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1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a gas turbine engine, and more specifically to cooling of the turbine blades in the turbine section of the engine.
2. Description of the Related Art Including Information Disclosed Under 37 CFR 1.97 and 1.98
Gas turbine engines include stationary vanes and rotating blades in the turbine section that have cooling fluid passages therein. The cooling fluid is usually air, and the supply for cooling air is usually from the compressor of the gas turbine engine. The first, second, and third stage turbine blades are usually cooled by air supplied from the compressor at various pressures. The cooling air is exhausted to the gas stream from cooling holes in the blades. The first stage blade operates under higher pressures, and therefore requires a cooling fluid supply having such a pressure that the flow can be exhausted into the gas stream. The second and third stage blades also require compressed cooling air in order to exhaust the cooling air into the gas stream. The last stage blade operates under the lowest gas stream pressure, and therefore requires the lowest cooling air pressure of all the stages. Using compressed air supplied from the compressor for the last stage blades waists compressed air and decreases the overall efficiency of the turbine engine.
What is needed is a way to improve the efficiency of the gas turbine engine without requiring as much cooling air from the compressor.
The object of the present invention is to provide for cooling of the last stage blade in a gas turbine engine while also reducing the amount of cooling air bled off from the compressor in order to improve the performance of the gas turbine engine.
The object of the present invention is to reduce the need for cooling air supplied from the compressor and therefore increase the efficiency of the gas turbine engine.
Another object of the present invention is to use the rotation of the fourth stage blade as a pumping means to drive a cooling air from the atmosphere surrounding the turbine through the fourth stage blade for cooling thereof.
The present invention is directed to an industrial gas turbine engine in which the last stage row of blades is cooled by driving cooling air through the blades, where the cooling air is supplied from the ambient air outside of the turbine and pumped through the blade by a centrifugal force (forced vortex flow) applied to the cooling air flow by the rotation of the blade row, or with the aid of an impeller that is secured to a cover plate on the last stage rotor and blade assembly that also rotates with the last stage row of blades. The cover plate includes an impeller on the inside surface, and the cover plate forms a closed space between it and the rear surface of the rotor disc. The cover plate includes cooling air openings to allow the ambient air to flow within the inside space, and the impellers that extend from the cover plate inside the space moves the air through the normal cooling passages within the blade. The cooling air is then exhausted into the gas stream of the turbine engine.
A gas turbine engine includes a plurality of stages in the turbine section, each stage including a stationary vane to direct the gas stream onto a stage of rotating blades. It is usual to provide for cooling air passages in the first, second and third stages of the turbine to cool the vanes and blades. The last or fourth stage of the turbine is sometimes not cooled with air passing through the vanes or blades because the gas stream temperature has dropped low enough such that cooling is not needed.
The gas turbine engine in
In operation, rotation of the last stage blade forces a cooling air flow through the blade due to centrifugal force. An internal cavity of the blade will act as a forced vortex pump and drive the cooling air from the inlet to the cooling holes in the blade. The centrifugal force due to the rotation of the turbine blade acts as the motive fluid force to pump the cooling air through the blade. The cooling air flow is indicated by the arrows in
A second embodiment of the present invention is shown in
The cover plate 30 forms a closed space in which a plurality of impellers 31 extend from the inside of the cover plate 30 and into this closed space. A plurality of openings exists in the cover plate 30 to allow for air from outside the turbine to enter the closed space. Rotation of the fourth stage rotor disc 20 drives the air within the closed space through the cooling air passages within the fourth stage blade 12. The cooling air flow path is shown in
Using the ambient air for cooling the last stage of the turbine, where the cooling air is driven through the blade by the rotation of the blade, or in addition by the use of a cover plate with impellers to increase the pressure of the cooling air being driven through the blade, will eliminate the need for cooling air supplied from the compressor and increase the efficiency of the gas turbine engine.
Cooling air is compressed by the compressor for supply to the first stage turbine blade, while the last stage turbine blade is supplied with uncompressed air from the ambient pressure source outside of the engine. For purposes of this disclosure and the claims, uncompressed air is defined to be cooling fluid that is forced through the last stage turbine blade due to the rotation of the blade and rotor disk. The impellers on the cover plate promote cooling air flow through the blade due to the rotation of the cover plate along with the rotor disk and blade. No outside compressor is used other that the rotor disk and blade assembly to force the cooling fluid through the blade and out the cooling holes.
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