This application is the US National Stage of International Application No. PCT/EP2005/002710, filed Mar. 14, 2005 and claims the benefits of European Patent application No. 04008485.7 filed Apr. 7, 2004. All of the applications are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
The invention refers to a rotor for a turbo-engine and a turbo-engine with a rotor as claimed in the claims.
From U.S. Pat. No. 5,211,407 a fastening of rotor blades of a compressor on the disk of the compressor rotor is known, in which the locking of the rotor blades against axial displacement is effected by an annular retaining segment. For this, the disk has radially inwards extending hooks on the end face between two rotor blade retaining slots into which is hooked a retaining segment. The retaining segment forms a stop for the rotor blade held in the retaining slot and so locks this against axial displacement.
In addition to this, a method for the fitting of rotor blades in a disk is described in DE 26 06 565. In this, the end face regions of a platform of a rotor blade are deformed in such a way that after a caulking action the material regions of the platform which are facing the outer periphery of the disk bear tightly against the disk in order to achieve a frictional damping.
Furthermore, CH 489 698 A shows a device for the locking of rotor blades of turbines individually positively retained in axial slots. A T-form slot with undercuts is located on the end face of a shaft collar in such a way that the undercut intersects from the bottom the slot base of the retaining slots of the rotor blades. For the axial locking of the rotor blades a locking element is insertable in the T-form slot after the fitting of the rotor blades, which engages in a recess correspondingly formed in the blade root.
In addition, it is known that rotor blade roots of rotor blades of a compressor are locked against axial displacement by plastic deforming.
After the introducing of a rotor blade 16, material of the rotor blade root 33 is plastically deformed into the region of the chamfer 30 on both sides by a caulking action. The projection formed in this way on the rotor blade root 33 then locks the rotor blade 16 against axial displacement, while the projection bears against the chamfer 30 which is inclined by 45° to the displacement direction.
As, however, during the caulking action the projection on its side facing the chamfer assumes a rounded form, the latter bears only partially on the chamfer which can lead to a smaller retaining force.
During the starting of the cold compressor and after the shutting down of the hot compressor, axially orientated stresses can arise in the rotor blade fastening owing to different thermal expansions of rotor blade and disk, which with repeated occurrence can deform the projection. This effect, also known as “Blade Walk”, can lead to the axial play of the compressor rotor blades and this to flow losses in the compressor.
Hence, the object of the invention is to specify a rotor for a turbo-engine which without additional components enables a more secure fastening of rotor blades with simple geometric arrangement on the rotor.
The problem focused on the rotor is solved by the features of the claims. Advantageous developments are specified in the dependent claims.
The solution to the problem specifies that an annular groove extending in the axial direction coaxial to the rotational axis of the rotor is provided at least in one end face of the shaft collar, which intersects the slot base of each retaining slot and as deformation material of the blade root of the rotor blade is plastically displaced into the annular groove.
The invention is based on the knowledge that a holding area, which below the slot base of the retaining slot lies in the coaxial annular groove and serves for the holding of the material of the blade root, has a more advantageous shape for the projection formed by the caulking. The material of the rotor blade root plastically deformed after a caulking then bears better against the annular groove so that a loss-affected axial play of the rotor blade is avoided. Additional fastening components are inapplicable.
Hitherto in the prior art each chamfer was manufactured in a separate milling process. The annular groove, however, can be manufactured during the turning process by which the contour of the end face is manufactured. Therefore, in only one manufacturing process the holding area into which material of the blade root is displaceable is created below each retaining slot. This reduces the manufacturing costs and the manufacturing time of the rotor.
Within the scope of an advantageous development, the annular groove has an annular groove base and two flanks, wherein each flank of the annular groove merges into the annular groove base by a rounding. By this, notch stresses in the shaft collar, which would be created with a sharp transition from flank to the annular groove base, are avoided.
On the cut edge formed by the slot base of the retaining slot and the cut edge formed by the inner face of the annular groove these include a tangent angle which lies in a plane which is spanned by the radius of the rotor and the rotational axis of the rotor. As a result, the slot base of the retaining slot can intersect the radially further inner-lying rounding of the annular groove. The tangent angle on account of the rounding can then lie in an order of magnitude of between 50° and 90° so that the shape of the holding area comes geometrically very close to the shape of the projection. Therefore, by the caulking action a projection can be formed which has an angle of 50° to 90° to the slot base of the retaining slot. The most effective portion of the projection is that which is formed at an angle of 90° to the slot base of the retaining slot.
More expediently the shaft collar is formed by a disk, especially by a compressor disk. The annular groove can be manufactured during the turning of the compressor disk so that the individual milling of each chamfer is inapplicable.
In a preferred development the rotor blade is installed in the respective retaining slot by its blade root formed complementarily to the retaining slot, wherein material of the blade root protrudes into the annular groove. After the introducing of the rotor blade into the retaining slot, material of the blade root is deformed by the caulking into the annular groove and, therefore, creates a mechanical lock against axial displacement. The retaining slot can be dovetail-shaped or fir-tree-shaped in cross section.
So that the rotor blade is locked against axial displacement in both directions, each end face of a disk has an annular groove. Therefore, each side of the blade root facing the end face is deformed by a caulking action and the rotor blade on both sides is locked against axial displacement in both directions.
The problem focused on the turbo-engine is solved in that this is equipped with a rotor as claimed in the claims. By this, the advantages outlined for the rotor are valid analogically also for the turbo-engine, especially if this is a compressor.
The invention is explained with reference to a drawing. The drawing shows:
Gas turbines and their principles of operation are generally known. The gas turbine has in essence a compressor, a combustion chamber and a turbine unit along a rotor. The air drawn in and compressed by the compressor is mixed with a fuel and combusted in the combustion chamber into a hot gas which then expands in the turbine unit performing work on the rotor of the gas turbine. The rotor of the gas turbine then drives the compressor and a working machine, such as a generator.
In the compressor two blade rings in each case form a compressor stage, wherein viewed in the flow direction a ring of rotor blades rotatably fastened on the rotor follows in each case a stationary ring of stator blades. In the same way, two blade rings form in each case a turbine stage, wherein viewed in the flow direction a stationary stator blade ring follows in each case a ring of rotor blades rotatably fastened on the rotor.
The rotor of the gas turbine has for each rotor blade ring a disk or a shaft collar upon which are fastened the rotor blades of the respective ring.
The annular groove 31 has in cross section a flank 37 in each case as a side wall which by a rounding 41, which can be constructed as a radius, ellipse, concave form or comparable, merges into the annular groove base 39.
The annular groove 31 is provided on both end faces 25 of the compressor disk 19 so that each rotor blade 16 can be axially locked by two caulking actions.
In
A tangent, which with the slot base 27 of the retaining slot 21 includes a tangent angle α, lies on the curvature of the annular groove 31 in the region of the transition of annular groove 31 to the slot base 27.
This lies in an imaginary plane, which is spanned by the rotational axis of the rotor and by the radial direction of the rotor, which extends through a retaining slot 21. Depending upon the distance of the slot base 27 to the rotational axis of the rotor the tangent angle α has a value of 50° to 90°. If the annular groove base 39 intersects the slot base 27 of the retaining slot 21, then a tangent angle α of 90° is provided. If, however, the annular groove 21 is located radially further out so that the radially inner rounding 41 intersects the slot base 27 of the retaining slot 21, then the tangent angle α reduces corresponding to the selected rounding 41.
The greater the tangent angle α is the better can the projection 35 lock the rotor blade 16 against axial displacement as the latter is supported on the annular groove base 39.
Compared with the prior art according to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04008485 | Apr 2004 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2005/002710 | 3/14/2005 | WO | 00 | 10/6/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2005/100751 | 10/27/2005 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3157385 | Jenson | Nov 1964 | A |
4439107 | Antonellis | Mar 1984 | A |
4507052 | Thompson | Mar 1985 | A |
5211407 | Glynn et al. | May 1993 | A |
6190131 | Deallenbach | Feb 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
489 698 | Apr 1970 | CH |
0489698 | Apr 1970 | CH |
26 06 565 | Sep 1976 | DE |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080267781 A1 | Oct 2008 | US |