The subject matter disclosed herein relates to forged turbine rotors and methods of making the same, and more particularly, to forged powder compact turbine rotors and methods of making the same.
The rotor disk sections of the rotors used in industrial gas turbines are currently cast and wrought. In order to make these disks, large ingots of various superalloy materials are formed using various casting techniques, including vacuum induction melting (VIM), eletroslag remelting (ESR) or vacuum arc remelting (VAR). These ingots may be on the order of 30-36″ in diameter and weigh between 22,000-35,000 lbs. Control of the melting and casting process is critical, particularly control implemented to limit segregation within the cast ingot.
The cast ingots are wrought by upset forging and billetized to create a preform or billet for final forging of the rotor disk sections. The billetizing process generally involves multiple steps, including up to about 15 steps, to form the forging preform. The forging preform generally has a relatively coarse grain size of about ASTM 0-4. The billet is generally not readily inspectable by non destructive methods such as ultrasonic inspection. Also, the top and bottom of the billets are generally cropped resulting in undesirable scrap.
Final forging of the billets into wrought rotor sections requires a large forging press, with the press size generally determined by the size of the rotor section desired. As the size of industrial gas turbines increases to achieve higher power outputs and efficiencies, these forgings may require very large forging presses, including presses having a capacity of about 75,000 tons. Such large presses are generally very costly to manufacture and operate owing to their large sizes and the associated facilities and utilities needed to run them.
The number of forging steps is critical due to abnormal grain growth (AGG) that may occur during extended time at high temperature necessary to perform the forming operations, particularly where isothermal forging at low strain rates are employed. AGG during the forging process can result in variations within the microstructure, particularly abnormal variations in the average grain size across the diameter and through the thickness of forging. In addition, larger rotor sections require larger forging envelopes that necessitate removal of more material after forging, which in turn increases the cost of the forging.
Careful control of the casting and forging processes are capable of producing large cast and wrought rotor sections having an average ASTM grain size of about 8. The yield strength and elongation in the bore region of the rotor section forgings are generally limited by the relatively slower cooling that occurs in this region due to their size and associated thermal mass. Cast and wrought rotor sections also generally have a non-uniform distribution of carbides across the diameter and through the thickness of the forging, with higher amounts of carbides in the central or bore region due to the fact that this is the slowest cooling portion of the ingots from which they are formed. The forgings are forged with the central portions being solid and the bores are formed afterwards by removing material from the central portion of the forgings.
Therefore, it is desirable to provide turbine rotors and associated turbine disks having improved mechanical and metallurgical properties, as well as improved methods of making them.
According to one aspect of the invention, a forging preform for a turbine rotor disk is disclosed. The preform includes a body of a superalloy material having a mass of about 5000 lbs or more, the superalloy material having a substantially homogeneous grain morphology and an ASTM average grain size of 10 or smaller.
According to another aspect of the invention, a turbine rotor disk is disclosed. The turbine rotor disk includes a substantially cylindrical disk of a superalloy material having a mass of about 5000 lbs or more, the superalloy material having a substantially homogeneous grain morphology and an ASTM average grain size of about 10 or smaller.
According to yet another aspect of the invention, a method of making a turbine rotor disk is disclosed. The method includes providing a superalloy powder material. The method also includes pressing the superalloy powder material to form a forging preform for a turbine rotor disk, the preform comprising a body of a superalloy material having a mass of about 5000 lbs or more, the superalloy material having a substantially homogeneous grain morphology and an ASTM average grain size of 10 or smaller.
These and other advantages and features will become more apparent from the following description taken in conjunction with the drawings.
The subject matter, which is regarded as the invention, is particularly pointed out and distinctly claimed in the claims at the conclusion of the specification. The foregoing and other features, and advantages of the invention are apparent from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
The detailed description explains embodiments of the invention, together with advantages and features, by way of example with reference to the drawings.
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The rotor wheels 6 may be formed from a high-temperature superalloy material 8. Any suitable high temperature alloy may be used, including various Fe-base, Fe—Ni-base, Ni-base or Co-base superalloys, and more particularly including Alloy 625 (UNS N06625), Alloy 706 (UNS N09706), Alloy 718 (UNS N07718) or Alloy 725 (UNS N07725) and derivatives of these alloys. The rotor wheels 6 have a substantially homogeneous as-forged microstructure and grain morphology, including a substantially-uniform, monomodal, equiaxed, as-forged microstructure and grain morphology, and exhibit an absence of abnormal grain growth (AGG). More particularly, the as-forged rotors have an ASTM E112 or E1382 average grain size of about 10 or smaller, and even more particularly an ASTM grain size of about 10 to about 16. The turbine rotor wheels or disks 6 comprise as-forged, powder compacts having densities that are about 99.9% of the theoretical density. It will be appreciated that the rotor wheels 6, including, for example, wheels 18, 20, 22 and 24 may each be formed from the same superalloy material or may each be formed from different superalloy materials, in any combination.
The turbine rotor wheels 6 disclosed herein have improved microstructural homogeneity that also provides improved homogeneity in the mechanical properties, including, for example, improved uniformity of the elongation, yield strength and ultimate tensile strength of the superalloy materials 8 both across the diameter d and through the thickness t,
Providing 110 the superalloy powder material may include forming 112 a plurality of powder particles of an Fe-base, Fe—Ni base, Ni-base or Co-base superalloy having a powder particle size of about −150 mesh using vacuum melting. The vacuum melting method used for forming 112 may include using ESR, VAR or VIM to melt the superalloy material. The molten superalloy material may then be atomized to form molten droplets that upon freezing comprise the superalloy powder particles. The atomization may be performed in an inert gas atmosphere, such as an argon atmosphere. VIM is well-suited for providing 110 the quantities of superalloy powder material needed for method 100. For example, VIM may be used to batch produce batches of powder of about 5,000 lbs to about 8,000 lbs or larger. The superalloy powder particles have a substantially homogeneous microstructure, and particularly exhibit substantially no segregation of the alloy constituents. Following forming 112, providing 110 may also include separating 114 the powder particles to provide a predetermined powder particle size, such as a size of about −150 mesh. Separating 114 may include any suitable method of separating the powder particles by size, including the use of various combinations of sieves. Providing 110 may also include loading 116 the powder particles into a container or can, not shown, in preparation for pressing 120. The can may comprise any suitable material, and may include various metals, including various grades of steel, and further including various grades of stainless steel. Following loading 116 the powder particles into a container or can, providing 110 may also include outgassing and sealing 118 the container to remove moisture or other volatile contaminants that are adsorbed or otherwise associated with the powder particles. Outgassing 118 may be performed by heating the powder particles and container to vaporize the moisture or other volatile constituents. The heating temperature and time may be selected to assure removal of the volatile contaminants. Once the can and powder have been outgassed to achieve predetermined levels of the contaminants and evacuated, the containers are sealed, such as by welding, to maintain the desired conditions, including contaminant levels and partial pressure within the container. It is desirable to perform providing 110 to include all handling of the powder, including forming 112, separating 114, loading 116 and outgassing/sealing 118, in a desiccated, inert gas atmosphere, such as argon, or under vacuum conditions.
The sealed container containing the powder particles of the superalloy material may then be subjected to pressing 120 to form a sintered powder compact forging preform 200. The amount of superalloy material powder provided will be sufficient to produce the desired size of the forging preform 200. In an exemplary embodiment, the powder and resultant forging preform 200 may have a mass greater than about 5,000 lbs, and in another embodiment, a mass up to about 16,000 lbs., and more particularly, a mass greater than about 5,000 lbs up to about 16,000 lbs. Pressing 120 may include any suitable pressing method to sinter and consolidate the powder particles and form the forging preform 200. In an exemplary embodiment, pressing 120 may include hot isostatic pressing 122 at a temperature, pressure and time sufficient to form forging preform 200. Advantageously, the powder compact forging preform 200 may have any suitable shape, including that of a conventional substantially cylindrical forging billet 200 as shown in phantom in
The method 100 also includes forging 130 the forging preform 200,
The forging temperatures of the forging preforms 200 during forging 130 may include subsolvus forging temperatures for the superalloy material 8 selected. Forging 130 may be performed in a single forging step, or in multiple forging steps.
Method 100 may also include a post-forging heat treatment 140, or multiple heat treatments, to develop the microstructure and mechanical properties of rotor wheels 6, including various combinations of solution heat treatments, stabilizing heat treatments and precipitation hardening heat treatments. Forging 130 of powder compact forging preforms avoids the development of retained strain within the microstructure of the superalloy material 8 and the problem of AGG both during forging 130 and during post-forging heat treatment 140, such that the resultant as-forged microstructure of disks or wheels 6 is substantially free of AGG. The as-forged microstructure is also free of carbide segregation across the diameter (e.g., about 17 to about 40 inches) and through the thickness of the as-forged disk.
While the invention has been described in detail in connection with only a limited number of embodiments, it should be readily understood that the invention is not limited to such disclosed embodiments. Rather, the invention can be modified to incorporate any number of variations, alterations, substitutions or equivalent arrangements not heretofore described, but which are commensurate with the spirit and scope of the invention. Additionally, while various embodiments of the invention have been described, it is to be understood that aspects of the invention may include only some of the described embodiments. Accordingly, the invention is not to be seen as limited by the foregoing description, but is only limited by the scope of the appended claims.