Turbine engines, and particularly gas or combustion turbine engines, are rotary engines that extract energy from a flow of combusted gases passing through the engine onto a multitude of rotating turbine blades. Gas turbine engines have been used for land and nautical locomotion and power generation, but are most commonly used for aeronautical applications such as for aircraft, including helicopters. In aircraft, gas turbine engines are used for propulsion of the aircraft. In terrestrial applications, turbine engines are often used for power generation.
Gas turbine engines for aircraft are designed to operate at high temperatures to maximize engine efficiency, so cooling of certain engine components, such as the high pressure turbine and the low pressure turbine, can be beneficial. Typically, cooling is accomplished by ducting cooler air from the high and/or low pressure compressors to the engine components that require cooling. Temperatures in the high pressure turbine are around 1000° C. to 2000° C. and the cooling air from the compressor is around 500° C. to 700° C. While the compressor air is a high temperature, it is cooler relative to the turbine air, and can be used to cool the turbine.
Contemporary turbine blades generally include one or more interior cooling circuits for routing the cooling air through the blade to cool different portions of the blade, and can include dedicated cooling circuits for cooling different portions of the blade, such as the leading edge, trailing edge and tip of the blade.
An airfoil for a gas turbine engine having an outer surface defining a pressure side and a suction side extending axially between a leading edge and a trailing edge and extending radially between a root and a tip. The airfoil further comprises a cooling circuit located within the airfoil comprising a supply passage extending from the root toward the tip and fluidly coupled to the dovetail inlet passage at the root, a leading edge cooling passage extending along the leading edge, a cross-over rib extending between the pressure side and the suction side to separate the supply passage form the leading edge cooling passage, and impingement orifice extending through the cross-over rib fluidly coupling the leading edge cooling passage to the supply passage. The cross-over rib has an arcuate cross-section to provide thermal stress-relief for the cross-over rib.
A turbine blade for a gas turbine engine having a turbine rotor disk comprising a dovetail having at least one cooling air inlet passage and configured to mount to the turbine rotor disk and an airfoil extending radially form the dovetail and having an outer surface defining a pressure side and a suction side extending axially between a leading edge and a trailing edge and extending radially between a root and a tip, with the root being adjacent the dovetail. The blade further comprises a cooling circuit located within the airfoil and comprising a supply passage extending from the root toward the tip and fluidly coupled to the dovetail inlet passage at the root, a leading edge cooling passage extending along the leading edge, a cross-over rib extending between the pressure side and the suction side to separate the supply passage from the leading edge cooling passage, and impingement orifices extending through the cross-over rib fluidly coupling the leading edge cooling passage to the supply passage. The cross-over rib has an arcuate cross-section to provide thermal stress-relief for the cross-over rib and a thickened portion having an increased cross-section, with at least some of the impingement orifices extending through the thickened portion.
An airfoil for a gas turbine engine, the airfoil an outer surface defining a pressure side and a suction side extending axially between a leading edge and a trailing edge and extending radially between a root and a tip. The airfoil further comprises a cooling circuit located within the airfoil and comprises a supply passage extending from the root toward the tip and fluidly coupled to the dovetail inlet passage at the root, a leading edge cooling passage extending along the leading edge, a cross-over rib extending between the pressure side and the suction side to separate the supply passage from the leading edge cooling passage, and impingement orifice extending through the cross-over rib fluidly coupling the leading edge cooling passage to the supply passage. The cross-over rib has an arcuate cross-section to provide thermal stress-relief for the cross-over rib, a thickened portion having an increase cross-section, with at least some of the impingement orifices extending through the thickened portion and where the thickened portion further comprises a flared portion.
In the drawings:
The described embodiments of the present invention are directed to a turbine blade, and in particular to cooling a turbine blade. For purposes of illustration, the present invention will be described with respect to a turbine blade for an aircraft gas turbine engine. It will be understood, however, that the invention is not so limited and can have general applicability in non-aircraft applications, such as other mobile applications and non-mobile industrial, commercial, and residential applications. It can also have application to airfoils, other than a blade, in a turbine engine, such as stationary vanes.
The fan section 18 includes a fan casing 40 surrounding the fan 20. The fan 20 includes a plurality of airfoils in the form of fan blades 42 disposed radially about the centerline 12. The HP compressor 26, the combustor 30, and the HP turbine 34 form a core 44 of the engine 10, which generates combustion gases. The core 44 is surrounded by core casing 46 which can be coupled with the fan casing 40.
A HP shaft or spool 48 disposed coaxially about the centerline 12 of the engine 10 drivingly connects the HP turbine 34 to the HP compressor 26. A LP shaft or spool 50, which is disposed coaxially about the centerline 12 of the engine 10 within the larger diameter annular HP spool 48, drivingly connects the LP turbine 36 to the LP compressor 24 and fan 20.
The LP compressor 24 and the HP compressor 26 respectively include a plurality of compressor stages 52, 54, in which a set of rotating airfoils in the form of compressor blades 56, 58 that rotate relative to a corresponding set of static airfoils in the form of compressor vanes 60, 62 (also called a nozzle) to compress or pressurize the stream of fluid passing through the stage. In a single compressor stage 52, 54, multiple compressor blades 56, 58 may be provided in a ring and may extend radially outwardly relative to the centerline 12, from a blade platform to a blade tip, while the corresponding static compressor vanes 60, 62 are positioned downstream of and adjacent to the rotating blades 56, 58. It is noted that the number of blades, vanes, and compressor stages shown in
The HP turbine 34 and the LP turbine 36 respectively include a plurality of turbine stages 64, 66, in which a set of rotating airfoils in the form of turbine blades 68, 70 that are rotated relative to a corresponding set of static airfoils in the form of turbine vanes 72, 74 (also called a nozzle) to extract energy from the stream of fluid passing through the stage. In a single turbine stage 64, 66, multiple turbine blades 68, 70 may be provided in a ring and may extend radially outwardly relative to the centerline 12, from a blade platform to a blade tip, while the corresponding static turbine vanes 72, 74 are positioned upstream of and adjacent to the rotating blades 68, 70. It is noted that the number of blades, vanes, and turbine stages shown in
In operation, the rotating fan 20 supplies ambient air to the LP compressor 24, which then supplies pressurized ambient air to the HP compressor 26, which further pressurizes the ambient air. The pressurized air from the HP compressor 26 is mixed with fuel in the combustor 30 and ignited, thereby generating combustion gases. Some work is extracted from these gases by the HP turbine 34, which drives the HP compressor 26. The combustion gases are discharged into the LP turbine 36, which extracts additional work to drive the LP compressor 24, and the exhaust gas is ultimately discharged from the engine 10 via the exhaust section 38. The driving of the LP turbine 36 drives the LP spool 50 to rotate the fan 20 and the LP compressor 24.
Some of the ambient air supplied by the fan 20 may bypass the engine core 44 and be used for cooling of portions, especially hot portions, of the engine 10, and/or used to cool or power other aspects of the aircraft. In the context of a turbine engine, the hot portions of the engine are normally downstream of the combustor 30, especially the turbine section 32, with the HP turbine 34 being the hottest portion as it is directly downstream of the combustion section 28. Other sources of cooling fluid may be, but is not limited to, fluid discharged from the LP compressor 24 or the HP compressor 26.
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The airfoil 78 comprises a plurality of internal passages which can be arranged to form one or more cooling circuits dedicated to cool a particular portion of the blade 68. The passages and the corresponding cooling circuits are illustrated in
The cooling circuits can be defined by one or more passages extending radially within the airfoil 78. It should be appreciated that the passages can comprise one or more film holes which can provide fluid communication between the particular passage and the external surface of the airfoil 78, providing a film of cooling fluid along the external surface of the airfoil 78.
A cooling circuit shown as a leading edge cooling circuit 120 comprises a plurality of passages disposed within the interior of the airfoil 78. The leading edge cooling circuit 120 includes a supply passage 122, near wall cooling passages 124, and a leading edge cooling passage 126. The supply passage 122 extends from root 82 to tip 80, being in fluid communication with an inlet in the dovetail 76 such as the first inlet passage 88. The near wall cooling passages 124 are in fluid communication with the supply passage 122 and extend from the tip 80 toward the root 82. The near wall cooling passages 124 can further comprise additional passages including a plenum passage 130, extending from tip 80 to the root 82, with a plurality of pins or pin banks 132. The plenum passage 130, near the root 82, can be in fluid communication with one or more return passages 134 extending from the root 82 to the tip 80.
The leading edge cooling passage 126 is also in fluid communication with the supply passage 122, extending from root 82 to tip 80 and disposed adjacent to the leading edge 102. A cross-over rib 140 is disposed between and partially defines the supply passage 122 and the leading edge cooling passage 126. The cross-over rib 140 spans the interior 96 of the airfoil 78, extending between the pressure side and the suction side at the pressure sidewall 98 and the suction sidewall 100, respectively. The leading edge cooling passage 126 is in fluid communication with the supply passage 122 via one or more impingement orifices 142 disposed within the cross-over rib 140, extending from root 82 to tip 80.
The interior 96 of the airfoil 78 can further comprise one or more additional cooling circuits defined by one or more internal passages 150, mesh passages 152, pin banks 154, slots 156, impingement orifices 158, and film holes, providing cooling fluid throughout the airfoil 78 or exhausting cooling fluid from the airfoil 78 to provide a cooling film to the exterior of the airfoil 78. The internal passages 150 and mesh passages 152 extend in a root 82 to tip 80 or tip 80 to root 82 direction and can be interconnected with one another such that one or more cooling circuits are defined.
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The impingement orifice can comprise a thickness defined by a ratio, L/D, of the length L of the impingement orifice 342 to the diameter D of the impingement orifice 342. The length L can be to total length of the impingement orifice 342, while the diameter D can be a metering diameter, such that it does not include a wider inlet or outlet radius defined within the length L. As such, the ratio (L/D) can be at least 2. The length L can be the total length being the same as the local rib width. A greater value for L/D can develop an improved flow development as well as more accurate directionality for the air flow passing through the impingement orifices.
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It should be appreciated that an arcuate cross-section for the cross-over rib, being concave or convex with respect to the leading edge cooling passage, provides stress relief for the cross-over rib as well as associated components often affected by the stresses adjacent the leading edge of the airfoil.
It should be further appreciated that thickened portions of the cross-over rib provide for a thicker width for the impingement orifices providing a cooling fluid flow to the leading edge cooling passage. The width of the thickened portions at the impingement orifice can comprise a thickness defined by the ratio, L/D, of the length, L, of the impingement orifice to the diameter, D, of the impingement orifice. A greater value for L/D can develop an improved flow development as well as more accurate directionality for the air flow passing through the impingement orifices.
It should be further appreciated that the film holes as shown are exemplary. Placement, orientation, and number of film holes can vary from what is illustrated in
This written description uses examples to disclose the invention, including the best mode, and to enable any person skilled in the art to practice the invention, including making and using any devices or systems and performing any incorporated methods. The patentable scope of the invention is defined by the claims, and can include other examples that occur to those skilled in the art. Such other examples are intended to be within the scope of the claims if they have structural elements that do not differ from the literal language of the claims, or if they include equivalent structural elements with insubstantial differences from the literal languages of the claims.