This patent application is a National Phase of and claims the benefit of priority to Application No. PCT/FR2019/051836, filed on Jul. 24, 2019, which claims priority to FR Application No. 1856858, filed Jul. 24, 2018.
The field of the invention is that of turbine engines and more particularly that of fan blades made of fiber-reinforced organic matrix composite material, the leading edge of which comprises a metallic structural reinforcement, and the present invention relates more particularly to a process for attaching this metallic structural reinforcement to the composite material blade of the blade.
It should be recalled that the leading edge corresponds to the front part of an airfoil that faces the airflow and divides the airflow into a lower airflow and an upper airflow. In contrast, the trailing edge corresponds the rear part of an airfoil where the upper and lower airflows meet.
Turbine engine blades, and in particular fan blades, are subject to considerable stress, in particular mechanical stress. Also, it is known to equip fan blades made of composite material with a metallic structural reinforcement extending over all the height of the airfoil and following the shape of the leading edge, as mentioned in application EP1908919 filed on behalf of the applicant. Such a metallic structural reinforcement protects the composite material blade during an impact of a foreign body on the blower, such as for example a bird, hail or even stones during takeoff or landing.
Conventionally, the metallic structural reinforcement is a titanium alloy metal part made from a preform obtained from a simple metal bar and a succession of forging steps, as described in particular in application FR2961866 also filed on behalf of the applicant, and then bonded to the leading edge of the fan blade using an epoxy adhesive joint the properties at 23° C. of which are as follows: Young's modulus 1 GPa<E<5 GPa; stress at break σb>10 MPa; strain at break εb<10%.
However, these impacts correspond to mechanical loads on the blade and generate, by edge effects, stress concentrations in the adhesive located under the ends of the metallic structural reinforcement that facilitate the initiation of disbonds that will then propagate more widely under the metallic structural reinforcement. These disbonds may also continue to propagate during other impacts or under vibratory fatigue loading causing risks of delamination, fiber breakage or damage by fiber/matrix decohesion.
The damaged fan blade must then be repaired or even replaced during a maintenance operation, which has a major impact on the availability of the aircraft integrating the turbine engine in question.
In this context, the invention aims at compensating for the above-mentioned disadvantages of the current bonded structural reinforcements by proposing a turbine engine blade comprising a metallic structural reinforcement the end disbonds of which are considerably reduced when a foreign body impacts on the fan.
This aim is achieved by means of a turbine engine blade having an aerodynamic surface extending in a first direction between a leading edge and a trailing edge and in a second direction, substantially perpendicular to said first direction, between a blade root and a blade tip, said aerodynamic surface being made of a fiber-reinforced organic matrix composite material, and a metallic structural reinforcement bonded by an adhesive joint to said leading edge whose shape it follows and having over its entire height a substantially V-shaped section with a base extended by two lateral flanks having a thinned profile at free ends directed toward said trailing edge, characterized in that said adhesive joint is locally supplemented under said free ends of said lateral flanks by an elastomeric polymer introduced in the form of solid particles into said adhesive joint and adhered to said aerodynamic surface and/or said free ends of said lateral flanks during a polymerization phase.
Thus, the addition of an elastomeric polymer, by softening the adhesive bond at the ends of the reinforcement, avoids the disbonds linked to the rigid bonds present in the solutions of the prior art.
Advantageously, said elastomeric polymer has the following properties at 23° C.: Young's modulus E≈10 MPa; stress at break σb>10 MPa; strain at break εb>80%.
Preferably, said elastomeric polymer is present over a length comprised between 0% and 25% of a total length from each of said free ends of each of said lateral flanks.
Depending on the embodiment considered, said elastomeric polymer may be adhered to both said aerodynamic surface and said free ends of lateral flanks, replacing said adhesive joint, or may be introduced in the form of particles into said adhesive joint.
The invention also relates to any turbine engine comprising at least one such blade.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will emerge from the description made below, with reference to the appended drawings which illustrate an example embodiment devoid of any limiting character and on which:
The blade 10 comprises an aerodynamic surface or blade 12 integral with a root 14 and extending in a first axial direction 16 between a leading edge 18 and a trailing edge 20 and in a second radial direction 22 substantially perpendicular to the first direction 16 between this root 14 and a tip of the blade 24. The lateral surfaces of the blade 12 which connect the leading edge 18 to the trailing edge 20 constitute the upper 26 and lower 28 surfaces of the blade.
Conventionally, the blade 12 is made of a fiber-reinforced organic matrix composite material. By way of example, the composite material used can be composed of an assembly of woven carbon fibers and an epoxy resin matrix, the whole being formed by molding by means of a resin injection process of the resin transfer molding (RTM) type.
The blade 10 also has a structural reinforcement 30 bonded to the leading edge 18 of the blade and extending both in the first direction 16 beyond this leading edge and in the second direction 22 between the root 14 and the tip 24 of the blade.
As shown in
As
This additional adhesion can be obtained at these free ends as a total replacement of the adhesive joint or in addition to the adhesive joint. In the absence of an adhesive joint, the surface of the reinforcement or that of the composite is degreased and sanded before receiving an adhesion primer. The elastomer is then adhered to the surface during its vulcanization (or polymerization) in a specific tooling known per se, for example at a temperature of 180° C. under a pressure of 3 bars and for 60 minutes. In the presence of an adhesive joint, the same polymerization process can be used to adhere all the elements (reinforcement, composite, elastomer and adhesive joint) together. It is also possible to polymerize the elastomer on the reinforcement or on the composite and then to place the reinforcement on the composite by interposing the adhesive joint and then to polymerize the assembly thus formed.
The elastomeric polymer can be present over a length comprised between 0% and 25% of the total length of the fin from its free end. The skilled person knows how to adapt it according to the criticality of the area located at a given height of the blade. This makes it possible to have an adhesive joint with mechanical properties optimized by zone according to need, like what is achieved with conventional composite materials. Indeed, since elastomeric polymers generally have a low stiffness, the intensity and singularity of the stresses induced by edge effects in the elastomeric polymer are considerably reduced compared to a conventional epoxy adhesive. In addition, elastomeric polymers have very high strains at break and stresses at break that increase with the impact speed. The addition of an elastomeric polymer at the fin tip thus ensures the dual function of i) attenuating the stresses generated in this critical zone and ii) dissipating the mechanical energy of the impact without damaging itself.
Finally,
If the aforementioned description has been illustrated by a turbine engine fan blade, it should be noted that the invention is also applicable to the production of a metallic structural reinforcement intended to reinforce the leading edge of any other type of turbine engine blade, whether for land vehicles or for aircraft, and in particular a helicopter turboshaft engine or an aircraft turbojet engine, but also of propellers such as the propellers of non-veined counter-rotating double fans.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1856858 | Jul 2018 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR2019/051836 | 7/24/2019 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2020/021199 | 1/30/2020 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4895491 | Cross | Jan 1990 | A |
7789630 | Schilling | Sep 2010 | B2 |
20080075601 | Giusti | Mar 2008 | A1 |
20090074586 | Le Hong | Mar 2009 | A1 |
20100054945 | McMillan et al. | Mar 2010 | A1 |
20100232974 | De Moura et al. | Sep 2010 | A1 |
20140193271 | Dudon | Jul 2014 | A1 |
20150104323 | Franchet | Apr 2015 | A1 |
20170252896 | Gascher | Sep 2017 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1908919 | Apr 2008 | EP |
2033772 | Mar 2009 | EP |
2921099 | Mar 2009 | FR |
2943102 | Sep 2010 | FR |
2961866 | Dec 2011 | FR |
Entry |
---|
International Search Report in corresponding Application No. PCT/FR2019/051836, dated Dec. 10, 2019, (2 pages). |
French Search Report in corresponding Application No. FR1856858, dated Mar. 18, 2019, (2 pages). |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20210293152 A1 | Sep 2021 | US |