The present invention relates to thrust-reversal devices for bypass turbojet engines and relates more specifically to an improvement to the flow deflection cascades also known as gratings used inside such devices.
Conventionally, a bypass turbojet engine is equipped with a passage behind the fan and whose purpose is to channel the so-called cold secondary flow. This passage is made up of an internal wall surrounding the structure of the actual engine behind the fan, and of an external wall the upstream part of which is a continuation of the engine casing which surrounds this fan. This external wall can channel both the secondary flow and the primary flow in its downstream part, this being behind the ejection of the so-called hot primary flow in the case of mixed-flow nacelles or confluent-flow nacelles for example. By contrast, in the case of so-called separate-flow nacelles, the external wall channels only the secondary flow.
One wall may also streamline the outside of the engine, that is to say the outside of the casing surrounding the fan and the outside of the exterior wall of the aforementioned passage, this being with a view to minimizing the drag of the propulsion unit, particularly in the case of propulsion units attached to the outside of the aircraft, such as those attached on or under the wings or at the rear of the fuselage for example.
Such a turbojet engine thrust reverser 10 comprises a moving cowling 12, advantageously made up of two cylindrical half-parts and forming, when the turbojet engine is operating in direct thrust mode, all or part of the downstream end of the external wall of the annular duct 14 through which the stream of secondary flow circulates, and able to be moved axially in the downstream direction by means of an operating system (not depicted) comprising, for example, jacks fixed to the upstream part of the reverser. Moving the cowling in the downstream direction causes the pivoting of a plurality of flaps 16 via link rods 18 connected to a point of articulation on the internal wall 20 of the annular duct 14, these flaps closing off the duct and deflecting the flow in order to form a reversal flow which is guided by means of a cascade device 22 arranged on the external periphery of this duct and of which the cascades, mounted side by side, are uncovered once the cowling has been moved in the downstream direction. These cascades comprise vane sets with greater or less curvature, in one or two directions, depending on the direction desired for the reversal thrust. Specifically, when reversing the thrust, it is necessary to direct the flow passing through certain cascades of the device in a given direction in order to prevent the air from striking undesired parts of the airplane and to avoid direct contact with the ground, in order to minimize or even cancel the possibility that the engine that generates this flow or a nearby engine might ingest this air by ricochet. This special orientation of the sets of vanes also avoids driving any obstacle present on the tarmac onto structures of the airplane, through the same ricochet phenomenon.
In the cascade device illustrated, each cascade is mounted in a parallelepipedal surround in order, on the one hand, to make it easier to install and to fit back on the structure of the nacelle, particularly during maintenance operations where the intervention time is of very great importance and therefore has to be as short as possible and, on the other hand, to give the reversal flow better aerodynamic properties because the width for the passage of the air needs to be approximately the same at the inlet and at the outlet, in the thickness of the cascade. To this end, the aerodynamic configuration of the transverse vanes 24A (longitudinal vanes 24B being straight) of the cascades is designed in such a way as to convert the thrust flow passing through them into a reversal flow advantageously directed toward the front of the nacelle.
Each cascade is fixed to the structure of the nacelle in the conventional way by screws 23 passing, on the one hand, through a front transverse edge 22A and screwed into a structural front part 26 of the reverser and, on the other hand, through a transverse rear edge 22B and fixed into a rear structural part 28 of this reverser. By contrast, the adjacent or middle cascades are not joined together via their parallel longitudinal edges 22C and there is therefore a lateral clearance 30 between each of the cascades of the thrust reverser cascade device.
Bearing in mind the manufacturing installation tolerances, this clearance may prove to be large enough that it generates an air leak 32 in a vertical direction, or even one directed toward the rear of the nacelle, of a particularly great magnitude when the thrust is being reversed, and which then reduces the effectiveness of the two reversal flows 34 leaving the cascades directly on each side of this leak 32, thus producing a thrust towards the rear of the nacelle that is likely to greatly reduce the performance of the aerodynamic braking of the airplane.
This leakage phenomenon is aggravated with a configuration of cascades which have their outlet toward the side, as illustrated in
In this configuration, the clearance 31 is greater than the clearance that corresponds to a cascade of parallelepipedal base (the example of
The subject of the invention is a deflection cascade device which alleviates these drawbacks. An object of the invention is also to provide a thrust reverser which offers ease of installation and of re-fitting or maintenance of all components of the nacelle, particularly the cascades. In effect, depending on the position of the nacelle on the wings of the airplane, for example in the case of a four-engined airplane, the configuration of the reversal flow may differ from one nacelle to another. This means providing a panoply of cascades with different vane configurations but which can be adapted and interchanged with one another.
These objects are achieved by a cascade device having a reversed flow from the thrust flow of a turbojet engine, comprising a plurality of flow deflection cascades arranged side by side at the external periphery of an annular duct for the circulation of the thrust flow, each cascade consisting of a plurality of transverse internal vanes and longitudinal internal vanes crossing one another, two adjacent cascades being separated by a lateral clearance that generates a leakage flow, characterized in that it comprises means for re-directing said leakage flow in a direction that increases the effectiveness of said reversal flow.
Thus, the leaks are limited and the flow leaving the cascades is re-directed in the desired direction.
Advantageously, the means for re-directing the leakage flow comprise aerodynamic appendages mounted on at least or on the two longitudinal external edges of each cascade, said longitudinal external edge of the cascade preferably consisting of a longitudinal vane.
As a preference, said aerodynamic appendages comprise a plurality of transverse vane tips and each vane tip of said plurality of transverse vane tips of a given cascade has a curvature the same as or different from that of the transverse internal vanes of said cascade. Each vane tip of said plurality of transverse vane tips of a given cascade may be arranged in the continuation of the transverse internal vanes of said cascade and said plurality of transverse vane tips may be arranged in a different number by comparison with the transverse internal vanes of one same cascade.
According to an advantageous embodiment, the number and the curvature of said plurality of transverse vane tips are identical for all the cascades of the device regardless of the number and curvature of the transverse internal vanes. Thus, it is possible to fit aerodynamic appendages to the outside of the longitudinal curved vanes inside the parallelepipedal initial envelope and allow any configuration of cascades with respect to each other to be installed.
Other features and advantages of the invention will be better understood from reading the description which will follow of some preferred embodiments of the invention, with reference to the attached drawings in which:
A first exemplary embodiment of the invention applied to a thrust reverser with its outlet forward (that is to say in a direction opposite to the airplane thrust direction) as illustrated in
According to the invention, the cascade device comprises means for redirecting forward (in the direction of the reverse flow) the parasitic flow created by the air leak 32 and which was initially at best neutral or at worst generated thrust, so as to improve the effectiveness of the reverse flow. To do this, aerodynamic appendages in the form of transverse vane tips 36 mounted on a longitudinal external edge 22C of each cascade 22 in order to fill the space resulting from the circular layout of the cascade device are added. Each cascade conventionally consists of a plurality of transverse internal vanes 24A and of longitudinal internal vanes 24B which cross one another. Also, these additional appendages are advantageously arranged in the continuation of the transverse vanes 24A and each has a curvature identical to that of the transverse vanes. Thus, the leak is immediately taken in hand by the vane tips which then, like the transverse vanes, direct it towards the front of the nacelle. However, this configuration is not compulsory and the vane tips 36 may be arranged differently, that is to say may be not aligned with the transverse vanes. The number of vane tips may also differ from the total number of transverse vanes. The curvature of these vane tips may differ from that of the transverse vanes. Finally, each vane tip may have a different configuration from its neighbor and likewise for each spacing. Furthermore, this addition of vane tips gives the cascades a trapezoidal cross section by comparison with their initial rectangular cross section, thus increasing the-total surface area for the passage of air through these cascades.
In this configuration, the cascade device comprises means for redirecting, in the direction of the reversal flow, the parasitic flow created by the air leak 32. These means comprise transverse vane tips 36, 38 fixed to the two longitudinal external edges 22C of each cascade 22 so as to fill the space created by the initial longitudinal clearance 31 resulting from the curvatures of the transverse vanes 24B. The longitudinal cutout of the vane tips 36, 38 is no longer parallel to an axis 40 passing through the center 42 of the nacelle and the center of the cascade 22 but is now parallel to an axis 44 passing through the center 42 of the nacelle and the middle of the residual longitudinal clearance 46. The cascade 22 is thus in the form of a “trapezium-shape” configuration now rather than a parallelepiped shape, and this, like before, slightly increases the surface area for guiding the flow.
Two further advantages stem from this configuration. The first is a residual leak 48 reduced to a magnitude comparable with a cascade configuration in which the outlet is forward. The second is that this residual leak is immediately taken in hand by the vane tips which, through this effect, give it a direction parallel to the reversal flow, namely toward the front of the nacelle so that it is no longer neutral or a generator of thrust. The reversal flows 34 leaving the vanes directly at the middle of the leak 48 are thereby less disrupted. This results in better effectiveness of the reversal assembly making it possible to reduce the length of the cascades, for the same effectiveness, by comparison with the design in which the leaks were not managed. The mass of many components such as the jacks that operate the moving cowling is thereby reduced and the reliability of the system and of the components concerned is increased.
Furthermore, the detailed view of
A second exemplary embodiment of the invention is illustrated in
Furthermore, this arrangement may easily be applied to configurations already in operation without changing the structure of the surrounding components. The gain would then be an appreciable improvement in the reversal performance or even, for the same sought-after reverser reversal effectiveness prior to fitting the panoply, the possibility of using the engine at a lower speed than the speed usually used, thus improving engine life.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
02 16634 | Dec 2002 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR03/03868 | 12/22/2003 | WO | 00 | 6/22/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2004/059157 | 7/15/2004 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3076309 | Rowan et al. | Feb 1963 | A |
3601992 | Maison | Aug 1971 | A |
3941313 | Jumelle | Mar 1976 | A |
3981451 | Prior et al. | Sep 1976 | A |
4026105 | James | May 1977 | A |
4067094 | Ittner | Jan 1978 | A |
4145877 | Montgomery | Mar 1979 | A |
4278220 | Johnston et al. | Jul 1981 | A |
4373328 | Jones | Feb 1983 | A |
4731991 | Newton | Mar 1988 | A |
4778110 | Sankey et al. | Oct 1988 | A |
5090197 | Dubois | Feb 1992 | A |
5507143 | Luttgeharm et al. | Apr 1996 | A |
6170253 | Newton | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6434927 | Stretton | Aug 2002 | B1 |
6557338 | Holme et al. | May 2003 | B2 |
6584763 | Lymons et al. | Jul 2003 | B2 |
20030024236 | Lymons et al. | Feb 2003 | A1 |
20030066284 | Chakkera et al. | Apr 2003 | A1 |
20040231317 | Dehu et al. | Nov 2004 | A1 |
20070283679 | Pesyna et al. | Dec 2007 | A1 |
20080072571 | Beardsley et al. | Mar 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2 096 650 | Feb 1972 | FR |
WO 9424430 | Oct 1994 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060005530 A1 | Jan 2006 | US |