1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a gas turbine engine, and specifically to a process for determining an optimum rub of the blades in the compressor or turbine.
2. Description of the Related Art including information disclosed under 37 CFR 1.97 and 1.98
In gas turbine engines, the gap between the rotating blades in both the turbine and the compressor is a critical design parameter. It is desirable for an efficiency standpoint to reduce the gap between the rotating blade and the adjacent static part in order to reduce leakage of the gas stream across this gap. The leakage not only reduces efficiency of the compressor or the turbine, but also reduces the life of the blade tips and shroud members because of high temperatures acting on the parts.
Some gas turbine engine designers will set the gap such that the blades will not rub at all. Some designers provide a negative gap in order to produce rub during the initial engine break-in in order to allow for the normal wear from the rub to produce a smooth and close to zero gap as possible. However, this rub is a complicated process, and several factors can effect how the rub should be performed to produce the best results. Certain materials used by the blade tips and the shroud members that will rub can have undesirable results if the rub produces too much heat. Galling can occur. Many factors must be evaluated in the operation of the gas turbine engine, such as thermal growths, rotational imbalances, centrifugal forces due to rotations, tolerances in the machining, gravitation effects on the casing, and even the uneven heating and cooling of parts of the engine. All these factors can have an effect on the rub produced under engine break-in procedures.
With conventional metals against metals, very high temperatures can be generated quickly and can cause severe damage to the metal components. When metal galling occurs, the damage can be even more extensive. Galling occurs when metals with dissimilar hardness (the blade tip and the shroud metal) come in contact at high speeds and pressures. Galling begins at metal defects such as notches or scratches and eventually develops into hard protrusions on the metal surface. These protrusions gouge the metal material. Factors that effect galling are relative speed between metals in contact, pressure between the metals, and lubrication between the metal contact surfaces.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide an improved process for optimizing a blade tip clearance in a gas turbine engine.
The present invention describes a process for optimizing the blade tip clearance for a rub tolerate design in a gas turbine engine, and involves four major steps. In the first step, the process will first evaluate six candidate materials for their galling capability and heat generation on a rub rig. The second step is to analyze the engine transient tip clearance including restart after deceleration and resulting steady state clearance for three of the materials chosen from the six in the first step. The third step is to verify the optimum materials, cooling and heat shielding for the tip clearance and structures. The fourth step is to analyze and select the engine break-in procedure for optimum tip clearance between turbine and compressor. During these four steps, the material selection for the tip, the static part, and the break-in procedure is reiterated to determine is another material will produce more desirable results. Throughout the procedure, reiteration of materials is done and the analysis is done again with the new material until a desired result for rub is obtained. Then, a finite element method is used for both moving and static parts to determine if stresses will produce cracks. When all this is done, the process will perform a 3D analysis for out-of-roundness, centerline bending, and rotor sag, and reiterate the process to produce a better result, before the actual engine test with tip clearance measurements is performed.
The present invention is a process to determine an optimum blade tip clearance in which the blades rub against the shroud member to produce a minimum gap. The process is represented by the flow chart shown in
Step 12 is to analyze the engine transient tip clearance including restart after deceleration and resulting steady state clearance for each of three materials chosen from the list of six selected in step 10. In step 12, the engine operation is analyzed to determine what the blade clearance will be based upon the rotary forces acting on the blades and the thermal growth of the blades, shrouds, and other parts of the turbine that will effect the gap length such as the blade support ring, the rotor disc, and the engine casing. Three of the candidate materials are chosen in step 12, and each material is evaluated to determine what rub will exist and what resulting gap would result. Only three materials from the six materials in step 10 are chosen in step 12 because of the long time period of analysis needed to produce results from the analysis in step 12. Each of the parts of the engine involved in the rub or the gap produced between the blade tip and the outer shroud could be made from distinct materials. The analysis will be based on the various parts and the respective materials chosen.
If the analysis of step 12 determines that one or more of the three materials used in the analysis produces unacceptable results, then another material will be chosen. In step 13, the process will then iterate the material selection for optimum temperature rise during rub. One or more of the three materials used in the analysis of step 12 may be replaced with one or more of the original candidate materials chosen in step 10. A new analysis in step 12 is run with the new material or materials. If the analysis produces desired results, then the process moves on the step 14. If the results are not acceptable, then another material from the original six candidates is analyzed in step 12.
In step 14, the process will verify the optimum material cooling and heat shielding for tip clearance and structures. In this step, factors other than materials are analyzed to determine the gap and the rubbing that would result. Factors such as using a heat shield around the shroud, using a cooling fluid, or other structure that can affect the gap are analyzed. Using a heat shield may require use of a different material. Thus, the process may need to revert back to step 12 for an additional analysis of a certain material used under the environment of a heat shield to determine if the use of a heat shield with a certain material will produce a better result than not using a heat shield. The same reanalysis would be done for the process of using a cooling fluid or any other change to the engine.
In step 15, the process will iterate static part material and rotor configuration for optimum tip clearance, and choose a different material for reanalysis under different conditions of engine operation (e.g., heat shield, cooling fluid).
When the best materials have been chosen and the best structure (heat shield, cooling fluid arrangement, etc.) have been determined, the process goes to step 16 where the process will analyze and select engine break-in procedure for optimum tip clearance between the turbine and the compressor. The break-in process can be re-evaluated by running the break-in analysis under different material and structural conditions by the use of step 17 where the process will iterate the break-in procedure (number of rubs and incursion rate) based upon the different materials and the different engine operating structures such as whether heat shielding exists and if and how much cooling is used.
When steps 10, 12, 14, and 16 in the process have been completed and the most suitable materials and operating conditions have been selected, the process moves on to the steps in which the materials are evaluated for damage.
Step 18 in
While steps 18, 20, 22, and 24 are being processed, steps 28, 30, and 32 in
Step 30 is to determine if static part stresses are high enough to cause a crack. Step 32 is to perform propagation analysis of the micro-crack to determine the remaining life. Step 33 is to determine if micro-crack is acceptable and will not propagate. Step 31 is to iterate the configuration of hooks, scallops, and part thickness to reduce stress. Step 29 is to determine if static part cooling is needed.
When steps 28, 30 and 32 are optimized, the process continues to step 26 in
Step 27 is to iterate the design configuration and manufacturing for optimum out-of-roundness. Step 34 is the actual engine test with tip clearance measurements.
This application claims the benefit to an earlier filed U.S. Provisional application 60/763,090 filed on Jan. 27, 2006 and entitled OPTIMIZED BLADE TIP CLEARANCE PROCESS FOR A RUB TOLERANT DESIGN.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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60763090 | Jan 2006 | US |