to and extending radially from each member 144, 146, and 148 in a distinct plane. In alternative embodiments, turbine blades 44 are coupled circumferentially to and extend radially from each member 144, 146, and 148 in staggered planes. In alternative embodiments, turbine blades 44 may extend at any angle with respect to axis that allows turbine blades 44 to function as described herein or be configured with varying angle in the radial direction.
In the exemplary embodiment, each member 144, 146, and 148 includes turbine blades 44 that include at least two different geometrical shapes each shaped to extract power from a different pulse detonation combustor product stream during PDC operation cycles wherein each of the at least two different geometrical shapes is different from an adjacent member 142. In one embodiment, blades 44 are positioned on each member 144, 146, and 148 such that adjacent blades 44 have different geometrical shapes. Specifically, and in the exemplary embodiment, member 144 includes turbine blades 44 that have a supersonic geometrical shape and a subsonic geometrical shape, member 146 includes turbine blades 44 that have a fill geometrical shape and a subsonic blowdown geometrical shape. In the exemplary embodiment, turbine blades 44 having different geometrical shapes are in the same plane. In alternative embodiments, turbine blades 44 having different geometrical shapes are in different planes.
In one embodiment, members 144, 146, and 148 also includes at least one transition blade 54 (shown in
Exemplary embodiments of disk assemblies with turbine blades that have at least two different geometrical shapes and transition blades are described above in detail. The disk assemblies are not limited to the specific embodiments described herein, but rather, components of the disk assemblies may be utilized independently and separately from other components described herein. Each disk assembly component can also be used in combination with other turbine components.
While the invention has been described in terms of various specific embodiments, those skilled in the art will recognize that the invention can be practiced with modification within the spirit and scope of the claims.
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