The invention relates to gas turbine engines. More particularly, the invention relates to gas turbine engine compressor vanes.
A gas turbine engine typically includes one or more rotor stacks associated with one or more sections of the engine. A rotor stack may include several longitudinally spaced apart blade-carrying disks of successive stages of the section. A stator structure may include circumferential stages of vanes longitudinally interspersed with the rotor disks. The rotor disks are secured to each other against relative rotation and the rotor stack is secured against rotation relative to other components on its common spool (e.g., the low and high speed/pressure spools of the engine).
Numerous systems have been used to tie rotor disks together. In an exemplary center-tie system, the disks are held longitudinally spaced from each other by sleeve-like spacers. The spacers may be unitarily formed with one or both adjacent disks. However, some spacers are often separate from at least one of the adjacent pair of disks and may engage that disk via an interference fit and/or a keying arrangement. The interference fit or keying arrangement may require the maintenance of a longitudinal compressive force across the disk stack so as to maintain the engagement. The compressive force may be obtained by securing opposite ends of the stack to a central shaft passing within the stack. The stack may be mounted to the shaft with a longitudinal precompression force so that a tensile force of equal magnitude is transmitted through the portion of the shaft within the stack.
Alternate configurations involve the use of an array of circumferentially-spaced tie rods extending through web portions of the rotor disks to tie the disks together. In such systems, the associated spool may lack a shaft portion passing within the rotor. Rather, separate shaft segments may extend longitudinally outward from one or both ends of the rotor stack.
Desired improvements in efficiency and output have greatly driven developments in turbine engine configurations. Efficiency may include both performance efficiency and manufacturing efficiency.
Interstage sealing has been one area of traditional concern. Traditional sealing systems utilize abradable seal material carried on inboard vane platforms and interacting with knife edge runners on one or both of the adjacent blade platforms or on connecting structure.
U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 10/825,255, 10/825,256, and 10/985,863 of Suciu and Norris (hereafter the Suciu et al. applications, disclosures of which are incorporated by reference herein as if set forth at length) disclose engines having one or more outwardly concave interdisk spacers. With the rotor rotating, a centrifugal action may maintain longitudinal rotor compression and engagement between a spacer and at least one of the adjacent disks. The '255 and '256 applications show knife edge sealing runners on the spacers whereas the '863 application shows inboard free tips on vane airfoils in close running proximity to the spacers.
One aspect of the invention involves a turbine engine having a rotor with a number of disks. Each disk extends radially from an inner aperture to an outer periphery. Each of a number of stages of blades is borne by an associated one of the disks. A number of spacers each extend between an adjacent pair of the disks. The engine includes a stator having a number of stages of vanes. The stages of vanes may include at least a first stage of vanes having inboard airfoil tips in facing proximity to an outer surface of the first spacer at the first portion thereof. The airfoils have dihedral and sweep.
The details of one or more embodiments of the invention are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
The engine 20 includes low and high speed shafts 40 and 42 mounted for rotation about an engine central longitudinal axis or centerline 502 relative to an engine stationary structure via several bearing systems (not shown). Each shaft may be an assembly, either fully or partially integrated (e.g., via welding). The low speed shaft carries LPC and LPT rotors and their blades to form a low speed spool. The high speed shaft carries the HPC and HPT rotors and their blades to form a high speed spool.
The vane airfoils 52 extend from a leading edge 70 to a trailing edge 72. The apparent leading edge concavity of
The foregoing principles may be applied in the reengineering of an existing engine configuration or in an original engineering process. Various engineering techniques may be utilized. These may include simulations and actual hardware testing. The simulations/testing may be performed at static conditions and one or more non-zero speed conditions. The non-zero speed conditions may include one or both of steady-state operation and transient conditions (e.g., accelerations, decelerations, and combinations thereof). The simulation/tests may be performed iteratively, varying parameters such as spacer thickness, spacer curvature or other shape parameters, vane sweep, dihedral, and bow profiles or vane tip curvature or other shape parameters, and static tip-to-spacer separation (which may include varying specific positions for the tip and the spacer). The results of the reengineering may provide the reengineered configuration with one or more differences relative to the initial/baseline configuration. The baseline configuration may have featured similar spacers or different spacers (e.g., frustoconical spacers). The reengineered configuration may involve one or more of eliminating outboard interdisk cavities, eliminating inboard blade platforms and seals (including elimination of sealing teeth on one or more of the spacers), providing the area rule effect, and the like.
For one exemplary reengineering,
The addition of tip-localized leading edge forward sweep and/or negative dihedral in the reengineered airfoil relative to the baseline airfoil may improve overall performance. Specifically, it may decrease the impact of the tip-to-spacer clearance on performance. Losses may be reduced. The radial distribution of stator vane exit velocity and stagnation pressure may be improved, maintaining higher momentum near the tip region. The effect on axial momentum may be particularly large when the vane stage is throttled toward a stall condition and the angle of incidence to the next downstream blade row is reduced.
There may be dihedral departures along the same region 420.
One or more embodiments of the present invention have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, when applied as a reengineering of an existing engine configuration, details of the existing configuration may influence details of any particular implementation. Among other factors, the size of the engine will influence the dimensions associated with any implementation relative to such engine. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080063520 A1 | Mar 2008 | US |