This invention relates generally to cooling a rotating component, and more specifically, to a rotor in a turbine system.
Steam turbines extract work from a flow of steam to generate power. A typical steam turbine may include a rotor associated with a number of wheels. The wheels may be spaced apart from each other along the length of the rotor and define a series of turbine stages. The turbine stages are designed to extract useful work from the steam traveling on a flow path from an entrance to an exit of the turbine in an efficient manner. As the steam travels along the flow path, the steam causes the wheels to drive the rotor. The steam gradually may expand and the temperature and pressure of the steam gradually may decrease. The steam then may be exhausted from the exit of the turbine for reuse or otherwise. Higher temperature steam turbines may generate increased output as the increased temperature of the steam increases the overall energy available for extraction.
Generally described, a typical steam turbine may include a high pressure section, an intermediate pressure section, and a low pressure section. The sections may be arranged in series with each section including any number of stages. Within the sections, work is extracted from the steam to drive the rotor. Between the sections, the steam may be reheated for performing work in the next section. The high pressure and the intermediate pressure sections may operate at relatively high temperatures so as to increase the overall steam turbine output.
Advanced combined-cycle power plants rely on higher steam temperatures to operate at peak efficiency. However, exposure to higher steam temperatures reduces rotor life. Known design solutions focus on bucket and rotor materials and/or geometries, steam turbine operating temperatures and/or pressures, and/or piping solutions external to the steam flowpath. For example, one solution is to use better, more temperature-resistant, rotor materials. However, the use of such materials and known processes are expensive and often undesirably complex. In addition, limiting operating temperatures and pressures within the turbine limits the thermodynamic design space and may result in decreased turbine performance.
As higher inlet and reheat steam temperatures are proposed to increase combined cycle efficiency, more attention must be focused on turbine rotor cooling, such as by fluid cooling of the rotor itself. One barrier to rotor cooling in monoblock, or even welded, rotors, is the difficulty of creating long axial holes for passage of coolant. In order to provide rotor cooling using this method, axially-oriented cooling holes oriented circumferentially are required about the rotor. The orientation of the holes makes them very challenging to machine. Furthermore, the holes are very long and thin; the length-to-diameter ratio is much greater than the preferred ratio for conventional machining.
One known attempt to address higher steam temperatures involves changing the rotor geometry and materials to make a rotor that is acceptable for long-term operations, without providing external cooling. However, such geometries are generally more costly, reduce stage efficiency, and/or require costly, higher capability materials than designs that use an adequate cooling scheme. One known cooling scheme uses pipes routed through a steam flowpath to supply a cooling steam flow. For example, such pipes may be positioned within first-reheat, double-flow tub stages. Such pipes; however, create an obstruction within the main steam flow and add complexity to the system.
Another known attempt at a rotor cooling arrangement involves channeling a cooling fluid through an outer plenum defined in a stationary component of the steam turbine and channeling the cooling fluid from the outer plenum through a passageway defined in an airfoil of the stationary component. The cooling fluid is discharged from the airfoil passageway through an inner plenum of the stationary component to facilitate cooling an adjacent rotating component. The method includes providing the cooling fluid through the casing, which results in a more complicated arrangement that may be subject to leakage and/or loss of turbine efficiency.
In one embodiment, a method for forming a rotating component that includes providing a rotor having an outer surface. A circumferential surface feature is formed on the outer surface of the rotor. The forming includes applying metallic material to the outer surface of the rotor to build up the circumferential surface feature on the outer surface of the rotor to define at least one cooling passageway.
In another embodiment, a rotating component that includes a rotor having a circumferential surface feature defining at least one passageway. The circumferential surface feature includes a feature formed on an outer surface of the rotor and built up from the outer surface to define the at least one passageway.
In another embodiment, an apparatus for forming a rotating component having an additive manufacturing cell. The additive manufacturing cell includes a metallic powder source arranged and disposed to provide metallic powder to the surface of a rotor and a focused energy source arranged and disposed to heat the metallic powder on the surface of the rotor to form a metallic layer on the surface of a rotor. The additive manufacturing cell is movable along an axis of the rotor and is arranged and disposed to sequentially deposit the metallic layers and form a circumferential surface feature having a cooling passage on the rotor.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the following more detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings which illustrate, by way of example, the principles of the invention.
Wherever possible, the same reference numbers will be used throughout the drawings to represent the same parts.
Provided are a rotating article having cooling passages and a method of forming a rotating article having cooling passages. Embodiments of the present disclosure, for example, in comparison to concepts failing to include one or more of the features disclosed herein, enable axial cooling passages, for example, in a monoblock turbine rotor. In addition, the steam turbine system, according to the present disclosure, enables cooling passages in a welded turbine rotor. The rotor cooling passages enable cooled rotors, which allow the use of present-day, low-cost turbine materials in turbines operating at temperatures higher than practical today. Further, the cooled rotors permit the ability to withstand higher steam temperatures and provide increased combined-cycle efficiency and better use of the high exhaust temperatures of modern gas turbines. Further still, the method according to the present disclosure permits formation of geometries for cooling passages that were not previously possible. Such flexibility in geometry permits targeted cooling and can reduce the overall amount of cooling flow used.
When introducing elements of various embodiments of the present invention, the articles “a,” “an,” “the,” and “said” are intended to mean that there are one or more of the elements. The terms “comprising,” “including,” and “having” are intended to be inclusive and mean that there may be additional elements other than the listed elements.
Systems used to generate power include, but are not limited to, steam turbines, gas turbines, and other turbine assemblies, such as steam turbines or land based aero-derivatives used for power generation. In certain applications, the power generation systems, including the turbomachinery therein (e.g., turbines, compressors, and pumps) and other machinery, may include articles that are exposed to heavy wear conditions. For example, the rotating articles may include certain power generation system components, such as steam turbine rotors or wheels or gas turbine rotors or wheels, and may operate in high heat and high revolution environments.
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Each of the HP section 105, IP section 107 and LP section 109 are connected along rotor 101 via couplings 125. The couplings 125 may be mechanical couplings, such as bolted joints, or may be welded joints. In one embodiment, the couplings 125 permit detachment of any of the HP section 105, IP section 107 and/or LP section 109 for reconfiguration, service or maintenance.
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As described above, the steam as cooling fluid 213 may be drawn from other sections of the steam turbine system (e.g., from the HP section 105 or LP section 109), see, for example,
In one embodiment, as shown in
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In one embodiment, the heating of the metallic powder 1101 includes, but is not limited to, melting the metallic powder 1101, sintering at least a portion of the metallic powder 1101, welding at least a portion of the metallic powder 1101, or a combination thereof. For example, in another embodiment, the heating the metallic powder 1101 to a temperature sufficient to join the metallic powder includes controllably directing a focused energy source toward the metallic powder 1101. Suitable focused energy sources include, but are not limited to, a laser device, an electron beam device, or a combination thereof. The laser device includes any laser device operating in a power range and travel speed for melting and/or welding the metallic powder 1101, such as, but not limited to, a fiber laser, a CO2 laser, or a ND-YAG laser.
Suitable power ranges for the focused energy source 1107 include, but are not limited to, between 125 and 500 watts, between 150 and 500 watts, between 150 and 400 watts, or any combination, sub-combination, range, or sub-range thereof. Additionally, the travel speed includes, but is not limited to, between 400 and 1200 mm/sec, between 500 and 1200 mm/sec, between 500 and 1000 mm/sec, or any combination, sub-combination, range, or sub-range thereof. For example, in one embodiment, the focused energy source 1107 operates in the power range of between 125 and 500 watts, at the travel speed of between 400 and 1200 mm/sec for one to three contour passes. In another embodiment, the focused energy source 1107 includes a hatch spacing of between about 0.08 mm and 0.2 mm.
The parameters of the focused energy source 1107 are dependent upon the material and/or orientation of the metallic powder 1101 used to form the circumferential surface feature 131. In one embodiment, the power and/or travel speed is adjusted based upon a melting temperature of the material in the metallic powder 1101. For example, the power and/or travel speed may be increased for materials having comparatively increased melting temperatures. Suitable materials for the metallic powder 1101 include any material capable of being joined through additive manufacturing, such as, but not limited to, a metal, a metallic alloy, a superalloy, steel, a stainless steel, a tool steel, nickel, cobalt, chrome, titanium, aluminum, or a combination thereof.
In another embodiment, the power and/or travel speed is adjusted based upon a number of metallic powder layers being joined and/or a thickness of each of the metallic powder layers. For example, the power and/or travel speed may be increased to join multiple layers of the metallic powder 1101 and/or layers of the metallic powder 1101 having increased thickness, as compared to the power and/or travel speed used to join a single layer of the metallic powder 1101 and/or layers of the metallic powder 1101 having a comparatively decreased thickness. The initial layer 1109 and each of the additional layers includes a thickness in the range of 20-100 μm (0.0008-0.004 inches), 20-80 μm (0.0008-0.0032 inches), 40-60 μm (0.0016-0.0024 inches), or any combination, sub-combination, range, or sub-range thereof. The thickness of the initial layer 1109 is equal to or dissimilar from the thickness of each of the additional layers, which is maintained or varied for each of the additional layers. Based upon the thicknesses of the initial layer 1109 and each of the additional layers, a thickness of the circumferential surface feature 131 includes any suitable thickness, such as thicknesses of about 2 mm to about 6.5 mm or from about 3 mm to about 5 mm or from about 3.5 mm to about 4.5 mm. In addition, the circumferential surface feature 131 may include any suitable diameter, including average diameters of from about 1 mm to about 4 mm or from about 2 mm to about 3 mm or from about 1.5 mm to about 2.5 mm.
In one embodiment, the method may further include processing the rotor 101 with the circumferential surface features 131. Suitable processing steps include, but are not limited to, hot isostatically pressing (HIP'ing) the rotor 101 and circumferential surface features 131, solution heat treating (solutionizing) the rotor 101 and circumferential surface features 131, or a combination thereof. The HIP'ing includes, after forming the rotor 101 and circumferential surface features 131, the rotor 101 and circumferential surface features 131 at an elevated temperature and elevated pressure sufficient to further consolidate the rotor 101 and circumferential surface features 131. For example, in another embodiment, the rotor 101 and circumferential surface features 131 is HIP'd for 3-5 hours at an elevated temperature of between 1149° C. and 1260° C. (2100° F. and 2300° F.), and an elevated pressure of between 68.95 MPa and 137.9 MPa (10,000 PSI and 20,000 PSI). The HIP'ing further consolidates the rotor 101 and circumferential surface features 131 to increase the density, for example, between about 98% and about 99% to between about 99.5% and about 99.8%. The solutionizing includes, after forming the rotor 101 and circumferential surface features 131 and/or HIP'ing the rotor 101 and circumferential surface features 131, treating the rotor 101 and circumferential surface features 131 for 1-2 hours in a vacuum at an elevated temperature of between 1093° C. and 1205° C. (2000° F. and 2200° F.). The elevated temperature includes any temperature sufficient for distributing segregated alloying elements within the article 200. It will be recognized by those skilled in the art that HIP'ing temperatures and heat treat temperatures will be highly dependent on the composition of the powders and the desired properties.
While the invention has been described with reference to one or more embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the invention without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiment disclosed as the best mode contemplated for carrying out this invention, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims. In addition, all numerical values identified in the detailed description shall be interpreted as though the precise and approximate values are both expressly identified.