Gas turbines engines produce bleed air when operating. Bleed air is compressed air taken from the compressor stages of a gas turbine engine, and can be used for many other purposes in an aircraft, such as anti-icing, cabin pressurization, internal engine cooling or cabin environmental control systems. However, bleed air released directly from the compressor stages of a gas turbine engine must first be pressure and temperature conditioned before it is useful in other parts of the aircraft.
Typically, bleed air systems in aircraft regulate two types of bleed air: high-pressure bleed air from the high-pressure compressor stage of the gas turbine engine, and low-pressure bleed air from the low-pressure compressor stage of the gas turbine engine. Bleed air systems condition both types of bleed air through a combination of ducts, valves and regulators.
Previous bleed air systems included single-valve methods for regulating the pressure of incoming high-pressure bleed air. In such systems, a single valve was used to modulate the incoming high-pressure bleed air. The valve was either fully open or fully closed, and modulated according to system needs.
But these types of systems caused unstable conditions downstream in the bleed air system. This was caused by a substantial pressure difference in the high-pressure bleed air and the low-pressure bleed air, which resulted in valves downstream operating in unstable regions upon transitions. Moreover, severe transient conditions can cause an increase in system sizing, in addition to instability. Increased system sizing is required to handle the severe changes in boundary conditions such as pressure and temperature cycles that are placed on the hardware. Increased system sizing impacts weight and complexity of such systems, and decreases reliability of these systems.
A bleed airflow system in an aircraft comprising: a high-pressure compressor; a low-pressure compressor; a high-pressure bleed line configured to receive high-pressure bleed air from the high-pressure compressor, the high-pressure bleed line comprising a valve system, the valve system configured to regulate the pressure of the high-pressure bleed air received from the high-pressure bleed line in at least two steps; a low-pressure bleed line configured to receive low-pressure bleed air from the low-pressure compressor, the low-pressure bleed line comprising a check valve; a bleed air junction in fluid connection with the high-pressure bleed line and the low-pressure bleed line, wherein the bleed air junction is downstream of the valve system and the check valve; a control valve configured to receive bleed air from the bleed air junction; and an outlet line configured to receive bleed air from the control valve and distribute bleed air to a location separate from the bleed airflow system.
A method for conditioning bleed air, comprising: receiving high-pressure bleed air from a high-pressure compressor; regulating flow of the high-pressure bleed air by delivering the high-pressure bleed air through a valve system, the valve system configured to regulate air pressure in at least two steps; receiving low-pressure bleed air from a low-pressure compressor; delivering the low-pressure bleed air through a check valve; combining high-pressure bleed air and low-pressure bleed air at a junction; and regulating pressure of the combined flow of bleed air.
The proposed bleed control system minimizes the impact of pressure differentials on downstream system stability by using a stepped pressure change instead of a completely open or completely closed valve system. Thus, there is no need to modulate the high-pressure bleed air coming into the bleed control system, and avoid pneumatic interactions of high-pressure bleed line and low-pressure bleed line valves. Transitioning between the high-pressure bleed line and low-pressure bleed line cause large temperature and pressure differentials. This can result in instability across the system
HP bleed line 12 is connected to first valve 16 and second valve 18 in series. LP bleed line 14 is connected to check valve 20. Both second valve 18 and check valve 20 are connected to bleed air junction 22. Bleed air junction 22 is connected to pressure or flow control valve 24. Pressure or flow control valve 24 is connected to first outlet 26 and heat exchanger 28. Fan line 30 is connected to fan air control valve 32, which is connected to heat exchanger 28. Heat exchanger 28 is also connected to cold flow outlet 34 and hot flow outlet 36. Once the air exits system 10 through outlets 24 or 26, it is routed to another use in the aircraft, such as an environmental control system.
When the system is in use, a high-pressure compressor 11 produces HP bleed air which travels through HP bleed line 12. HP bleed air must be temperature and pressure regulated before the HP bleed air is used elsewhere in the aircraft, because HP bleed air exits the high-pressure compressor 11 section of the engine at temperatures and pressures that are very high, making the air generally unusable elsewhere if it is completely unconditioned. System 10 provides for the pressure and temperature conditioning of the HP bleed air.
Thus, the HP bleed air is delivered through first valve 16. First valve 16 can be a butterfly valve, a ball valve, or a gate valve, and can be actuated by pneumatic, solenoid or electric forces. First valve 16 can be fully opened to allow flow of HP bleed air, or fully closed to halt flow of HP bleed air.
If first valve 16 is open, HP bleed air is able to flow to second valve 18. Second valve 18 can again be actuated by pneumatic, solenoid or electric forces. Second valve 18 can be a butterfly valve, a ball valve, or a gate valve. But second valve 18 can only be fully open or partially open. Second valve 18 permits flow in both the fully open and partially open positions. The amount of flow allowed by second valve 18 when it is in the “partially open” position is less than the flow allowed in the “fully open” position. The amount of flow allowed depends on the particular needs of the system. This creates a two-stage transition for the incoming HP bleed air within bleed air flow system 10 and eliminates the need to modulate incoming HP bleed air before it enters bleed air flow system 10.
While HP bleed air flows through HP bleed line 12, a low-pressure compressor 13 produces LP bleed air which travels through LP bleed line 14. LP bleed line 14 includes check valve 20. Check valve 20 prevents HP bleed air from rushing into LP bleed line 14. Instead, check valve 20 allows LP bleed air to pass through check valve 20 to bleed air junction 22, where LP bleed line 14 meets HP bleed line 12 and both streams of bleed air mix.
Bleed air junction 22 regulates incoming HP bleed air and incoming LP bleed air. Bleed air junction 22 can allow flow from either HP bleed line 12 or LP bleed line 14, depending on the settings of first valve 16, second valve 18, and check valve 20. Incoming bleed air (HP, LP or a mixture) then flows to pressure or flow control valve 24. Pressure or flow control valve 24 modulates the pressure and flow of the incoming bleed air. Pressure or flow control valve 24 can be actuated by pneumatic, solenoid, or electric forces. Pressure or flow control valve 24 can be a butterfly valve, a ball valve, or a gate valve. As the incoming bleed air flows through pressure or flow control valve 24, the pressure of the incoming bleed air is further regulated. Bleed air exiting pressure or flow control valve 24 can either be routed to outlet 26 or to heat exchanger 28 or both outlet 26 and heat exchanger 28. Different portions of bleed air can be routed to either outlet 26 or heat exchanger 28 depending on the needs of the aircraft system as a whole.
Outlet 26 is a pressure-conditioned, but not temperature-conditioned, outlet. Bleed air that is flown through outlet 26 is not temperature conditioned by heat exchanger 28, but its pressure has been adjusted through the multi-step valve system (e.g., valves 16, 28, 20 and 24). Outlet 26 leads to a downstream location, which can be an environmental control system, an anti-ice system, an inert gas system, a waste water pressurization system, another pneumatically-driven system and combinations thereof, depending on the needs of the aircraft. Only downstream systems which do not require temperature-conditioned bleed air are fed from this outlet.
When bleed air flows to heat exchanger 28, it can be temperature conditioned by heat exchanger 28. Heat exchanger 28 can be a plate-fin, shell-tube, or other appropriate type of heat exchanger for use in an aircraft bleed air condition system. Heat exchanger 28 includes two sides, a hot side and a cool side. The cool side of heat exchanger 28 is fed by cooling air coming through fan air line 30. Cooling air can be engine fan air, inducted air, forced air, ram air, or other types of cooling air. Cooling air stays in the cool side of heat exchanger 28, and does not mix with incoming bleed air. However, the cooling air allows heat exchanger 28 to temperature condition incoming bleed air before the cooled bleed air exits through conditioned air hot side outlet 34. Cooling air exits out conditioned cool side outlet 36. Conditioned air hot side outlet 34 leads to a downstream location, which can be an environmental control system, an anti-ice system, an inert gas system, a waste water pressurization system, another pneumatically-driven system and combinations thereof. In this instance, bleed air funneled through hot air side outlet 34 is temperature-conditioned, and can feed into systems which require temperature-regulated air.
The multi-step regulation of incoming HP bleed air mitigates severe pressure transient conditions and results in a less drastic pressure differential across the bleed air system as a whole. In particular, the multi-step valve system allows for a smaller pressure differential across pressure/flow control valve 24, which modulates bleed air downstream, before the bleed air is repurposed for other uses in the aircraft. This allows for better system stability and longevity across the aircraft operational envelope.
Multi-step valve 42 of
The proposed bleed airflow system regulates pressure, flow and temperature of incoming HP bleed air in two or more steps. This method eliminates the needs to modulate incoming HP bleed air with an additional valve system. The method increases system stability and reliability by decreasing the pressure differential across the system and mitigating transient pressure conditions.
The following are non-exclusive descriptions of possible embodiments of the present invention.
A bleed airflow system in an aircraft comprising: a high-pressure compressor; a low-pressure compressor; a high-pressure bleed line configured to receive high-pressure bleed air from the high-pressure compressor, the high-pressure bleed line comprising a valve system, the valve system configured to regulate the pressure of the high-pressure bleed air received from the high-pressure bleed line in at least two steps; a low-pressure bleed line configured to receive low-pressure bleed air from the low-pressure compressor, the low-pressure bleed line comprising a check valve; a bleed air junction in fluid connection with the high-pressure bleed line and the low-pressure bleed line, wherein the bleed air junction is downstream of the valve system and the check valve; a control valve configured to receive bleed air from the bleed air junction; and an outlet line configured to receive bleed air from the control valve and distribute bleed air to a location separate from the bleed airflow system.
The system of the preceding paragraph can optionally include, additionally and/or alternatively, any one or more of the following features, configurations and/or additional components:
The valve system comprises a first valve, wherein the first valve can be opened fully or closed fully, and a second valve, wherein the second valve can be opened fully or opened partially.
The valve system comprises a multi-step valve.
The outlet line is connected to a heat exchanger.
The heat exchanger is configured to regulate temperature of incoming bleed air.
The heat exchanger is configured to receive cooling air.
The heat exchanger comprises a hot side outlet, wherein the hot side outlet leads to a downstream location selected from the group consisting of an environmental control system, an anti-ice system, an inert gas system, a waste water pressurization system, a pneumatically driven system and combinations thereof.
The outlet is connected to a downstream location which is selected from the group consisting of an environmental control system, an anti-ice system, an inert gas system, a waste water pressurization system, a pneumatically driven system and combinations thereof.
At least one of the first and second valves is a butterfly valve.
At least one of the first and second valves is a ball valve.
At least one of the first and second valves is a gate valve.
A method for conditioning bleed air, comprising: receiving high-pressure bleed air from a high-pressure compressor; regulating flow of the high-pressure bleed air by delivering the high-pressure bleed air through a valve system, the valve system configured to regulate air pressure in at least two steps; receiving low-pressure bleed air from a low-pressure compressor; delivering the low-pressure bleed air through a check valve; combining high-pressure bleed air and low-pressure bleed air at a junction; and regulating pressure of the combined flow of bleed air.
The method of the preceding paragraph can optionally include, additionally and/or alternatively, any one or more of the following features, configurations and/or additional components:
Regulating flow of the high-pressure bleed air comprises flowing the high-pressure bleed air through a first valve, wherein the first valve can only be opened fully or closed fully; and through a second valve, wherein the second valve can only be opened fully or opened partially.
Regulating flow of the high-pressure bleed air comprises flowing the high-pressure bleed air through a multi-step valve.
The method includes temperature conditioning the pressure-conditioned air in a heat exchanger.
The method includes delivering pressure regulated bleed air to a system selected from the group consisting of an environmental control system, an anti-ice system, an inert gas system, a waste water pressurization system, a pneumatically driven system and combinations thereof.
The method includes delivering the temperature conditioned and pressure regulated bleed air to a system selected from the group consisting of an environmental control system, an anti-ice system, an inert gas system, a waste water pressurization system, a pneumatically driven system and combinations thereof.
While the invention has been described with reference to an exemplary embodiment(s), 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(s) disclosed, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.