The subject invention concerns a turbine runner of the Kaplan type with adjustable runner blades, where the runner blades are adjustable by an oil-operated servo-motor, which is mounted on a piston rod in the runner hub.
Oil-operated servomotors are often used in Kaplan turbines for the purpose of adjusting the runner blades. Leakage losses of the servo-oil from the servomotor may occur. Due to the increasing environmental requirements, the leakage losses of the servo-oil must be prevented from being transported to the medium flowing around the turbine.
Therefore, the subject invention is based on the task of defining a turbine runner with which the leakage from the servomotor can be prevented, in a simple and effective manner, from being transported into the medium flowing around the turbine.
According to the invention, this task is solved by a collecting bin being provided in which the oil emerging between the piston rod and a seal of the servomotor is collected, the collecting bin being arranged around the free end of the piston rod and rigidly connected with the servomotor and moving with the latter, a delivery pipe being provided and one end of the delivery pipe discharging into a pump room formed between the movable collecting bin and the fixed piston rod and the actuation movement of the servomotor reducing and increasing the pump room and thus hydraulic liquid being conveyed from the collecting bin into the delivery pipe.
In this manner, the power for conveying the leakage from the runner comes from the servomotor during the adjustment movement of the runner blades, and, therefore, no separate driving mechanism is needed for the leakage conveyance system. The movement of the servomotor, which is in any case needed to control the turbine, is therefore used for conveying the leakage as well. In addition, the leakage conveying system is of simple design and needs but a few items and requires only minor adaptations to the runner.
It is especially easy to prevent backflow of the leakage into the collecting bin by providing a valve in the delivery pipe.
A particularly advantageous embodiment is achieved with an intermediate storage for the conveyed oil, which is accommodated in the turbine runner, wherein the intermediate storage is advantageously arranged between the piston rod, the runner hub and a turbine shaft to which the turbine runner is mounted.
To enable ease of conveyance of the leakage from the intermediate bin, a second delivery pipe, which is preferably arranged in the turbine shaft, is provided, the end of which is connected to the intermediate bin.
Backflow of the leakage from the intermediate storage to the collecting bin can be prevented easily by the discharge of the first delivery pipe being arranged in the intermediate storage such that the level of the leakage is below the discharge of the first delivery line.
The present invention will now be described using
The servomotor 5 is arranged at a piston rod 7, which is fixed to the runner hub 2 at one end, and glides up and down along the rod, as indicated by the double arrow in
Seals 13, which are to prevent hydraulic liquid from emerging from the servomotor 5 to the inner room of the runner hub 2 and further from runner hub 2 to the medium flowing around the turbine, are arranged between the servomotor 5 and the piston rod 7. However, leakage losses from seals 13 necessarily occur at times, because it is not possible to achieve an absolutely tight finish of the seals 13 and the sealing performance of the seals 13 may also deteriorate due to wear and external influences. These leakage losses must be collected due to the aforementioned reasons and must be eliminated from the runner hub 2. To do so, conveyance of the leakage is applied according to the invention and as described in the following, using
An externally closed collecting bin 8, which is rigidly connected to the servomotor 5, is arranged around the free end of piston rod 7. Consequently, collecting bin 8 is moved together with the servomotor. Collecting bin 8 is sized and arranged such that it encloses seals 13 on the side of the servomotor 5, which is connected to collecting bin 8. Any leakage losses from this seal 13 are thus directly led to collecting bin 8 and are collected there, as shown by the arrow in
As shown in
Due to the actuation movement of servomotor 5, which also entrains the collecting bin 8, a change occurs in the volume enclosed between the fixed piston rod 7 and the moved collecting bin 8, which volume is termed pumping volume 17 here. The movement range of servomotor 5 and, therefore, of the collecting bin 8 is indicated as “H” in
Leakage 15 could be removed from the runner hub 2 to, for instance, a collecting bin (not shown), through the first delivery pipe 11. To prevent leakage 15 from being sucked back to the collecting bin 8 at the opposite actuation movement of servomotor 5, i.e., when the pump volume 17 increases, a check valve could be provided e.g. in the delivery pipe 11. Such an alternative embodiment is shown at 11a in
Due to the pump movement of collecting bin 8, which is caused by the actuating movement of servomotor 5, the leakage 15 can thus be removed easily from the collecting bin 8 and without any other driving device.
The first delivery pipe 11 discharges into an intermediate storage 9 arranged between the turbine shaft 4, runner hub 2 and piston rod 7, where the leakage 18 conveyed from collecting bin 8, indicated by the arrow, collects again in the corner and at the outer walls of collecting bin 8 due to the centrifugal forces occurring. Through a further connecting piece 19, which is again arranged to discharge into the area of the corner of the intermediate storage 9, leakage 18 is transported to a second delivery pipe 12 on account of the pump movement of the collecting bin 8. Here, this second delivery pipe 12 leads the leakage 18 out of runner hub 2 through the turbine shaft 4, indicated by the arrow, e.g. into a supply bin for hydraulic liquid (not shown).
To prevent back suction of leakage 18 from the intermediate storage 9, the first delivery pipe 11 is extended to just below the upper edge of intermediate storage 9. Leakage 18 could, therefore, flow back into the first delivery pipe 11 only if intermediate storage 9 is almost full. The same effect could again be achieved by a check valve mounted in the first delivery pipe 11 or the second delivery pipe 12.
Due to the temporary suction caused by the actuation movement of servomotor 5, leakage 18 is also sucked from the second delivery pipe 12 back to intermediate storage 9. This storage should, therefore, be sized at least such that the entire volume of the second delivery pipe 12 can be taken up, because then the back-suction of leakage 18 from intermediate storage 9 into delivery pipe 11 can be prevented by the extension of the first delivery pipe 11. But, similarly to the description above, a check valve could be provided in the second delivery pipe 12 in order to prevent the backflow of leakage 18.
The example of an embodiment according to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A 1102/2004 | Jun 2004 | AT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2005/052580 | 6/6/2005 | WO | 00 | 12/27/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2006/000519 | 1/5/2006 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2357228 | Seewer | Aug 1944 | A |
2636714 | Willi | Apr 1953 | A |
3778187 | Wennberg | Dec 1973 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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59087279 | May 1984 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080095617 A1 | Apr 2008 | US |