The present application relates generally to gas turbine engines and more particularly relates to a turbine bucket having an angel wing compression seal with a sinusoidal shape.
Minimizing secondary cooling air leakage through the wheel spaces may increase overall turbine performance and efficiency. The sealing mechanism should effectively seal between rotating components such as buckets, blades, disks, and spacers and stationary components such as nozzles, vanes, and diaphragms. Specifically, the hot gases flowing through the turbine should be prevented from “ingesting” or leaking into the wheel spaces between the rotating components attached to the rotor and the stationary components attached to the turbine shell.
The wheel space cavities may be pressurized to provide a positive outflow from the wheel spaces into the gas path. Angel wing type seals also may be used to minimize this outflow by restricting the gap through which the leakage may occur. These seals also create a pressure loss “labyrinth/seal tooth” mechanism to further reduce the outflow of the wheel space air.
A drawback with the angel wing type designs is that the gas path pressure profile may vary circumferentially, particularly downstream of the buckets. In order to prevent ingesting, the wheel space pressure should exceed that found at peak pressure locations. Current angel wing configurations, however, generally only provide a near uniform annular pressure throughout. At low gas path pressure locations, such as downstream of the suction side or concave side of the rotating airfoils, a higher pressure gradient may exist that may drive a high outflow of the wheel space air. Such a high outflow may starve or lessen the ability of the available cooling air to prevent ingestion downstream of the higher pressure regions.
There is a desire therefore for improved sealing mechanisms so as to minimize the loss of secondary cooling air through the wheel spaces. Reduction in the loss of the cooling air flow should improve overall gas turbine performance and efficiency.
The present application thus provides an angel wing seal for a turbine bucket. The angel wing seal may include a first wing with a sinusoidally-shaped outer edge and a number of wing teeth positioned thereon.
The present application further provides a method of reducing turbine bucket cooling air losses. The method may include the steps of positioning an angel wing seal about the bucket, providing a sinusoidally shaped outer edge on the angel wing seal and rotating the bucket such that the sinusoidally shaped outer edge creates a pressure profile that is substantially in phase with a pressure profile created by the bucket.
The present application further provides an angel wing seal for a turbine bucket. The angel wing seal may include an upper wing with a sinusoidally-shaped outer edge, a number of wing teeth positioned on the upper wing, and a gap defined by the wing teeth.
These and other features and improvements of the present application will become apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art upon review of the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the several drawings and the appended claims.
Referring now to the drawings, in which like numerals refer to like elements throughout the several views,
Referring to
The buckets 22, 24 may include a number of axially projecting angel wing seals 38. The angel wing seals 38 may cooperate with a number of lands 40 formed on the adjacent nozzles 18, 20 so as to limit the ingestion of hot gasses flowing therethrough. A hot gas path may be indicated by an arrow 42. The angel wing seals 38 limit the flow into the wheel spaces 44.
The angel wing seals 38 may include an angel wing body 45, an upturn or a tip 46 at a distal end, upper and lower wing root surfaces 48, 50, and upper and lower seal body surfaces 52, 54. The upper and lower seal body surfaces 52, 54 generally may be linear surfaces extending from the root surfaces 48, 50 to the tip 46. The upper body surface 52 may be an arcuate surface that is concentric about the axis of rotation of the rotor 11. As is shown, each side of the buckets 22, 24 may have an upper angel wing 56 and a lower angel wing 58. Other configurations of the angel wing seals 38 and similar structures may be used.
The combination of the sinusoidal shape of the outer edge 120 and the wing teeth 130 produce a repetitive annular pressure pattern that coincides and opposes the gas path pressure profile surrounding the bucket 100. Specifically, this sinusoidal pressure profile created by the angel wing seal 105 may be in phase with the frequency of the pressure profile created by the rotating bucket 100. These pressure profiles thus may be synchronized so as to provide a more uniform overall pressure gradient. Such a uniform pressure gradient potentially results in considerably less leakage in the wheel space cooling air. Moreover, the average wheel space pressure may be lowered so as to provide less of a pressure gradient that drives the outflow of the cooling air leakage.
The uniquely shaped upper wing 110 with the wing teeth 130 thereon provide the angel wing seal 105 with an angle of inclination relevant to the direction of rotation of the bucket 100. Specifically, the angel wing seal 105 provides a forward facing outer edge 120 such that the relative velocity of the cooling air may be decreased while the static pressure of the air is increased from the work performed on the air by the angel wing seal 105. The angel wing seal 105 thus addresses circumferential pressure gradients and, as such, may minimize secondary cooling loses. Overall cycle efficiency improvements thus may be obtained. The angel wing seal 105 may be used in any type of turbine. The angel wing seals 105 may be used at discrete locations so as to counter regions of localized high gas path pressure or the angel wing seals 105 may be in more widespread use.
It should be apparent that the foregoing relates only to certain embodiments of the present application and that numerous changes and modifications may be made herein by one of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the general spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the following claims and the equivalents thereof.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6189891 | Tomita et al. | Feb 2001 | B1 |
6506016 | Wang | Jan 2003 | B1 |
20070224035 | Nigmatulin | Sep 2007 | A1 |
20080014094 | Itzel et al. | Jan 2008 | A1 |
20080056889 | Cheng et al. | Mar 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20100178159 A1 | Jul 2010 | US |