The present invention relates to the manufacture of components such as metal turbomachine blades having internal cavities of complex geometry, especially those forming cooling circuits, using the technique of lost wax casting. It relates to the tool for molding the casting core for these components.
The manufacture of blades using this technique starts with the production of a pattern, made of wax or another equivalent temporary material, which comprises an internal component forming a casting core and corresponding to the cavities in the blade. To form the pattern, a wax injection mold is used in which the core is placed and wax injected thereinto. The wax pattern obtained is then dipped several times in slips consisting of a suspension of ceramic particles in order to produce a shell mold. The wax is removed and the shell mold fired. The blade is obtained by pouring a molten metal into the shell mold, said metal occupying the voids between the inner wall of the shell mold and the core. Thanks to an appropriate seal or selector and controlled cooling, the metal solidifies in the desired structure. Depending on the nature of the alloy and on the expected properties of the component resulting from the casting operation, this may be directional solidification (DS), with a columnar structure, directional solidification with a single-crystal structure (SX) or equiaxed solidification (EX). The first two families of components relate to superalloys for components subjected to high stresses, both thermal and mechanical, in the turbojet engine, such as the HP turbine blades.
Once the alloy has solidified, the shell and the core are knocked out. This results in the desired blade.
The casting cores used are made of a ceramic with a generally porous structure. They are produced from a mixture consisting of a refractory filler in the form of particles and a relatively complex organic fraction forming a binder. Examples of compositions are given in patents EP 328 452, FR 2 371 257 or FR 1 785 836. As is known, the casting cores are formed by molding in a core box using for example an injection-molding machine. This forming is followed by a binder removal operation during which the organic fraction of the core is removed by means such as sublimation or thermal degradation, depending on the materials used. This results in a porous structure. The core is then consolidated by a heat treatment in an oven. A finishing step may possibly be needed in order to remove and fettle the traces of the parting lines and to obtain the geometry of the core. Abrasive tools are used for this purpose. It may also be necessary to reinforce the core, so that it is not damaged in the subsequent cycles of its use. In this case, the core is impregnated with an organic resin.
The cores of high-pressure turbine blades of a gas turbine engine have a thin trailing edge zone. Moreover, there is a demand for components having ever thinner wall portions or zones. As a result, the filling limits of the mold are often reached and lead to the development of more fluid ceramic slurries or the modification of the injection parameters. In particular, injection flow rates or pressures higher than under the conventional conditions of use for filling the dies of the mold are employed.
However, these techniques have certain limits. The ceramic possesses abrasive properties and the shear stresses generated by the latest, severer filling conditions cause premature wear of the thin zones of the tools, resulting in an increase in the number of production stoppages and in the cost of maintaining the tools. Furthermore, the demolding operation may result in the deformation of the core when the slurry is infiltrated into the mechanisms of the core box. Thus, these core filling and demolding conditions in the core box are the source of indications of the crack and burr type which result in large quantities of cores being scrapped after they have been ejected and checked. The defects may also be revealed only after the binder-removal/firing heat treatment.
To improve the quality of filling the die, the present Applicant has proposed in patent application FR 0 651 682 to thicken the teeth of the core in the trailing edge zone and then to machine the thickened teeth so as to return to the required thickness. The teeth denote those parts of the core near the trailing edge which form, after are metal has been cast, the channels for discharging the cooling air.
Another means of remedying these manufacturing problems is now proposed in accordance with the invention with a tool for manufacturing a casting core, for a turbomachine blade with a leading edge and a trailing edge, the core comprising a thick part on the leading edge side and a thin part on the trailing edge side, the mould comprising first and second dies that can move in a direction one with respect to the other between a molding position and a demolding position, with sub-components that can move relative to the dies. This tool is noteworthy in that the parts of the dies corresponding to said thin part of the core do not include a movable sub-component, mechanical ejectors being provided on one or other of the dies, in such a way that the thin part is demolded along the main direction of opening, after the core has been injected.
The expression “thin zone” is understood to mean one having a thickness e of less than 0.5 mm. Thicknesses as low as 0.1 mm are envisioned.
The two dies can preferably move translationally between the open and closed positions. More particularly, the dies have projecting surface decorations for the formation of cavities in the core.
Optionally, a core blank may possibly be formed in the mold with a zone that is thickened relative to that as designed in the design office and to machine said thickened zone after the blank has been extracted from the mold. The operation of machining the blank may be carried out before or after heat treatment.
The invention also relates to a process for manufacturing a casting core comprising at least one thin zone, in particular a thin trailing edge, especially for a turbomachine blade, comprising the forming, in a suitable tool, of a mixture comprising a charge of ceramic particles and an organic binder, extraction from the mold, removal of the binder and consolidation heat treatment of the core, wherein a core blank with said padding part is formed in said tool and wherein said padding part is machined after the blank has been extracted from the mold, this being before or after the heat treatment operation.
Although those skilled in the art seek to develop materials with a lower viscosity or to modify the injection parameters, in particular the flow rate without forgetting the pressure, it turns out that by reducing the clearances and mechanical deformations of the mold and of the core in the thin zones it is possible for the quality of the core to be appreciably improved. Thanks to the invention, any lengthy and tricky adjustment, both initially and after each cleaning operation, for regulating the movable sub-components and any particular development regarding the wear of the molds is obviated, even with a reduction in the wall thicknesses down to 0.1 mm on the core delivered.
Thanks to the invention, the costs involved in obtaining and operating the core boxes or mold, and consequently the casting cores, are thus reduced. Although the quantity of cores exhibiting indications of the demolding injection crack, firing crack and injection burr type, obtained by injection molding in a mold with a thin trailing edge amounts to several tens of %, the solution enables the better level of quality of the cores to be rapidly obtained, eliminates the burrs associated with the clearance of the sub-components of the core box and reduces the vagaries in the manufacture of cores having thin trailing edges. The intended limit of the thicknesses drops to 0.1 mm.
The material constituting the core preferably comprises 80 to 85% of a mineral filler and 15 to 20% of an organic binder. Advantageously, the composition corresponds to one of those described in the Applicant's patent EP 328 452, in particular the least fluid composition, but also that having the smallest shrinkage variation when mass-producing the cores.
Other features and advantages will become apparent on reading the following description of a method of implementing the process of the invention with reference to the appended drawings in which:
The following description corresponds to the application of the invention to the formation of a casting core for a high-pressure turbine blade in a gas turbine engine for aeronautical or terrestrial use. This example is not limiting.
As may be seen in
When this type of blade is manufactured by casting a molten metal in a shell mold, a core that occupies the voids of the cavities to be formed in the blade must be incorporated into said mold. This core 10, shown schematically in
In particular, it comprises a thin zone 10A1 corresponding to the trailing edge. In the example shown in
It will be recalled that the molds usually consist of two dies—one the lower die and the other the upper die—which are pressed tightly against each other during casting and then separated so as to allow the cast component to be extracted. Unlike other processes in which the mold is lost (sand casting or lost wax casting, etc.), it is imperative to ensure that the injected components do not remain jammed in the dies and that, on the contrary, they can be extracted therefrom without any damage. Surfaces parallel to the extraction direction are avoided—they differ from said extraction direction by an angle called the “taper”, which may vary from 3 to 5 degrees. Certain parts that are difficult to extract require a system of sliding rods called ejectors. Moreover, the geometry of the component to be cast may include reverse tapers and prevent demolding by simply moving the lower and upper die apart in the demolding direction. The dies then include, for these reverse taper parts, movable sub-components arranged so as to ensure demolding.
The usual technique consists in designing the dies of the mold with sub-components 330a and 340a at the trailing edge 10A1 of the core 10 which have a certain mobility, indicated by the arrows F1 and F2. Usually, the number of partitions having the same orientation in the solid part of the core is higher than in the direction of the decorations on the trailing edge. In the prior art, the movable sub-component is therefore reserved for the trailing edge outlets and for direct demolding of the lower and upper dies in the solid part of the core. By means of the invention, the tool is simplified in its critical part at the trailing edge and the movable sub-components are kept in the zones that are thicker and simpler to obtain. The decorations 370a on the sub-components are tapered in the direction of the arrows. They allow the core to be extracted after the material has been injected into the mold.
As explained above, injecting material into this zone 10A1 is more tricky the thinner it is. It is necessary to increase the pressure, but the slurry then gets into the clearances between the movable components more easily. Moreover, the mobility also results in deformations on this part of the core.
The object of the invention is to produce a core comprising thin zones having such a complex structure without in particular these zones deforming during the injection and demolding operations.
Deformations result in the appearance of cracks in the thin zones or burrs in the mechanisms of the core box. The cracks lead to the core being scrapped. The burrs accelerate the wear of the core box and increase the number of production stoppages. Wear of the core box reduces its lifetime.
In accordance with the invention, a modified mold is constructed, that is to say in which certain zones which were movable in the die now become stationary.
Such a mold comprises (
The other part of the core has not been shown. This is thicker and the dies in this part are capable of having movable sub-components. The axis of the decorations 510 is directed along the main direction of opening of the tool, indicated by the arrows F′1 and F′2. The decorations 510 on the trailing edge are demolded thanks to mechanical ejectors 570 sliding along the axis of the arrows, here vertically. These are metal rods that are actuated from outside the mold. They are located in the lower part 530 of the mold.
Preferably, the mold no longer has a hinge, unlike the prior art, (see reference 160 in
To manufacture the core with this tool, the following steps are carried out:
A sufficient number of ejectors is determined, these being distributed so as to ensure a low pressure at their point of contact with the core. This distribution of the total pressure as several low pressures prevents any buckling of the core as it is being ejected. In addition, the ejectors maintain a direction as parallel as possible to the demolding axis.
An example of the distribution of the ejectors and their points of contact with the core is shown in
To manufacture the core, a suitable mixture is produced. This is in particular a mineral filler combined with an organic binder. For example, the mixture is made according to the teaching of patent application EP 328 452. The core has good handleability and its construction allows work to be carried out thereon, by means of a milling cutter, by chip removal or by abrasion.
In the case in which the trailing edge is injected with thickened teeth, as reported in patent application FR 0651682 by the present Applicant, the following step consists in machining, in this blank 10, the thickened zones that are added in the mold.
Once the contours of the core have been completed, where appropriate by machining, before firing, the next treatments, known per se, in the casting core manufacturing process are carried out. As regards the binder removal, that is to say the removal of the organic binder, the core is heated to a temperature high enough to degrade the organic components that it contains. The other steps consist in then heating the core to the temperature for sintering the ceramic particles of which it is composed. If additional consolidation is required, the core is impregnated with an organic resin.
For cores that are machined after firing, these pass directly to the finishing and checking operations.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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07 02640 | Apr 2007 | FR | national |