This application claims priority of European Patent Office Application No. 08016914.7 EP filed Sep. 25, 2009, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
The present invention relates to a steam turbine with at least one magnetic bearing for the shaft, with steel paneling being attached in the area of a magnetic bearing.
A magnetic bearing represents an alternate option to the support methods used to date. The outstanding attribute of the magnetic bearing is the lack of contact between supported part and bearing. The bearing forces needed are generated by an appropriate magnetic field which is established between the fixed part and the part to be supported. This means that the magnetic bearing is friction-free and needs no lubricant.
If a magnetic bearing is used to support the shaft of a steam turbine, then the high temperatures occurring during the operation of the steam turbine are a problem for the magnetic bearing.
Metal paneling is attached in the area of the magnetic bearing to minimize the eddy current losses in the bearing. This metal paneling normally consists of a number of metal rings insulated from one another by a suitable coating. The high temperatures in the shaft of a steam turbine can lead to the coating melting and thereby to the metal paneling being destroyed.
An object of the present invention is thus to specify a steam turbine with at least one magnetic bearing for the shaft with which overheating of the magnetic bearing and thus destruction of the metal paneling is prevented.
This object is achieved for the steam turbine given above by air ducts running in the area of the magnetic bearing in a longitudinal direction of the shaft being embodied for a supply of cooling air, with the air ducts being connected on the side of the magnetic bearing facing the blading to a cooling air supply device featuring a cooling air supply running radially and ending at the free end of the shaft end in the bearing housing.
The explicit cooling of the magnetic bearing, specifically of a magnetic bearing arranged at the hot end of a steam turbine, prevents overheating of the insulating layers of the metal paneling and thereby destruction of the magnetic bearing.
Further expedient embodiments of the inventive steam turbine emerge from the dependent claims and from the subsequent description of various exemplary embodiments of a steam turbine as claimed in the present invention which refer to the enclosed drawing.
The figures show:
The shaft of the steam turbine is supported in the front bearing housing 1 by a front screwed-on shaft end 4 and in the rear bearing housing 2 by a rear screwed-on shaft end 5.
The individual cooling air ducts 9 end at the free end of the rear screwed-on shaft end 5 in the rear bearing housing 2. Further cooling air ducts 10 are provided in the rear screwed-on shaft end 5.
At the same time, in accordance with a development of the present invention, there is a further cooling air guide which is routed to the central shaft 13 and is routed back from there through a central axial hole into the rear bearing housing 2. This cooling air guide is to be described in greater detail below. The precise attachment of the shaft end 5 to the central shaft 13 is not to be described in any greater detail here. The figure merely shows an insulation bearing housing disk 14 between the central shaft 13 and the screwed on shaft end 5. This insulating disk 14 serves to interrupt the heat flow from the central shaft 13 to the rear screwed-on shaft end 5.
The cooling air supply 8 supplies both the cooling air ducts 9 and also the cooling air supply in the direction of the central shaft 13. To this end, radial blind holes 16 are provided at predetermined intervals in the area of the cooling air supply 8 embodied in the shape of a ring. Starting from the end of the rear screwed-on shaft end 5 lying opposite the central shaft 13, a number of axial holes 18 are provided in the periphery of the shaft end 5, which meet the radial blind hole 16. In the vicinity of the end of the screwed-on shaft end adjacent to the central shaft 13 further radial blind holes 17 are provided, which meet the peripheral axial holes 18.
The axial holes 18 are each closed off at their start with a closure piece 20. Furthermore, a central axial hole 19 exists which leads through the entire screwed-on shaft end 5. In this way, a further cooling air supply is produced which lead, starting from the cooling air supply 8, through the radial blind holes 16, the peripheral axial holes 18, the radial blind holes 17, through a free space between a part of the peripheral surface of the screwed-on shaft end 5 and a part of the inner peripheral surface of the central shaft 13, a chamber 15 between the central shaft 13 and screwed-on shaft end 5 and through the central axial hole 19. The axial and radial holes 17, 18 and the chamber 15 form the cooling air ducts 10.
This significantly reduces the heat transfer from the central shaft 13 to the rear screwed-on shaft end 5.
The cooling air ducts 10 for the rear screwed-on shaft end 5 described above are also possible for the front screwed-on shaft end 4.
Also with the two shaft ends 4 and 5, when the circumstances allow, the second cooling air guide can be dispensed with.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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08016914 | Sep 2008 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5104284 | Hustak, Jr. et al. | Apr 1992 | A |
6224327 | Aoki et al. | May 2001 | B1 |
7112036 | Lubell et al. | Sep 2006 | B2 |
20040118894 | Koch et al. | Jun 2004 | A1 |
20070273219 | Shimada | Nov 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
4444587 | Jun 1996 | DE |
0287440 | Oct 1988 | EP |
1391586 | Feb 2004 | EP |
6159362 | Jun 1994 | JP |
H10-510896 | Oct 1998 | JP |
2004-526884 | Sep 2004 | JP |
WO 9618805 | Jun 1996 | WO |
Entry |
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Translation of JP 2004-526884. |
Translation of JP H10-10896. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100074737 A1 | Mar 2010 | US |