The present invention concerns a titanium compressor wheel for use in an air boost device, capable of operating at high RPM with acceptable aerodynamic performance, yet capable of being produced economically by an investment casting process.
Air boost devices (turbochargers, superchargers, electric compressors, etc.) are used to increase combustion air throughput and density, thereby increasing power and responsiveness of internal combustion engines. The design and function of turbochargers are described in detail in the prior art, for example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,705,463, 5,399,064, and 8,164,931, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The blades of a compressor wheel have a highly complex shape, for (a) drawing air in axially, (b) accelerating it centrifugally, and (c) discharging air radially outward at elevated pressure into the volute-shaped chamber of a compressor housing. In order to accomplish these three distinct functions with maximum efficiently and minimum turbulence, the blades can be said to have three separate regions.
First, the leading edge of the blade can be described as a sharp pitch helix, adapted for scooping air in and moving air axially. Considering only the leading edge of the blade, the cantilevered or outboard tip travels faster (MPS) than the part closest to the hub, and is generally provided with an even greater pitch angle than the part closest to the hub (see
Next, in the second region of the blades, the blades are curved in a manner to change the direction of the airflow from axial to radial, and at the same time to rapidly spin the air centrifugally and accelerate the air to a high velocity, so that when diffused in a volute chamber after leaving the impeller the energy is recovered in the form of increased pressure. Air is trapped in airflow channels defined between the blades, as well as between the inner wall of the compressor wheel housing and the radially enlarged disc-like portion of the hub which defines a floor space, the housing-floor spacing narrowing in the direction of air flow.
Finally, in the third region, the blades terminate in a trailing edge, which is designed for propelling air radially out of the compressor wheel. The design of this blade trailing edge is generally complex, provided with (a) a pitch, (b) an angle offset from radial, and/or (e) a back taper or back sweep (which, together with the forward sweep at the leading edge, provides the blade with an overall “S” shape). Air expelled in this way has not only high flow, but also high pressure.
Recently, tighter regulation of engine exhaust emissions has led to an interest in even higher pressure ratio boosting devices. However, current compressor wheels are not capable of withstanding repeated exposure to higher pressure ratios (>3.8). While aluminum is a material of choice for compressor wheels due to low weight and low cost, the temperature at the blade tips, and the stresses due to increased centrifugal forces at high RPM, exceed the capability of conventionally employed aluminum alloys. Refinements have been made to aluminum compressor wheels, but due to the inherent limited strength of aluminum, no further significant improvements can be expected. Accordingly, high pressure ratio boost devices have beer, found in practice to have short life, to be associated with high maintenance cost, and thus have too high a product life cost for widespread acceptance.
Titanium, known for high strength and low weight, might at first seem to be a suitable next generation material. Large titanium compressor wheels have in fact long been used in turbojet engines and jet engines from the B-52B/RB-52B to the F-22. However, titanium is one of the most difficult metals to work with, and currently the cost of production associated with titanium compressor wheels is so high as to limit wide spread employment of titanium.
There are presently no known cost-effective manufacturing techniques for manufacturing automobile or truck industry scale titanium compressor wheels. The automotive industry is driven by economics. While there is a need for a high performance compressor wheel, it must be capable of being manufactured at reasonable cost.
One example of a patent teaching casting of compressor wheels is U.S. Pat. No. 4,556,528 (Gersch et al) entitled “Method and Device for Casting of Fragile and Complex Shapes”. This patent illustrates the complex design of compressor wheels (as discussed in detail above), and the complex process involved in forming a resilient pattern for subsequent use in forming molds. More specifically, Gersch et al teach a process involving placing a solid positive resilient master pattern of an impeller into a suitable flask, pouring a flexible and resilient material, such as silastic or platinum rubber material, over the master pattern, curing, and withdrawing the solid master pattern of the impeller from the flexible material to form a flexible mold with a reverse or negative cavity of the master pattern. A flexible and resilient curable material is then poured into the cavity of the reverse mold. After the flexible and resilient material cures to form a positive flexible pattern of the impeller, it is removed from the flexible negative mold. The flexible positive pattern is then placed in an open top metal flask, and foundry plaster is poured into the flask. After the piaster has set up, the positive flexible pattern is removed from the plaster, leaving a negative plaster mold. A non-ferrous molten material (e.g., aluminum) is poured into the plaster mold, After the non-ferrous molten material solidifies and cools, the plaster is destroyed and removed to produce a positive non-ferrous reproduction of the original part.
While the Gersch et al process is effective for forming cast aluminum compressor wheels, it is limited to non-ferrous or lower temperature or minimally reactive casting materials and cannot be used for producing parts of high temperature casting materials such as ferrous metals and titanium. Titanium, being highly reactive, requires a ceramic shell.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,019,927 (Galliger) entitled “Method of Casting a Complex Metal Part” teaches a method for casting a titanium gas turbine impeller which, though different in shape from a compressor wheel, does have a complex geometry with walls or blades defining undercut spaces. A flexible and resilient positive pattern is made, and the pattern is dipped info a ceramic molding media capable of drying and hardening. The pattern is removed from the media to form a ceramic layer on the flexible pattern, and the layer is coated with sand and air-dried to form a ceramic layer. The dipping, sanding and drying operations are repeated several times to form a multi-layer ceramic shell. The flexible wall pattern is removed from the shell, by partially collapsing with suction if necessary, to form a first ceramic shell mold with a negative cavity defining the part. A second ceramic shell mold is formed on the first shell mold to define the back of the part and a pour-passage, and the combined shell molds are fired in a kiln. A high temperature casting material is poured into the shell molds, and after the casting material solidifies, the shell molds are removed by breaking.
It is apparent that the Galliger gas turbine flexible pattern is (a) collapsible and (b) is intended for manufacturing large-dimension gas turbine impellers for jet or turbojet engines. This technique is not suitable for mass-production of automobile scale compressor wheels with thin blades, using a non-collapsing pattern, Galliger does not teach a method which could be adapted to in the automotive industry.
In addition to the above “rubber pattern” technique for forming casting molds, there is a well-known process referred to as “investment casting” which can be used for making compressor wheels and which involves:
There are however significant problems associated with the initial step of forming the compressor wheel wax pattern. Whenever a die is used to cast the wax pattern, the casting die must be opened to release the product. Herein, the several parts of the die (die inserts) must each be retracted, generally only in a straight (radial) line.
As discussed above, the blades of a compressor wheel have a complex shape. The complex geometry of the compressor wheel, with undercut recesses and/or back tapers created by the twist of the individual air foils with compound curves, not to mention dips and humps along the leading edge of the blade, impedes the withdrawal of die inserts.
In order to side-step these complexities, it has been known to fashion separate molds for each of the wax blades and for the wax hub. The separate wax blades and hub can than be assembled and fused to form a wax compressor wheel pattern. However, it is difficult to assemble a compressor pattern from separate wax parts with the required degree of precision—including coplanerism of airfoils, proper angle of attack or twist, and equal spacing. Further, stresses are encountered during assembling that lead to distortion after removal from the assembly fixture. Finally, this is a labor intensive and thus expensive process. This technique cannot be employed on an industrial scale.
Certainly, titanium compressor wheels would seem desirable over aluminum or steel compressor wheels. Titanium is strong and light-weight, and thus lends itself to producing thin, light-weight compressor wheels which can be driven at high RPM without over-stress due to centrifugal forces.
However, as discussed above, titanium is one of the most difficult materials to work with, resulting in a prohibitively high cost of manufacturing compressor wheels. This manufacturing cost prevents their wide-spread employment. No new technology will be adopted industrially unless accompanied by a cost benefit.
There is thus a need for a simple and economical method, for mass producing titanium compressor wheels, and for the low-cost titanium compressor wheels produced thereby. The method must be capable of reliably and reproducibly producing compressor wheels, without suffering from the prior art problems of dimensional or structural imperfections, particularly in the thin blades.
The present invention addressed the problem of whether it would be possible to design a titanium compressor wheel for boosting air pressure and throughput to an internal combustion engine and satisfying the following two (seemingly contradictory) requirements:
The problem was solved by the present inventors in a surprising manner. Simply stated, the present inventors approached this problem by standing it on it's head. Traditionally, a manufacturing process begins by designing a product, and then devising a process for making that product. Most compressor wheels are designed for optimum aerodynamic efficiency, and thus have narrow blade spacing and complex leading and trailing edge design (excess rake, undercutting and backsweep, complex bowing and leading edge hump and dip).
The present invention was surprisingly made by departing from the conventional engineering approach and by looking first not at the end product, but rather at the various processes for producing the wax pattern. The inventors then designed various compressor wheels on the basis of “pullability”—ability to be manufactured using die inserts which are pullable—and then tested the operational properties of various compressor wheels produced from these simplified patterns at high RPM, with repeated load cycles, and for long periods of time (to simulate long use in practical environment). The result was a simplified compressor wheel design which (a) lends itself to economical production by casting of titanium, and (b) at high RPM has an entirely satisfactory aerodynamic performance.
More specifically, the invention provides a titanium compressor wheel with a simplified blade design, which will aerodynamically have a degree of efficiency comparable to that of a complex compressor wheel blade design, and yet which, form a manufacturing aspect, can be produced economically in an investment casting process (lost wax process) using a wax pattern easily producible at low cost from an automated (and “pullable”) die.
As a result of this discovery, the economic equation has shifted for the first time in favor of the titanium compressor wheel for general automotive technology.
Accordingly, in a first embodiment, the invention concerns a compressor wheel of simplified, blade design, such that:
The compressor wheel blades may have curvature, and may be of any design so long as the blade leading edges have no dips and no humps, and the blades have no undercut recesses and/or back tapers created by the twist of the individual air foils with compound curves of a magnitude which would prevent extracting the die inserts radially or along some curve or arc in a simple manner.
In simplest form, the wax mold is produced from a die having one die insert corresponding to each air passage. This is possible where the blades are designed to permit, pulling of simple die inserts (i.e., one die insert per air passage). However, as discussed below, each die can be comprised of two or more die inserts, with two inserts per air passage being preferred for reasons of economy.
In a more advanced form, the blades are designed with some degree of rake or backsweep or curvature, but only to the extent that two or more, preferably two inserts, per air passage can be easily automatically extracted. Such an arrangement, though slightly increasing the cost and complexity of the wax mold tooling, would permit manufacture of wax molds, and thus compressor wheels, with greater complexity of shape. In the case of two inserts per air passage, the pull direction would not necessarily be the same for each member of the pair of inserts. The one die insert, defining one area of the air passage between two blades, may be pulled radially with a slight forward tilt, while a second die insert, defining the rest of the passage, may be pulled along a slight arc due to the slight backsweep of the blade. This embodiment is referred to as a “compound die insert” embodiment. One way of describing pullability is that the blade surfaces are not convex. That is, a positive draft exists along the pull axis.
Once the wax pattern is formed, the titanium investment casting process continues in the conventional manner.
The invention further concerns an economical method for operating an internal combustion engine, comprising providing said engine with an easily manufactured, long-life titanium compressor wheel and driving the titanium compressor wheel at high RPM for increasing combustion air throughput and density and reducing emissions.
The titanium compressor wheel of the present invention has a design lending itself to being produced in a simplified, highly automated process.
The foregoing has outlined rather broadly the more pertinent and important features of the present invention in order that the detailed description of the invention that follows may be better understood, and so that the present contribution to the art can be more fully appreciated. Additional features of the invention will be described hereinafter, which form the subject of the claims of the invention, it should be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the conception and the specific embodiments disclosed may be readily utilized as a basis for modifying or designing other compressor wheels for carrying out the same purposes of the present invention, it should also be realized by those skilled in the art that such equivalent structures do not depart from the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims.
For a fuller understanding of the nature and objects of the present invention reference should be made by the following detailed description taken in with the accompanying drawings in which:
One major aspect of the present invention is based on an adjustment of an aerodynamically acceptable design or blade geometry so as to make a wax pattern, from which the cast titanium compressor wheel is produced, initially producible in an automatic die as a unitized, complete shape. The invention provides a simplified blade design which (a) allows production of wax patterns using simplified tooling and (b) is aerodynamically effective. This modified blade design is at the root of a simple and economical method for manufacturing cast titanium compressor wheels.
The invention provides for the first time a process by which titanium compressor wheels can be mass produced by a simple, low cost, economical process. In the following the invention will first be described using simple die inserts, i.e., one die insert per air passage, after which an embodiment having compound die inserts, i.e., two or more die inserts per air passage, will be described.
The term “titanium compressor wheel” is used herein to refer to a compressor wheel comprised predominantly of titanium. This is often simply referred to in the art as titanium, but is more accurately a “titanium alloy”, and these terms are used interchangeably herein.
As the starting point for understanding the present invention, it must be understood that the shape, contours and curvature of the blades are modified to provide a design which, on the one hand, provides aerodynamically acceptable characteristics at high RPM, and on the other hand, makes it possible to produce a wax pattern economically using an automatic compound die. That is, it is central to the invention that die inserts used to define the air passages during casting of the wax pattern are “pullable”, i.e., can be withdrawn radially or along a curvature in order to make the die inserts retractable, the following aspects were taken into consideration:
Once the wax pattern satisfying the above requirements has been produced, the remainder of the casting technique can be traditional investment casting, with modifications as known in the art for casting titanium. A wax pattern is dipped into a ceramic slurry multiple times. After a drying process the shell is “de-waxed” and hardened by firing. The next step involves filling the mold with molten metal. Molten titanium is very reactive and requires a special ceramic shell material with no available oxygen. Pours are also preferably done in a hard vacuum. Some foundries use centrifugal casting to fill the mold. Most use gravity pouring with complex gating to achieve sound castings. After cool-down, the shell is broken and removed, and the casting is given special processing to remove the mold-metal reaction layer, usually by chemical milling.
Some densification by HIP (hot isostatic pressing) may be needed if the process otherwise leaves excessive internal voids.
The invention will now be described in greater detail by way of comparing the compressor wheel of the invention to a compressor wheel of the prior art, for which reference is made to the figures.
These design considerations result, as seen in
It can be seen that the leading edge 17 of the blades are essentially straight, having no dips or humps which would impede radial extraction of die inserts. That is, there may be a slight rounding up 18 (i.e., continuation of the blade along the blade pitch) where the blade joins the hub, but this curvature does not interfere, with pullability of die inserts.
It can be seen that the blade spacing is wide enough and that any rake and/or backsweep of the blades is not so great as to impede extraction of the inserts along a straight line or a simple curve.
Trailing edge 16 of the blade 14 may in one design extend relatively radially outward from the center of the hub (the hub axis) or, more preferably, may extend along an imaginary line from, a point on the outer edge of the hub disk to a point on the outer (leading) circumference of the hub shaft. The trailing edge of the blade, viewed from the side of the compressor wheel may be oriented parallel to the hub axis, but is preferably cantilevered beyond the base of the hub and extends beyond the base triangularly, as shown in
In a basic embodiment, the compressor wheel has from 8 to 12 full blades and no splitter blades. In a preferred embodiment, the compressor wheel has from 4 to 8, preferably 6, full blades and an equal number of splitter blades.
Obviously, the above dimensions refer equally to the wax pattern and the finished compressor wheel. The wax pattern differs from the final product mainly in that a wax funnel is included. This produces in the ceramic mold void a funnel into which molten metal is poured during casting. Any excess metal remaining in this funnel area after casting is removed from the final product, usually by machining.
In
The wax casting process according to the invention occurs fully automatically. The inserts are assembled to form a mold, wax is injected, and the inserts are timed by a mechanism to retract in unison.
Once the wax pattern (with pour funnel) is formed, the ceramic mold forming process and the titanium casting process are carried out in conventional manner. The wax pattern with pour funnel is dipped into a ceramic slurry, removed from the slurry and coated with sand or vermiculite to form a ceramic layer on the wax pattern. The layer is dried, and the dipping, sanding and drying operations are repeated several times to create a multiple layer ceramic shell mold enclosing or encapsulating the combined wax pattern. The shell mold and wax patterns with pour funnel are then placed within a kiln and fired to remove the wax and harden the ceramic shell mold with pour funnel.
Molten titanium is poured into the shell mold, and after the titanium hardens, the shell mold is removed by destroying the mold to form a light weight, precision case compressor wheel capable of withstanding high RPM and high temperatures.
The titanium compressor wheel of the present invention has a design lending itself to being produced in a simplified, highly automated process. As a result, the compressor wheel is not liable to any deformities as might result when using em elastic deformable mold, or when assembling separate blades onto a hub, according to the procedures of the prior art.
Tested against an aluminum compressor wheels of similar design, the aluminum compressor wheel as not capable of withstanding repeated exposure to higher pressure ratios, while the titanium compressor wheel showed no signs of fatigue even when run through thirteen or more times the number of operating cycles as the aluminum compressor wheel.
Although this invention has been described in its preferred form with a certain degree of particularity with respect to a titanium compressor wheel, it is understood that the present disclosure of the preferred form has been made only by way of example and that numerous changes in the details of structures and the composition of the combination may be resorted to without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Although a cast titanium compressor wheel has been described herein with great detail with respect to an embodiment suitable for the automobile or truck industry, it will be readily apparent that the compressor wheel and the process for production thereof are suitable for use in a number of other applications, such as fuel cell powered vehicles. Although this invention has been described in its preferred form with a certain of particularity with respect to an automotive internal combustion compressor wheel, it is understood that the present disclosure of the preferred form has been made only by way of example and that numerous changes in the details of structures and the composition of the combination may be resorted to without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Now that the invention has been described.
This is a Continuation Application of U.S. application Ser. No.: 10/661,271 filed Sep. 12, 2003 now abandoned, which is a Continuation Application of U.S. application Ser. No.: 09/875,760 filed Jun. 6, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No.: 6,663,347.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080289332 A1 | Nov 2008 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10661271 | Sep 2003 | US |
Child | 12019434 | US | |
Parent | 09875760 | Jun 2001 | US |
Child | 10661271 | US |