1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to bearing support assemblies, and more particularly to bearing support assemblies with radial spring and damping elements.
2. Description of Related Art
A variety of bearings are known for use in supporting rotating components. For example, in gas turbine engines, the spools are supported by bearings for rotation of rotor blades in the compressor and turbine. Over the wide range of operational speed of a gas turbine engine, or other systems with wide ranges of operational speed, it can be beneficial to include mechanical equivalent spring stiffness to the bearing supports to optimize the rotor critical speed system and also to include damping to the spring to reduce rotor radial excursion as it passes through these critical speeds. For example, during startup of a gas turbine engine, the shaft and bearings may pass through two or more critical rotor natural frequencies (called critical speeds). If one or more of these critical speeds presents in the operational speed range, it could damage the engine. Radial springs can be provided to tune these interfered critical speeds outside of the operational speed range. The damper element is added to the spring to soften and/or dampen the effects of resonance to allow the engine to pass through these critical frequencies without damage.
An embodiment includes a squirrel cage defining a longitudinal axis and having a cylindrical portion defining a bearing seat. The squirrel cage is configured and adapted to provide a first level of radial support stiffness between a housing and a bearing seated in the bearing seat. A damper sleeve is operatively coupled to the cylindrical portion of the squirrel cage, e.g., through a fluid film, to dampen relative radial motion between the damper sleeve and the squirrel cage, and hence that of the rotor. A radial spring component is operatively connected to a side of the damper sleeve radially opposite the cylindrical portion of the squirrel cage to provide a second level of radial support stiffness, in which the squirrel cage and the radial spring component form a spring system in parallel whose equivalent radial stiffness is the sum of the two individual stiffnesses.
To prevent damper fluid leakage, seals can be provided at the two ends of the squeeze film damper land. The squirrel cage can be mounted to a housing with the damper sleeve and radial spring component radially between the housing and the cylindrical portion of the squirrel cage. For example, the squirrel cage can be radially inside the damper sleeve, and the radial spring component can be radially outside the damper sleeve. The radial spring component can be positioned radially between the damper sleeve and the housing to radially bias the damper sleeve apart from the housing to provide the second level of radial support stiffness.
In certain embodiments, the radial spring component is an annular wave spring with a plurality of radially outer lands for pressing outward, e.g., against the housing, and a plurality of radially inner lands for pressing inward, e.g., against the damper sleeve. The inner lands alternate circumferentially with the outer lands. It is contemplated that the squirrel cage can have a spring constant lower than that of the radial spring component for applying the first level of radial stiffness support before the second level of radial stiffness support. The wave spring can be a complete wave ring, a split wave ring, a circumferentially segmented wave ring, or any other suitable configuration.
In accordance with certain embodiments, an axially spaced apart pair of seal rings seal a damper fluid chamber defined between the squirrel cage and the damper sleeve. The damper sleeve can include a recessed channel that forms part of the damper fluid chamber, to provide damper fluid storage. To prevent the squirrel cage and damper sleeve from bottoming out or from metal to metal contact, in which the oil film thickness is zero, the squirrel cage outer land, e.g., the cylindrical portion of the squirrel cage, includes two bumpers or steps at two respective ends thereof on the outside of the seal rings. The height of the bumpers is equal to the minimum fluid film radial clearance.
These and other features of the systems and methods of the subject disclosure will become more readily apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments taken in conjunction with the drawings.
So that those skilled in the art to which the subject disclosure appertains will readily understand how to make and use the devices and methods of the subject disclosure without undue experimentation, preferred embodiments thereof will be described in detail herein below with reference to certain figures, wherein:
Reference will now be made to the drawings wherein like reference numerals identify similar structural features or aspects of the subject disclosure. For purposes of explanation and illustration, and not limitation, a partial view of an exemplary embodiment of a bearing support assembly in accordance with the disclosure is shown in
Bearing support assembly 100 includes a housing 102 and a squirrel cage 104 mounted to housing 102. As shown in
Referring now to
Squirrel cage 104 is mounted to housing 102, e.g., by bolts 126, with damper sleeve 116 and a radial spring component, namely wave spring 124, radially between housing 102 and cylindrical portion 106 of squirrel cage 104. Wave spring 124 is operatively connected the side of damper sleeve 116 radially opposite cylindrical portion 106 of squirrel cage 104 to provide a second level of radial support stiffness. In the exemplary embodiment shown, squirrel cage 104 is radially inside damper sleeve 116, and wave spring 124 is radially outside damper sleeve 116. With wave spring 124 positioned radially between damper sleeve 116 and housing 102, wave spring 124 can radially bias damper sleeve 116 apart from housing 102 to provide the second level of radial support stiffness beyond the first level of radial support stiffness provided by squirrel cage 104.
Referring now to
Squirrel cage 104 has a spring constant lower than that of wave spring 124 for applying the first level of radial stiffness support before the second level of radial stiffness support. This provides nonlinear stiffness that can be tailored to specific applications to provide adequate support under changing conditions. For example, in an embodiment where bearing support assembly 100 is used to support a rotor bearing in a gas turbine engine, squirrel cage 104 provides a first level of bearing support stiffness that is relatively soft for accommodating critical speed conditions where vibrations occur as the rotor accelerates and decelerates. The second level of stiffness is provided by wave spring 124 when squirrel cage 104 bottoms out against damper sleeve 116, for example during significant radial excursions of the rotor shaft such as during a warm start up where uneven heating bows the rotor shaft together with housing deflections. The second level of stiffness provides some cushioning to prevent the rotor from rubbing until equilibrium conditions prevail and the squirrel cage can resume providing the first level of stiffness. In the second level of bearing support stiffness the squirrel cage spring and wave spring 124 form a parallel spring system in which the overall bearing support stiffness is the sum of the two individual spring stiffnesses. This stiffness is provided under certain adverse conditions of high rotor excursions. Without the contribution of wave spring 124, the squirrel cage would be pressed against the damper sleeve. Having the spring action of squirrel cage 104 and wave spring 124 decoupled/disengaged allows the squirrel cage to provide relatively soft support for normal operation, so the desirable rotor dynamic characteristics are not perturbed during normal operation.
The single and parallel aspects of the stiffness levels provided by squirrel cage 104 and wave spring 124 are illustrated schematically in
While shown and described in the exemplary context of rotary shafts for gas turbine engines, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that the systems and methods disclosed herein can be used in any other suitable application without departing from the scope of this disclosure. Those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that while described and shown in the exemplary context of wave spring 124 being a full or complete ring, the ring can be split or incomplete, i.e. with an axial slot, and can even be separated into multiple circumferential ring segments as needed for specific applications.
The methods and systems of the present disclosure, as described above and shown in the drawings, provide for bearing support with superior properties including nonlinear support stiffness for providing appropriate levels of stiffness as needed. While the apparatus and methods of the subject disclosure have been shown and described with reference to preferred embodiments, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that changes and/or modifications may be made thereto without departing from the scope of the subject disclosure.
This application claims the benefit of and priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/837,847 filed Jun. 21, 2013, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2014/040186 | 5/30/2014 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61837847 | Jun 2013 | US |