The present invention relates generally to aircraft gas turbine engines with thrust augmenting afterburners and, more specifically, afterburners and trapped vortex cavities.
High performance military aircraft typically include a turbofan gas turbine engine having an afterburner or augmentor for providing additional thrust when desired particularly for supersonic flight. The turbofan engine includes in downstream serial flow communication, a multistage fan, a multistage compressor, a combustor, a high pressure turbine powering the compressor, and a low pressure turbine powering the fan. A bypass duct surrounds and allows a portion of the fan air to bypass the multistage compressor, combustor, high pressure, and low pressure turbine.
During operation, air is compressed in turn through the fan and compressor and mixed with fuel in the combustor and ignited for generating hot combustion gases which flow downstream through the turbine stages which extract energy therefrom. The hot core gases are then discharged into an exhaust section of the engine which includes an afterburner from which they are discharged from the engine through a variable area exhaust nozzle.
Afterburners are located in exhaust sections of engines which includes an exhaust casing and an exhaust liner circumscribing a combustion zone. Fuel injectors (such as spraybars) and flameholders are mounted between the turbines and the exhaust liner for injecting additional fuel when desired during reheat operation for burning in the afterburner for producing additional thrust. Thrust augmentation or reheat using such fuel injection is referred to as wet operation while operating dry refers to not using the thrust augmentation. The annular bypass duct extends from the fan to the afterburner for bypassing a portion of the fan air around the core engine to the afterburner. This bypass air is mixed with the core gases and fuel from the spraybars prior and ignited and combusted prior to discharge through the exhaust nozzle. The bypass air is also used in part for cooling the exhaust liner.
Various types of flameholders are known and provide local low velocity recirculation and stagnation regions therebehind, in regions of otherwise high velocity core gases, for sustaining and stabilizing combustion during reheat operation. Since the core gases are the product of combustion in the core engine, they are initially hot, and are further heated when burned with the bypass air and additional fuel during reheat operation. Augmentors currently are used to maximize thrust increases and tend to be full stream and consume all available oxygen in the combustion process yielding high augmentation ratios for example about 70%.
Augmentors are generally heavy, include many parts such as the flameholders and fuel injectors, and are inefficient if used as a partial reheat situation such in engines that operate at subsonic flight speeds only even when operating wet. The flameholders and spraybars extend into the nozzle's flowpath thus causing a loss of performance particularly during dry operation of the engine.
It is, therefore, highly desirable to have an afterburner which does not use spraybars and flameholders and operates efficiently if used as a partial reheater. It is also highly desirable to have an afterburner which has better performance characteristics than previous augmentors.
A turbofan gas turbine engine afterburner includes one or more trapped vortex cavity stages for injecting a fuel/air mixture into a combustion zone and is operable to provide all thrust augmenting fuel used for engine thrust augmentation. Each trapped vortex cavity stage has at least one annular trapped vortex cavity. The trapped vortex cavity afterburner may be a multi-stage afterburner having two or more trapped vortex cavity stages operably ganged for simultaneous ignition or operable for sequential ignition. One embodiment of the annular trapped vortex cavity is operable to raise a temperature of an exhaust gas flow through the afterburner about 100 to 200 degrees Fahrenheit. Each of the trapped vortex cavity stages may be operable to produce a single or a different amount of temperature rise in the exhaust gas flow flowing through the afterburner. The trapped vortex cavity may be chevron shaped and have zig-zag shaped leading and trailing edges.
The trapped vortex cavity afterburner may be incorporated in a turbofan gas turbine engine having a fan section upstream of a core engine, an exhaust combustion zone downstream of the core engine, and an annular bypass duct circumscribing the core engine. The trapped vortex cavity afterburner and its one or more trapped vortex cavity stages are operably positioned for injecting a fuel/air mixture into the combustion zone. The trapped vortex cavity afterburner is operable to provide all thrust augmenting fuel used for engine thrust augmentation.
The foregoing aspects and other features of the invention are explained in the following description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings where:
Illustrated in
Engine air 25 enters the engine through an engine inlet 11 and is initially pressurized as it flows downstream through the fan section 14. A splitter 37 splits the engine air 25 into an inner portion thereof referred to as core engine air 3 which flows through the high pressure compressor 16 for further compression and an outer portion thereof referred to as bypass air 26 which bypasses the core engine 13 and flows through the bypass duct 24. The core engine air 3 is suitably mixed with fuel by fuel injectors 32 and carburetors in the main combustor 18 and ignited for generating hot combustion gases which flow through the turbines 20, 22 and are discharged therefrom as core gases 28 into a diffuser duct 33 aft and downstream of the turbines 20, 22 in the engine 10.
Referring to
The exhaust section 126 includes an annular exhaust casing 36 disposed coaxially with and suitably attached to the corresponding engine casing 21 and surrounding an exhaust flowpath 128. Mounted to the aft end of the exhaust casing 36 is a conventional variable area converging-diverging exhaust nozzle 38 through which the bypass air 26 and core gases 28 are discharged during operation. The exhaust section 126 further includes an annular exhaust combustion liner 40 spaced radially inwardly from the exhaust casing 36 to define therebetween an annular cooling duct 42 disposed in flow communication with the bypass duct 24 for receiving therefrom a portion of the bypass air 26. The exhaust section 126 of the engine is by definition located aft of the turbines.
An exhaust section combustion zone 44 within the exhaust flowpath 128 is located radially inwardly from the exhaust liner 40 and the bypass duct 24 and downstream or aft of the core engine 13 and the low pressure turbine 22. An annular radially outer diffuser wall 46 is circumscribed around the diffuser duct 33 and is axially spaced apart from a forward end 35 of the combustion liner 40 inside the casing 36. Thus, the combustion zone 44 located radially inwardly from the bypass duct 24 and downstream and aft of the mixer 31 and bypass duct outlet 27. The diffuser wall 46 also defines an annular inner inlet 49 for passing the core gases 28 from the core outlet 30 into the combustion zone 44.
As illustrated in
Referring to
The fuel/air mixture is 53 ignited by an igniter 98 and the resulting flame is stabilized by the action of the annular trapped vortex cavity 50. The trapped vortex cavity 50 is utilized to produce an annular rotating vortex 41 of the fuel/air mixture more particularly illustrated in
Referring more particularly to
The circumferentially disposed annular trapped vortex cavity 50, faces radially inwardly towards the centerline axis 12 in the combustion zone 44 so as to be in direct unobstructed fluid communication with the combustion zone 44. The annular trapped vortex cavity 50 is located aft and downstream of the mixer 31 at a radially outer portion 122 of the combustion zone 44 for maximizing flame ignition and stabilization in the combustion zone 44 during thrust augmentation or reheat. Fuel may be introduced into the trapped vortex cavity 50 at one or more locations. Illustrated in
Illustrated in
Illustrated in
One particular application of the trapped vortex cavity afterburner 34 is in a single expansion ramp nozzle 300 (SERN) illustrated in
The trapped vortex cavity afterburner 34 illustrated in
An exemplary embodiment of the trapped vortex cavity afterburner 34 is designed to raise the temperature of the exhaust gas flow 43 in the exhaust section 126 by about 100 degrees Fahrenheit for each stage of the trapped vortex cavity 50 incorporated in the trapped vortex cavity afterburner 34. The stages of the trapped vortex cavity 50 in the multi-stage afterburners 104 can be initiated simultaneously or individually. Each of the trapped vortex cavity stages 52 may be operable to produce the same amount of additional thrust or temperature rise in the exhaust gas flow 43 flowing through the afterburner or different amounts. One embodiment of the trapped vortex cavity afterburner 34 may have five stages of trapped vortex cavities 50 wherein each stage is operable to produce a temperature rise of 150 degrees F. in the exhaust gas flow 43 through the afterburner. The stages of trapped vortex cavities 50 may be ganged and ignited simultaneously or sequentially one or more at a time such that varying amounts of reheat are produced. Another embodiment of the trapped vortex cavity afterburner 34 may have three stages of trapped vortex cavities 50 wherein each stage is operable to produce a different temperature rise, for example 150, 250, and 350 degrees F. in the exhaust gas flow 43. The stages of trapped vortex cavities 50 may be ganged and ignited simultaneously or sequentially one or more at a time such that varying amounts of reheat are produced.
The trapped vortex cavity afterburner 34 illustrated in
Though the trapped vortex cavity afterburner 34 is illustrated in-the exhaust section 126 of an exemplary medium bypass ratio turbofan gas turbine engine 10, it may be used in various other types of gas turbine engines such as a turbojet. When the trapped vortex cavity afterburner is used in a turbojet, exhaust flow from the turbines contain oxygen to be used for combustion by the afterburner. Compressor air may be flowed to the afterburner of the turbojet in order to have more oxygen for combustion.
The trapped vortex cavity afterburner 34 provides a thrust augmentation system that is inexpensive to manufacture and produce, and has the performance to meet the requirements of low levels of thrust augmentation or reheat. In an exemplary embodiment of the engine, each stage of the augmentor would produce approximately 150 degrees F. of temperature rise. The trapped vortex cavity afterburner 34 is probably capable of providing a heat or temperature rise or temperature rise of about of 100 to 200 degrees Fahrenheit for each stage containing a single annular trapped vortex cavity 50. The trapped vortex cavity afterburner 34 has no need for instream flameholders and development cost, acquisition cost, and maintenance costs would be low. The trapped vortex cavity afterburner 34 provides improved dry performance because there are no flameholders to reduce nozzle performance. The trapped vortex cavity afterburner 34 decreases the weight of the engine compared to one with conventional afterburners.
The trapped vortex cavity afterburner 34 may be used for various flight conditions calling for an additional amount of thrust for a short period of time. Takeoff and flight maneuvers are two examples of these flight conditions. The trapped vortex cavity afterburner 34 can be used to get overcome transonic drag rise as the engine propels an aircraft through transonic flight to supersonic flight where drag decreases and dry operation of the engine may be resumed.
While there have been described herein what are considered to be preferred and exemplary embodiments of the present invention, other modifications of the invention shall be apparent to those skilled in the art from the teachings herein, and it is, therefore, desired to be secured in the appended claims all such modifications as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
Accordingly, what is desired to be secured by Letters Patent of the United States is the invention as defined and differentiated in the following claims: