The invention relates to the field of power plant technology. It relates to a rotor end piece for rotors of thermal turbomachines according to the preamble of patent claim 1.
Thermal turbomachines, such as turbines and compressors, essentially comprise a rotor fitted with moving blades and a stator in which the guide blades are suspended.
The task of the fixed guide blades is to direct the flow of the gaseous medium to be compressed or expanded onto the rotating moving blades in such a way that the energy conversion is effected with the best possible efficiency.
Both moving blades and guide blades essentially have an airfoil and a blade root. In order to be able to fasten the moving blades on the rotor or the guide blades in the stator, slots are recessed in the stator and on the rotor shaft. The roots of the blades are pushed into these slots and locked there.
It is known that most compressor blade rows of gas turbine rotors are arranged in circumferential slots. During the fitting of such blade rows, a special solution has to be found for the last blades to be fitted, since the remaining filling opening has then become too small. This residual opening is filled with a “rotor end piece”. The rotor end piece consists of an intermediate piece divided in half (two end piece halves) and of a wedge, by means of which the end piece halves are caulked in the rotor. The rotor end piece is therfore supported in the axial direction on the rotor. In this known prior art, the two end piece halves each have a straight side face, which at its top end forms a projecting lug with the top surface of the end piece half. Said side faces are opposite one another in the installed state, the wedge then being located between them. Once the two end piece halves and the wedge have been installed, the lugs of the two end piece halves are finally caulked via the wedge.
A disadvantage with this prior art is that the wedge, on account of the tilting moment of the two end piece halves, which is caused by the centrifugal force during operation, is able to bend open the caulked lugs. The wedge can thus fly out of the compressor and complete compressor damage may occur.
This disadvantage can certainly be removed by an invention of the applicant which has still not been published and in which the wedge is prised open and the lugs of the prised-open wedge are anchored in a heart-shaped cavity formed by the side faces of the two end pieces.
However, a disadvantage with these technical solutions consists in the fact that the end pieces exert axial forces on the rotor, on the one hand due to the centrifugal force during operation and on the other hand due to the caulking of the wedge. In the search for the causes of the frequently occurring rotor vibrations, it has been found that these axial forces can bend the rotor and thereby adversely generate disturbing vibrations.
The aim of the invention is to avoid said disadvantages of the prior art. The object of the invention is to develop a rotor end piece which exerts no axial forces on the rotor, so that an occurrence of disturbing rotor vibrations caused by axial forces is thereby avoided.
According to the invention, this object is achieved in a rotor end piece for rotors of thermal turbomachines according to the preamble of patent claim 1 in that the rotor end piece is fastened in the axial direction to the two adjacent moving blades. Each of the two end piece halves of the rotor end piece is fastened in the axial direction of the rotor to the two adjacent moving blades by means of one interlocking connection each.
The advantages of the invention consist in the fact that it is now the two blades, and not the rotor as in the prior art, which absorb the axial forces caused by the centrifugal force and the prised open wedge. As a result, disturbing vibrations are advantageously avoided.
The interlocking connection can be designed to be straight or a form fit. If the end piece halves and the adjacent moving blades form a form-fitting subassembly, this has the additional advantage that the adjacent blades are not turned into the rotor by the forces acting on them from the end piece, so that they do not jam during their thermal expansion.
It is expedient if the wedge, at its top end, has two lugs which are separated from one another by a longitudinal slot and which are spread out in the installed state, and if the side faces of the end piece halves each have a recess in the top region, these recesses forming a roughly heart-shaped cavity in the installed state, the walls of this cavity being covered by the spread-out lugs of the wedge, and the wedge being firmly anchored in the end piece halves as a result. The spreading-out of the wedge into the heart shape of the two end piece halves avoids a situation in which the wedge can break away from its anchorage during operation.
Several exemplary embodiments of the invention are shown in the drawing, in which:
In each case the same items are provided with the same designations in the figures. The effective direction of the axial force is designated by arrows.
The invention is explained in more detail below with reference to exemplary embodiments and
The rotor end piece 1 shown in
A disadvantage with these technical solutions consists in the fact that the end pieces 4, 4′ exert axial forces F on the rotor 2, on the one hand due to the centrifugal force during operation and on the other hand due to the caulking of the wedge 6. In the search for the causes of the frequently occurring rotor vibrations, it has been found that these axial forces F can bend the rotor 2 and thereby adversely generate disturbing vibrations.
A technical solution (see
A plan view of a schematically represented rotor end piece 1 according to the invention after installation with a straight interlocking connection 8, 8′, 9, 9′ is shown in
However, since there is the risk in the case of the straight interlocking connections 8, 8′, 9, 9′ shown in
This form-fitting combination of the end pieces and the adjacent blades is referred to as an end piece pack.
A further exemplary embodiment is shown in
The invention is of course not restricted to the exemplary embodiments described above.
The solution according to the invention is suitable for all blade rows in a circumferential slot. It is always advantageously used if the rotor reacts to axial forces in a sensitive manner and disturbing vibrations can arise as a result.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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103 10 432 | Mar 2003 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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1371327 | Schneider | Mar 1921 | A |
2406703 | Morris | Aug 1946 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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223599 | Sep 1942 | CH |
812337 | Aug 1951 | DE |
820598 | Nov 1951 | DE |
271243 | Aug 1989 | DE |
10134611 | Jun 2002 | DE |
1215367 | Nov 2002 | EP |
674543 | Jun 1952 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040179945 A1 | Sep 2004 | US |