Embodiments of the present disclosure relate to turbine vanes of a turbine engine and, in particular, a turbine vane stilt arrangement. The stilt of a vane is a part supporting the vane blade which extends radially between a lower attachment part known as a “fir-tree root” and a vane platform.
More particularly, the disclosure relates to turbine vanes of a free-turbine turbine engine.
The disclosure also relates to a turbine engine comprising such vanes.
Conventionally, as illustrated in
In free-turbine turbine engines, used for example, but not exclusively, in helicopter propulsion units, the free turbine is mechanically independent from the helicopter rotor, a reduction gear being interposed between the shafting and the main rotor.
In the event of breakage of the power transmission line, for example in the event of breakage of the shafting or the transmission line connected to the reduction gear, the turbine can find itself in an overspeed scenario due to the disappearance of the resistive torque applied on the turbine vanes.
This overspeed scenario can be particularly hazardous, result in the breakage of at least one rotary disk supporting the vanes of a stage of the turbine, under the effect of centrifugal force, and trigger the release of very high-energy debris which cannot be contained by the armour provided on the engine.
It is therefore necessary to provide protection systems which prevent overspeed in the turbines.
In the prior art, overspeed protection systems have already been proposed, known as “blade-shedding”, which involves creating a frangible zone in the vanes such that they break at a predetermined rotational speed preventing any risk of disk breakage which would be caused by the centrifugal forces. In this regard, reference can be made to GB 881,850 which describes a turbine for driving accessories wherein holes are drilled at the base of the vane blades.
Thus, in the event of overspeed risk, after the vanes break, the turbine, having lost the aerodynamic profiles thereof, slows down naturally, and can stop rotating. The deceleration of the free turbine to return to acceptable speeds prevents in this way the risk of breakage of the disk caused by centrifugal forces.
In this regard, it has been proposed to machine the leading edge of the turbine vane root in order to adjust the cross-section of the neck of the vane so that it breaks at a required speed, while retaining a sufficient contact length between the fir-tree root of the vane and the corresponding receptacle of the disk which receives the fir-tree root to ensure the mechanical strength of the attachment of the vane on the disk.
In
As can be seen, the stilt 4 of the vane, which extends between the fir-tree root 6 and a platform which forms the base of an aerodynamic profile 5 or blade of the vane, includes a concave leading edge 7 for forming in the stilt a frangible zone of minimal cross-section suitable for enabling the vane to be detached from the disk from a protection threshold speed.
In
It has been observed that this maximum stress determines the fatigue lifetime of the vane such that producing this concave zone in the leading edge to embrittle the vane locally requires relatively complex design work in order to define the threshold value from which the stilts break while limiting the increase in maximum stress harmful for the fatigue lifetime of the vane.
Moreover, the use of materials having an increased strength for producing the vanes induces, for the same frangible section, an increase in the threshold speed from which the stilts break.
Producing a concave zone of increased size in the leading edge of the vane so as to reduce the cross-section of the vane stilt locally would not make it possible to reduce the breakage limit speed of the stilt without increasing the maximum stress on the minimum cross-section on the stilt in a redhibitory way and hence reducing the fatigue lifetime of the vane. It is therefore desirable to be able to reduce the breakage speed of the stilt when using a high-strength material to produce the vane.
In the light of the above, the disclosure aims to propose a turbine vane provided with a frangible section for setting the vane breakage speed value without increasing the maximum stress in the vane.
Therefore, the disclosure relates to a turbine vane comprising a blade and a root, the root comprising a stilt having lateral flanks with a curvilinear profile, the stilt comprising a frangible zone adapted to undergo a breakage of the stilt if radial forces greater than a threshold are exerted on the vane, in particular centrifugal forces during an overspeed state of the turbine.
The frangible zone comprises at least one oblong frangibility recess formed on at least one of the lateral flanks of the stilt, the oblong recess extending in an axial direction of the stilt along a longitudinal axis parallel to or comprised in a minimum cross-sectional plane in which a minimum cross-section of the stilt is located.
This recess thus helps embrittle the frangible section of the stilt by increasing the mean stress exerted in the neck of the stilt, without significantly increasing the maximum stress induced locally under the action of thermomechanical forces. It hence helps optimise the setting of the limit speed from which the vanes break.
Advantageously, the vane is mounted on a disk, the longitudinal axis of the or each oblong recess being comprised in a frangibility plane located at a distance from an axis of rotation of the disk between h+0.06h and h−0.06h, preferably between h+0.04h and h−0.04h, h being the distance between the axis of rotation and the minimum cross-sectional plane, the frangibility plane and the minimum cross-sectional plane being parallel to one another and to the axis of rotation.
According to another feature, the frangible zone of the stilt is formed by a concave zone of the stilt formed on a front face and on at least one of the lateral flanks of the stilt, the deepest zone of the oblong recess being intersected by the minimum cross-sectional plane of the stilt.
For example, the maximum depth of the oblong recess is between 9% and 35% of the width of the stilt, preferably between 10% and 25% of the width of the stilt, considered at the deepest point of the recess.
In one embodiment, the maximum depth of the oblong recess is between 10% and 25% of the length thereof, preferably between 14% and 20% of the length of the recess.
In one embodiment, wherein each lateral flank of the stilt comprises an oblong frangibility recess, the distance between the barycentre of the recesses and the projection of the centre of gravity of the vane on the minimum cross-sectional plane is between 0 and 20% of the axial length of the stilt, preferably between 0 and 15% of the width of the stilt.
Advantageously, the oblong recess has a curvilinear cross-section.
Preferably, the oblong recess has a cross-section in the arc of a circle.
The disclosure also relates to a turbine engine turbine, comprising a rotor including at least one disk and a set of turbine vanes mounted on the disk, each vane being a vane as defined above.
Advantageously, the longitudinal axis of the or each oblong recess of each vane is comprised in a frangibility plane located at a distance from an axis of rotation of the disk between h+0.06h and h−0.06h, preferably between h+0.04h and h−0.04h, h being the distance between the axis of rotation of the disk and the minimum cross-sectional plane, the frangibility plane and the minimum cross-sectional plane being parallel to one another and to the axis of rotation.
Further aims, features and advantages of the disclosure will emerge on reading the following description, given merely by way of example, with reference to the appended drawings.
The foregoing aspects and many of the attendant advantages of the claimed subject matter will become more readily appreciated as the same become better understood by reference to the following detailed description, when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The detailed description set forth below in connection with the appended drawings, where like numerals reference like elements, is intended as a description of various embodiments of the disclosed subject matter.
In
This vane 10 includes a blade 11, a fir-tree root 12 intended to fasten the vane onto a rotor risk, by engaging the root 12 into a housing also known as “receptacle” of corresponding shape formed in the disk, a stilt 13 extending the fir-tree root 12 and a platform 14.
The fir-tree root extends along a longitudinal axis, which in a manner known per se can form an angle with the axis of rotation A-A′ of the turbine disk, in order to increase the contact length between the fir-tree root and the disk. The axis of the fir-tree root once the vane is mounted on the disk extends along the direction of the corresponding receptacle in the disk. The receptacles of a free turbine disk can be provided each more or less sloping in a tangential plane to the disk, with respect to the axial direction of the disk. In other words, an angle in a tangential plane to the disk is formed between the direction of a receptacle and the axis of the disk.
As can be seen, the stilt 13 has a curvilinear shape.
It includes, on the anterior face thereof, on the side of the leading edge of the vane, a concave shape 15 and lateral flanks 16, also concave, in order to reduce the cross-section of the stilt locally to delimit a frangible zone in the stilt.
The vane 10 also includes recesses 17 that are oblong, i.e. having a longitudinal dimension greater than the lateral dimension thereof, which are formed in the lateral flanks of the stilt 13. Each recess 17 extends along a longitudinal axis X-X′ parallel or substantially parallel to the fir-tree root. The axis X-X′ of each recess can, therefore, like the axis of the fir-tree root, form an angle with the axis of rotation A-A′ of the turbine disk, seen in
Each recess forms a pocket locally reducing the cross-section of the neck of the stilt in order to embrittle the frangible zone of the stilt and set the overspeed limit speed from which the blade is detached from the disk.
For example, as illustrated, each lateral flank of the stilt includes at least one recess. Each lateral flank includes here a recess, the stilt comprising a pair of recesses formed symmetrically.
As illustrated in
The depth thereof, which can for example correspond to the radius of the recess, is advantageously between 9% and 35% of the minimum width lmin of the stilt, considered at the deepest point of the recess (
With reference to
Considering the distance h between the axis of rotation A-A′ of the turbine disk and the plane P, the axis X-X′ of each recess is comprised in a plane, hereinafter referred to as frangibility plane, which either coincides with the plane P, or is parallel to the plane P and is located slightly above or above the plane P. More specifically, the frangibility plane is located at a distance from the axis of rotation A-A′ of the disk between h−0.06h and h+0.06h, preferably between h−0.04h and h+0.04h. Moreover, if the stilt comprises a pair of recesses formed symmetrically, the frangibility plane comprises the two respective axes X-X′ of the two recesses.
Moreover, as seen in
The length of the recesses is for example about 40% of the total length of the fir-tree root at the point of the minimum cross-section and the depth thereof is about 20% of the neck width.
Each lateral flank of the stilt can include any number of recesses in order to reduce the cross-section of the stilt locally and as such set the limit rotational speed of the vanes.
As stated above, the recesses are free from sharp angles so as not to induce concentration of higher stress than that already induced by the concave shape formed in the anterior face, on the leading edge side.
These recesses make it possible to set the breakage speed of the vane by increasing the mean stress exerted in the neck of the stilt, without significantly increasing the maximum stress induced under the action of thermomechanical forces harmful for the lifetime of the vane.
Indeed, as shown in
The principles, representative embodiments, and modes of operation of the present disclosure have been described in the foregoing description.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1905588 | May 2019 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2020/063781 | 5/18/2020 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2020/239490 | 12/3/2020 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5435694 | Kray et al. | Jul 1995 | A |
20150176415 | Nucci | Jun 2015 | A1 |
20170298750 | Jablonski | Oct 2017 | A1 |
20180156047 | Nucci | Jun 2018 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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109139123 | Jan 2019 | CN |
3067625 | Jun 2017 | FR |
Entry |
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English machine translation of FR-3067625-A1, Nov. 29, 2022. |
International Search Report dated Jul. 23, 2020, issued in corresponding International Application No. PCT/EP2020/063781, filed May 18, 2020, 2 pages. |
Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority dated Jul. 23, 2020, issued in corresponding International Application No. PCT/EP2020/063781, filed May 18, 2020, 5 pages. |
Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority dated Jul. 23, 2020, issued in corresponding International Application No. PCT/EP2020/063781, filed May 18, 2020, 6 pages. |
International Preliminary Report of Patentability dated Nov. 16, 2021, issued in corresponding International Application No. PCT/EP2020/063781, filed May 18, 2020, 1 page. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20220235665 A1 | Jul 2022 | US |