This invention is directed generally to gas turbine engines, and more particularly to internal cooling systems for airfoils in gas turbine engines.
Typically, gas turbine engines include a compressor for compressing air, a combustor for mixing the compressed air with fuel and igniting the mixture, and a turbine blade assembly for producing power. Typical turbine combustor configurations expose turbine vane and blade assemblies to high temperatures. As a result, turbine vanes and blades must be made of materials capable of withstanding such high temperatures, or must include cooling features to enable the component to survive in an environment which exceeds the capability of the material. Turbine engines typically include a plurality of rows of stationary turbine vanes extending radially inward from a shell and include a plurality of rows of rotatable turbine blades attached to a rotor assembly for turning the rotor.
Typically, the turbine blades and vanes are exposed to high temperature combustor gases that heat the airfoil. These airfoils include internal cooling systems for reducing the temperature of the airfoils. One of the internal cooling systems is described as near-wall cooling. In near-wall cooling, the internal cooling flow is directed to the vicinity near the wall to be cooled. Some airfoils include a four wall design forming near-wall cooling channels. Cooling air is passed through the near-wall cooling channels to cool the outer wall. However, the four wall design has an inherent structural problem due to the significant differences in operating temperatures between the outer and inner walls. The outer walls will operate at significantly higher temperatures than the inner walls because the outer walls are subjected to the hot gas path air whereas the inner walls are not contacted by the hot gas path air and operate near the temperature of the cooling air. This difference in operating temperature between the inner and outer walls creates high thermally induced stress in the walls and can greatly limit the life of the airfoils. In addition, forming complex cores required for multiwall definition in turbine airfoils formed by investment casting is challenging. Thus, a need exists for reducing thermal stress between the outer and inner walls of near-walled cooled gas turbine airfoils and overcoming the challenges in creating complex cooling systems.
A turbine airfoil with an internal cooling system having one or more bladders forming near-wall cooling channels is disclosed. The bladder may be conformed to a shape of an inner surface forming a cavity within the internal cooling system. One or more standoff ribs may extend radially inward from the inner surface forming the cavity to maintain the bladder in position off of the inner surface so that the near-wall cooling channel is formed between the bladder and the inner surface. The near-wall cooling channel may be formed by inserting a bladder into the cavity in a first insertable position and expanding the bladder into a second expanded position. In at least one embodiment, the chamber formed by the bladder may be dead space that does not contain cooling fluids as a part of the cooling system.
In at least one embodiment, the turbine airfoil may be formed from a generally elongated hollow airfoil formed from an outer wall, and having a leading edge, a trailing edge, a pressure side, a suction side, and a cooling system positioned within interior aspects of the generally elongated hollow airfoil and formed by at least one cavity. The turbine airfoil may include one or more bladders positioned within one or more cavities of the cooling system. The bladder may form one or more near-wall cooling channels between an outer surface of the bladder and an inner surface forming the cavity of the cooling system. The bladder may be formed from a continuous, nonlinear wall. In at least one embodiment, the bladder may define an internal chamber that is a dead space. The bladder may define a sealed internal chamber not in fluid communication with the cooling system such that cooling fluids cannot be exchanged with between the sealed internal chamber and the cooling system. In other embodiments, the cooling system may be configured to control or limit the flow of cooling fluids into an internal chamber of the bladder.
The turbine airfoil may further include one or more standoff ribs extending from the inner surface forming the cavity of the cooling system and into contact with the bladder. In particular, a first section of the at least one bladder laterally adjacent to a portion of the bladder in contact with a tip of the standoff rib may be positioned closer to the inner surface forming the cavity of the cooling system than the tip of the standoff rib. A second section of the bladder may be positioned on an opposite side of the standoff rib from the first section, wherein the second section of the bladder laterally adjacent to a portion of the bladder in contact with a tip of the standoff rib may be positioned closer to the inner surface forming the cavity of the cooling system than the tip of the standoff rib. In at least one embodiment, the standoff rib may include a plurality of standoff ribs extending from the inner surface forming the cavity of the cooling system and into contact with the bladder. The bladder between two adjacent standoff ribs may be curved from a tip of a first standoff rib toward the inner surface forming the cavity of the cooling system to an outermost point and may be curved away from the inner surface forming the cavity of the cooling system and from the outermost point to a tip of a second standoff rib. In an embodiment of the turbine airfoil with a plurality of standoff ribs, the bladder extending between each of the plurality of standoff ribs may be curved from a tip of a first standoff rib toward the inner surface forming the cavity of the cooling system to an outermost point and may be curved away from the inner surface forming the cavity of the cooling system and from the outermost point to a tip of a second standoff rib.
In at least one embodiment, the standoff ribs may be positioned to direct cooling fluids within the near-wall cooling channels. The plurality of standoff ribs may be formed from a plurality of serpentine shaped ribs extending spanwise and may be offset chordwise from each other. The plurality of standoff ribs may be positioned nonparallel and nonorthogonal with a spanwise extending direction and may be formed into chordwise extending rows.
The bladder may be formed from a material that is different from a material forming the outer wall of the generally elongated hollow airfoil. In at least one embodiment, the bladder may be formed from a material having greater plasticity than the material forming the outer wall of the generally elongated hollow airfoil. In at least one embodiment, the bladder may be formed from a first section having a first thickness and a second section having a second thickness that is greater the first section. The first section may be formed from a material having a tapered thickness.
The airfoil may be formed from a method including positioning a generally elongated hollow airfoil formed from an outer wall, and having a leading edge, a trailing edge, a pressure side, a suction side, and a cooling system positioned within interior aspects of the generally elongated hollow airfoil and formed by at least one cavity. The method may include inserting one or more bladders within the cavity of the cooling system, wherein the bladder forms at least one near-wall cooling channel between an outer surface of the bladder and an inner surface forming the cavity of the cooling system. The method may also include expanding the bladder from a first insertable position to a second expanded position within the cavity in the cooling system, wherein the second expanded position of the bladder has a larger volume than a volume of the bladder in the first insertable position.
In at least one embodiment, expanding the bladder from a first insertable position to a second expanded position within the cavity in the cooling system may cause the bladder to become locked in place within the cavity in the cooling system. Expanding the bladder from a first insertable position to a second expanded position within the cavity in the cooling system may include applying pressure within the bladder to expand the bladder from the first insertable position to the second expanded position. In another embodiment, expanding the bladder from a first insertable position to a second expanded position within the cavity in the cooling system may include evacuating the near-wall cooling channel between the outer surface of the bladder and the inner surface forming the cavity of the cooling system to expand the bladder from the first insertable position to the second expanded position. Expanding the bladder from a first insertable position to a second expanded position within the cavity in the cooling system may further include heating the bladder to expand the bladder and to deform the bladder partially about at least one standoff rib extending from the inner surface forming the cavity to lock the bladder within the cavity forming the cooling system.
The method may also include pretreating an outer surface of the bladder with a metal braze so that the bladder is joined to metal contacting the bladder after the bladder has been expanded. The step of pretreating an outer surface of the bladder may also include pretreating the outer surface of the bladder with a foil that may chemically bond the bladder wall to rib surfaces to ensure a seamless and continuous joint, which may be required for heat transfer.
An advantage of the internal cooling system is that the internal bladder may be created in a very simple process that is better suited for complex cooling configurations than conventional investment casting.
These and other embodiments are described in more detail below.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and form a part of the specification, illustrate embodiments of the presently disclosed invention and, together with the description, disclose the principles of the invention.
As shown in
In at least one embodiment, the turbine airfoil 10 may be formed from a generally elongated hollow airfoil 30 formed from an outer wall 32, and having a leading edge 34, a trailing edge 36, a pressure side 38, a suction side 40, and the cooling system 12 positioned within interior aspects of the generally elongated hollow airfoil 30 and formed by one or more cavities 18. The airfoil 30 may have any conventional shape and configuration or heretofore yet to be conceived shapes and configurations. The airfoil 30 may or may not include a platform 48 with aspects of the cooling system 12. One or more bladders 14 may be positioned within the cavity 18 of the cooling system 12. The bladder 14 may form one or more near-wall cooling channels 16 between an outer surface 42 of the bladder 14 and an inner surface 44 forming the cavity 18 of the cooling system 12.
The bladder 14 may be formed from a continuous, nonlinear wall 46. The bladder 14 may be formed from a material that is different from a material forming the outer wall 32 of the generally elongated hollow airfoil 30. The bladder 14 may be formed from a material that is different from a material forming the inner surface 44 of the cavity 18 forming at least a portion of the cooling system 12. The bladder 14 may be formed from a material having greater plasticity than the material forming the outer wall 32 of the generally elongated hollow airfoil 30 or forming the inner surface 44 of the cavity 18 forming at least a portion of the cooling system 12. The material forming the bladder 14 may have a large plastic deformation range such that the material can be plastically deformed without fracture. In at least one embodiment, as shown in
The bladder 14 may define an internal chamber 26 that is a dead space. In particular, the bladder 14 may be sealed and not in fluid communication with the cooling system 12. As such, cooling fluids from the cooling system 12 do not flow into the bladder 14. The bladder 14 may define a sealed internal chamber 26 not in fluid communication with the cooling system 21 such that cooling fluids cannot be exchanged with between the sealed internal chamber 26 and the cooling system 12.
The cooling system 12 may include one or more standoff ribs 20 extending from the inner surface 44 forming the cavity 18 of the cooling system 12 and into contact with the bladder 14. The standoff ribs 20 may have consistent cross-sections. The standoff ribs 20 may also include tips 58 configured to contact the expanded bladder 14 and to prevent the bladder 14 from being punctured. In at least one embodiment, the standoff ribs 20 may include one or more protection members 96 attached to the tips 58 of the standoff ribs 20. In at least one embodiment, the protection members 96 may be one or more side arms 98, as shown in
In at least one embodiment, the cooling system 12 may include a plurality of standoff ribs 20 extending from the inner surface 44 forming the cavity 18 of the cooling system 12 and into contact with the bladder 14. The bladder 14 between two adjacent standoff ribs 20 may be curved from a tip 58 of a first standoff rib 66 toward the inner surface 44 forming the cavity 18 of the cooling system 12 to an outermost point 68 and is curved away from the inner surface 44 forming the cavity 18 of the cooling system 12 and from the outermost point 68 to a tip 58 of a second standoff rib 70. For the plurality of standoff ribs 20, the bladder 14 extending between each of the plurality of standoff ribs 20 may be curved from a tip 58 of a first standoff rib 66 toward the inner surface 44 forming the cavity 18 of the cooling system 12 to an outermost point 68 and may be curved away from the inner surface 44 forming the cavity 18 of the cooling system 12 and from the outermost point 68 to a tip 58 of a second standoff rib 70. The plurality of standoff ribs 20 may be formed from a plurality of serpentine shaped ribs 20 extending in a spanwise direction 72 and offset chordwise from each other, as shown in
The generally elongated airfoil 30, as shown in
The turbine airfoil 10 may be configured to be super plastically deformed to form patterns of near-wall cooling channels 16 without damaging or distorting the airfoil 30. The standoff ribs 20 may be positioned to control bladder expansion. The bladder 14 in the first insertable position 22, as shown in
The turbine airfoil may be formed via a method 80, as shown in
In at least one embodiment, expanding at 86 the bladder 14 from a first insertable position 22 to a second expanded position 24 within the cavity 18 in the cooling system 12 may cause the bladder 14 to become locked in place within the cavity 18 in the cooling system 12. When the bladder 14 is locked in place, movement of the bladder 14 is substantially limited. The method 80 may also include pretreating at 88 an outer surface 42 of the bladder 14 with a metal braze so that the bladder 14 may be joined to metal contacting the bladder 14 after the bladder 14 has been expanded. The metal that the bladder 14 contacts may be the inner surface 44 forming the cavity 18. In at least one embodiment, the inner surface 44 may be an inner surface 44 of the outer wall 32 forming the generally elongated hollow airfoil 30. In other embodiments, the inner surface 44 of the cavity 18 may be an inner surface 44 of internal ribs or other components of the airfoil 30, such as, but not limited to, the platform 48, as shown in
Expanding at 86 the bladder 14 from a first insertable position 22 to a second expanded position 24 within the cavity 18 in the cooling system 12 comprises applying pressure within the bladder 14 to expand the bladder 14 from the first insertable position 22 to the second expanded position 24. The process of applying pressure within the bladder 14 to expand the bladder 14 may occur from an explosion, blow forming or any other appropriate method. Use of an explosive to create an explosion within the bladder 14 will instantaneously form the bladder to the standoff ribs 20. The process of applying pressure within the bladder 14 to expand the bladder 14 may include super plastically forming the bladder 14 to contact the support ribs 20. Such a process may require coupling of the bladder 12 to a pressure system (not shown) for pressurization, which may require custom expendable interconnects for coupling the bladder to the pressure system. The expendable interconnects may be truncated, and the bladder 14 sealed after the bladder 14 has been expanded to prevent cooling fluids within the cooling system 12 from flowing into the internal chamber 26 formed within the bladder 14. Expanding at 86 the bladder 14 from a first insertable position 22 to a second expanded position 24 within the cavity 18 in the cooling system 12 may include evacuating the near-wall cooling channel 16 between the outer surface 42 of the bladder 14 and the inner surface 44 forming the cavity 18 of the cooling system 10 to expand the bladder 14 from the first insertable position 22 to the second expanded position 24. Expanding at 86 the bladder 14 from a first insertable position 22 to a second expanded position 24 within the cavity 18 in the cooling system 10 may include heating 90 the bladder 14 to expand the bladder 14 and to deform the bladder 14 partially about one or more standoff ribs 20 extending from the inner surface 44 forming the cavity 18 to lock, mechanically lock or chemically lock, or both, the bladder 14 within the cavity 18 forming the cooling system 12.
The method 80 may also include forming at 92 the bladder 14 via edge bonded sheets, such as via diffusion bonding, are preformed into open bladders capable of further expansion through super plastic forming (SPF). The bladder 14 may be formed from any material having a large deformation range such that the material can be plastically deformed without fracture. The engineered features of the airfoil 30, such as, but not limited to, the outer wall 32 forming the airfoil 30, may be configured to support the airfoil 30, thereby enabling the bladder 14 to be formed from weaker materials and in thinner wall configurations. The bladder 14 typically will not experience high surface temperatures due to the bladder 14 being relatively isolated from the outer wall 32 forming the airfoil 30. As such, lower temperature capable materials may be used. In at least one embodiment, the bladder 14 may be formed from materials such as, but not limited to, materials used in high temperature sheet forming industries, including, but not limited to, nickel chromium based superalloys, such as, but not limited to, INCONEL 718 and titanium based alloys, such as, but not limited to, Ti 6A14V.
The generally elongated hollow airfoil 30 may be formed from an appropriate method of construction or from any appropriate material. In at least one embodiment, the generally elongated hollow airfoil 30 may be formed via casting process with enhanced surface features, such as, but not limited to, standoff ribs 20 including geometric pedestals and the like, on the inner surface of the outer wall 32 forming the generally elongated hollow airfoil 30. The generally elongated hollow airfoil 30 may be formed with open near-wall cooling channels 16. The height, width, geometry and location of the standoff ribs 20 may be customized for desired applications. The protection members 96 may add more control of the super plastically forming bladder during the manufacturing process. The standoff ribs 20 may be positioned anywhere on the inner surface 44. The serpentine shaped ribs 20 shown in
The foregoing is provided for purposes of illustrating, explaining, and describing embodiments of this invention. Modifications and adaptations to these embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art and may be made without departing from the scope or spirit of this invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2015/029673 | 5/7/2015 | WO | 00 |