The subject of this invention is a shroud for a turbomachine combustion chamber.
Such shrouds cover the rear side of fuel injectors and protect them from shocks due to the ingestion of bodies such as blocks of ice or birds into the machine. They are approximately semi-toroidal in shape and extend between two concentric attachment edges to the edges of an annular chamber bottom plate surrounding the combustor. Injectors extend through this plate. A central portion of the shroud is open to allow fuel injection pipes to pass through to the injectors. The openings may be a single circular slit (the shroud then being composed of two concentric and separated sides called “caps”), or consist of a sequence of windows each leading to a group of injectors.
The combustion chamber inside which the shroud extends often produces excessive noise due to unstable combustion and vibrations. A reduction in acoustic emissions may be achieved by adding stiffeners or dampers to the structure that produces them, but this makes manufacturing less simple, and increases the weight or the flow quality. Other methods consist of dynamic control of combustion, but they do not yet have any practical application. Since it is difficult to obtain good results with these known methods, restriction of instabilities is sometimes neglected, although this is becoming less and less acceptable due to increasingly stringent requirements for noise reduction and correct operation to be satisfied by engines.
Shrouds must also enable satisfactory flow of combustion air. Their rounded shape enables smooth flow with little turbulence around them; but this favourable flow is only guaranteed under nominal operating conditions, and it is found that the shape of the shroud is no longer adapted under other conditions; flow separation and non-uniform pressures may occur on some portions of the sides of the shroud.
The invention was designed to overcome these deficiencies. It is based on an improvement to the shroud design without any added material. Its essential characteristic is that at least one of the sides of the shroud is provided with at least one row of drillings. The drillings hinder the formation of a resonant cavity in the volume formed in the shroud and therefore reduce noise output from it. According to other information disclosed in the invention, they also contribute to regulating the airflow for all machine operating modes, by eliminating pressure differences between the inside and the outside of the shroud.
One purpose of the invention is a shroud for a turbomachine combustion chamber covering a circular row of fuel injectors provided with an open central portion and two sides joining the central portion at two concentric edges at which the shroud is attached to an annular bottom plate of the combustion chamber, characterised in that at least one of the sides is provided with at least one row of drillings.
Another aspect of the invention is a turbomachine combustion chamber including a case delimiting a diffusion chamber, a flame tube placed in the case, a compressor diffuser opening up into the diffusion chamber and forming a starting point for a first gas flow into the diffusion chamber, the flame tube comprising a shell and a shroud attached to the shell and facing the compressor diffuser, the shroud covering a circular row of fuel injectors and being provided with an open central portion and two concentric sides joining the central portion to the shell, the first flow being in the direction from the diffuser towards the open central portion, then going round the shroud passing along the sides and finally along the shell, characterised in that at least one of the sides is provided with at least one row of drillings.
Another aspect of the invention is a turbomachine equipped with this shroud or this combustion chamber.
The invention will now be described with reference to the following figures:
and
The shroud 10 comprises two circular and concentric edges 16 and 17 on each side of the opening 30 through which the supply pipes 14 pass. In traditional embodiments of the shroud 10, the sides 16 and 17 are completely separated by an annular opening and assembled to the rest of the stator separately.
The invention could equally well be applied to a single piece shroud in which the central circular slit is replaced by a sequence of shorter slits separated by radial bridges joining the sides 16 and 17 to each other.
The airflow at the output from the diffuser 4 preferably passes along a path represented by the arrows and the current lines in
According to the invention, the shroud 10 can be drilled as shown in
These drillings favourably coincide with the locations at which separation 20 might occur. Their main effect is to reduce noise emission produced in the internal volume of the shroud 10. This emission originates from combustion and it is applied by acoustic coupling between the shell 9 and the shroud 10, that is attenuated by drillings 21 located not far from the location of the connection to the shell 9 or the chamber bottom plate 11, by efficiently opening up the acoustic cavity in the shroud 10. Note that the central openings for the passage of fuel injectors do not have an important effect on noise reduction despite their large area, which suggests that the smaller but better placed drillings 21 formed on the sides 16 and 17 have a surprising effect.
Efficient locations for the drillings 21 frequently coincide with the separation locations 20, such that well placed drillings 21 also help to restore a uniform flow. The technical effect will be as shown in
Although it will often be useful to create several rows of drillings 21 in order to increase the flow uniformity, a single well-placed row of drillings 21 is often sufficient to give a better noise reduction.
Obviously, drillings according to the invention need to be distinguished from drillings of the edges of the shroud 10 that are used to hold bolts 15 for fixing to the chamber bottom plate 11, so that they are closed off and do not have the same properties as the drillings according to the invention; the same is true for the large number of small diameter drillings made through the shell 9 of the flame tube 8, the role of which is to create an airflow towards the flame tube 8 under all circumstances to keep it at a moderate temperature while participating in combustion as long as the combustor is reached.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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05 50379 | Feb 2005 | FR | national |
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2901032 | Brola | Aug 1959 | A |
3500639 | Stamm | Mar 1970 | A |
5181379 | Wakeman et al. | Jan 1993 | A |
5524430 | Mazeaud et al. | Jun 1996 | A |
6792757 | Borns et al. | Sep 2004 | B2 |
7062920 | McMasters et al. | Jun 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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199 00 025 | Jul 2000 | DE |
0 562 792 | Sep 1993 | EP |
WO 2004113794 | Dec 2004 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060174626 A1 | Aug 2006 | US |