This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from British Patent Application Number 1619092.8 filed 11 Nov. 2016, the entire contents of which are incorporated by reference.
The disclosure relates to a method of treating an article which tapers towards an edge, and a treated article.
Metal articles may be susceptible to damage from external impacts and fatigue. For example, a metal blade or aerofoil for a gas turbine, may be susceptible to foreign object damage (FOD) or fatigue, which may promote crack growth. A metal article may be particularly susceptible to crack growth from an edge.
It is known to treat a region of an article to generate compressive residual stress to inhibit crack growth. Previously considered treatments are not suitable for an edge of a tapered article as they may result in excessive deformation of the edge, and because tool access to the edge may not be practical.
According to a first aspect there is provided a method of treating a metal article which tapers towards an edge comprising applying a compressive force to a treatment region of the article to generate an edge region of compressive residual stress adjacent the edge; wherein the treatment region is spaced apart from the edge region by an intermediate region.
The intermediate region may be part of an untreated region including both the intermediate region and the edge region. In other words, the treatment region is treated by the application of the compressive force, whereas the compressive force is not applied in the intermediate region and the edge region such that they are untreated. The intermediate region may therefore be referred to as an intermediate untreated region. The intermediate region and the edge region may be subject to other treatments (such as heat treatments and conventional surface finishing), but may not be treated by the application of compressive force to generate compressive residual stress in the edge region.
Applying the compressive force to the treatment region may generate a region of tensile residual stress in the intermediate region between the treatment region and the edge region. It will be appreciated that the tensile residual stress may be generated in a sub-region of the intermediate region. In other words, the region of tensile residual stress may be a sub-region of the intermediate region.
The treatment region may be spaced apart from the edge by at least 2.5 mm along a direction perpendicular to the edge. In other words, a boundary between the intermediate region and the treatment region may be separated from the edge by at least 2.5 mm along a direction perpendicular to the edge (i.e. the untreated region may extend at least 2.5 mm away from the edge along a direction perpendicular to the edge).
The article may have opposing surfaces which taper towards the edge. A separation between the surfaces may define a thickness of the article. The maximum thickness may vary along the edge, and may be the maximum thickness of the article along a direction perpendicular to the edge.
When the article comprises an aerofoil having a camber line, the maximum thickness in a respective chord-wise section of the aerofoil may be a maximum distance between opposing surfaces perpendicular to the camber line. The chord-wise section of the aerofoil may correspond to a portion of the edge and may therefore vary along the edge.
The method may comprising deep rolling to apply the compressive force. The method may comprise shot peening to apply the compressive force.
Applying the compressive force (i.e. by deep cold rolling) may comprise moving a roller element along a movement path having a plurality of path sections traversing back and forth over the treatment region along a principal direction substantially perpendicular to the edge. When the article comprises an aerofoil, the principal direction may be a chord-wise direction or may be substantially parallel with a chord of the aerofoil.
At each point along the movement path there may be a respective contact area over which the roller element contacts the treatment region. The compressive force may be applied so that each path section of the movement path has a contact pathway defined by the contact areas along the respective path section, which contact pathway overlaps with a contact pathway of an adjacent path section.
The compressive force may be applied so that a width of the contact pathway is substantially equal to twice the separation between adjacent path sections. Accordingly, each portion of the treatment region between adjacent path sections may be rolled twice. The separation between the adjacent path sections may be the separation between the centrelines of the respective path sections.
The article may comprise opposing surfaces which taper towards the edge. Compressive force may be applied simultaneously to corresponding opposing treatment regions. For example, roller (axially-extending) or ball (spherical) elements may be coupled to a calliper tool extending around the article and configured to compress the article between the elements.
The article may comprise an aerofoil defining the edge. The edge may be a leading edge of the aerofoil. Accordingly, the edge region of compressive stress may be generated adjacent the leading edge. Additionally or alternatively, an edge region of compressive stress may be generated adjacent a trailing edge of the aerofoil by treatment of a corresponding treatment region spaced apart from the trailing edge by a corresponding intermediate region.
The article may be an element for forming the leading edge of a composite fan blade having a composite body.
According to a second aspect there is provided a metal article which tapers towards an edge, the article comprising: a treated region of compressive residual stress; and an edge region of compressive residual stress adjacent the edge; wherein the treatment region is spaced apart from the edge region by an intermediate region.
The intermediate region may comprise a region of tensile residual stress.
The treated region may be spaced apart from the edge by at least 2.5 mm along a direction perpendicular to the edge.
The article may comprise an aerofoil defining the edge. The edge may be a leading edge of the aerofoil. The article may be selected from the group consisting of a compressor blade, turbine blade, fan blade, propeller blade.
The article may be an element for forming the leading edge or trailing edge of a composite fan blade having a composite body.
The skilled person will appreciate that except where mutually exclusive, a feature described in relation to any one of the above aspects may be applied mutatis mutandis to any other aspect. Furthermore except where mutually exclusive any feature described herein may be applied to any aspect and/or combined with any other feature described herein.
The disclosure will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In this example, the compressor blade 10 is symmetrical, but other example blades may by non-symmetrical. The compressor blade has opposing aerodynamic surfaces 22, 24 extending between the leading edge 18 and trailing edge 20. The surfaces 22, 24 taper towards each of the leading edge 18 and the trailing edge 20 respectively.
In the following description, the terms leading edge and trailing edge are intended to take the standard meaning in the art. In particular, the leading edge is considered to be the foremost part of an aerofoil, whereas the trailing edge is the rearmost part. In this example, the leading edge 18 and trailing edge 20 are the forward and rear edges of the aerofoil to which the respective surfaces 18, 20 taper (i.e. the thinnest part towards the respective edge region along a direction perpendicular to the camber line of the aerofoil).
In this example, the compressor blade is an integral body comprising a titanium alloy, such as Ti-6Al-4V, but in other examples, a blade may comprise any other suitable material, such as nickel-based alloys including Inconel® 718, Udimet 718 and RR1000, and titanium-based alloys such as Ti6246.
As shown in
A further limitation in treating this region relates to tool access to the region adjacent the leading edge 18. One technique of plastically deforming a surface is by the application of opposing rollers or burnishing balls to the surface. It will be appreciated that such rollers or balls engage a surface at a tangent to the surface. Owing to the curvature in the tapering region towards an edge, such rollers or balls contact each other before reaching the extreme edge, thereby limiting tool access to a region adjacent such an edge. In previously considered methods, the inaccessible region may extend approximately 0.3 mm away from the edge.
Treatment of the treatment region 32 generates tensile residual stress in a tension region 34 extending from the leading edge 18 to the treatment region 32.
As shown in
A treatment region 42 spaced apart from the leading edge 18 is treated to plastically deform the aerodynamic surface 22 in the treatment region 42, thereby generating compressive residual stress in the treatment region 42. In this example, compressive force is applied to the treatment region 42 by deep cold rolling, for example with a burnishing ball as will be described in detail below, although other suitable techniques may be used. The treatment region 42 is spaced apart from the leading edge 18 along a direction perpendicular to the leading edge 18.
An untreated region 43 extends from the leading edge 18 to the treatment region 42 along a direction substantially perpendicular to the edge. Unlike the treatment region 42, the untreated region 43 is not treated with compressive force to generate compressive residual stress within the same region.
The application of compressive force in the treatment region 42 of the tapering metal article results in the generation of a further region of compressive residual stress adjacent the leading edge 18, which region is referred to herein as the edge region 44. The edge region 44 of compressive residual stress is separated from the treatment region 42 by an intermediate region 45.
In this example, the application of compressive force in the treatment region 42 further results in the generation of a tensile region 46 (i.e. a region of tensile residual stress) within the intermediate region 45 that separates the edge region 44 and the treatment region 42.
Accordingly, compressive residual stress is generated in the edge region 44 adjacent the leading edge 18 without the direct application of compressive force to plastically deform the edge region. In contrast, the applicant has determined that, in a tapering metal article, compressive residual stress can be generated in an edge region 44 adjacent an edge 18 by the application of compressive force in a treatment region 42 separated from the edge region by an intermediate region 45. In this example, the intermediate region 45 (like the edge region 44) is untreated, and contains a tensile region 46 of tensile residual stress.
It will be appreciated that in other examples the particular shapes of the edge region 44 of compressive residual stress and the tensile region 46 may be different; for example such shapes may depend on both the shape of the treatment region 42 and the compressive force treatment applied to it, and the geometry of the tapering blade.
In some examples, there may be a region of tensile residual stress adjacent the edge region 44 with respect to the span-wise direction and adjacent the leading edge 18. There may be two such regions at each span-wise end of the edge region 44.
In this example, the treatment region 42 and the untreated region are substantially mirrored on opposing surfaces 22, 24 of the blade. As shown in
Whilst
Further residual stress values corresponding to selected zones or regions in the cross-section of
As shown in
In some examples, the residual stress value may be directional. In this example, the residual stress values and relative definitions referred to in the above description relate to the residual stress along the span-wise axis of the blade. The applicant has found that it may be beneficial to maximise compressive residual stress along a direction substantially parallel with a respective edge (in this example, the span-wise direction) to resist crack opening.
In this example, residual stress values are obtained by finite element analysis (FEA) and may be calibrated by empirical testing, for example using digital image correlation and/or focused ion beam analysis, as is known in the art.
The particular values described above relate to an example compressor blade 40 having a symmetrical elliptical profile having a chord-wise extent of approximately 40 mm, a maximum thickness of 2 mm, and a span-wise extent of 50 mm. In this example, the treatment region has a span-wise extent of approximately 10 mm and a chord-wise extent of approximately 5 mm. The chord-wise separation between the leading edge and the centre of the treatment region is approximately 5.0 mm (between 2.5 mm and 7.5 mm from the tip, in this example). The edge region of compressive residual stress has a chord-wise extent of approximately 1.5 mm. The region of tensile residual stress is contiguous with the edge region and extends towards the treatment region.
However, it will be appreciated that the disclosure applies to blades and metal articles of other geometries which taper towards an edge.
In particular, in other examples the separation (or offset distance) between the treatment region 42 and the leading edge 18 may be greater or less. For example, the chord-wise separation distance between the leading edge 18 and the treatment region may be at least 2.5 mm, for example 5 mm, 7.5 mm or 10 mm. Geometric parameters, such as at least the span, chord, thickness shape and material may vary between example articles to which the treatment method can be applied.
A particular method of applying compressive force to the treatment region 42 will now be described with respect to
As will be appreciated, the burnishing ball has a contact area (rather than merely a contact point along the movement path 90) over which it contacts the surface 22 of the article within the treatment region 42 to plastically deform it. The contact area may depend on the force applied, material properties of the burnishing ball and the article, and may be determined using numerical simulation, for example by static or dynamic FEA.
An example burnishing ball may be between 5 and 15 mm in diameter, for example. An example compressive force loading through the burning ball may be between 30 and 60 MPa, for example. An example burnishing ball may comprise a high strength material, such as tungsten carbide.
In the context of a rotary machine such as a gas turbine, it will be appreciated that the span-wise axis may substantially correspond to a radial axis of the rotary machine (i.e. a radial axis extending orthogonally from an axis of rotation).
Although an example of the disclosure has been described with respect to a metal article which comprises an aerofoil, in particular a compressor blade, it will be appreciated that the disclosure applies equally to other aerofoils and indeed other metal components. For example, the disclosure may be embodied by any type of metal member or aerofoil, such as fan blades and turbine blades.
Whilst the expressions “chord-wise” and “span-wise” have been used in the above description in the context of a metal article comprising an aerofoil, in the context of non-aerofoil examples to which the disclosure applies, such terms can be interpreted as follows. In the context of a non-aerofoil component, references above to “chord-wise” can be interpreted to mean a longitudinal direction extending substantially perpendicular to the edge (i.e. the edge towards which the article tapers and where compressive stress is to be generated without direct application of force). For example, the longitudinal direction may extend from the edge to an opposing edge. In the context of a non-aerofoil component, references above to “span-wise” can be interpreted to mean a direction extending substantially parallel with the respective edge. These interpretations also apply to aerofoil components.
Whilst the disclosure has been described with respect to a particular treatment technique for the generation of residual stresses (deep cold rolling), it will be appreciated that other treatment techniques may be used, such as high intensity shot peening.
The terms “treated region” and “treatment region” may be used interchangeably with respect to an article that has been treated.
It will be understood that the disclosure is not limited to the embodiments above-described and various modifications and improvements can be made without departing from the concepts described herein. Except where mutually exclusive, any of the features may be employed separately or in combination with any other features and the disclosure extends to and includes all combinations and sub-combinations of one or more features described herein.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1619092.8 | Nov 2016 | GB | national |