The present invention relates to the field of turbomachines. It relates to a turbomachine vane and in particular a fan flow-straightener vane. The invention also concerns an assembly comprising a nacelle and a fan casing which is fixed to the nacelle and which is equipped with at least one flow-straightener vane and a turbomachine equipped with such a vane or such an assembly with a flow-straightener vane.
The natural evolution of multi-flow turbojet engines with a fan, particularly upstream, is to increase the propulsive efficiency by reducing the specific thrust, obtained by reducing the fan compression ratio, which results in an increase in the bypass ratio (BPR), which is the ratio of the mass flow of air through a vein or veins surrounding the gas generator to the mass flow of air through the gas generator, calculated at the maximum thrust when the engine is stationary in an international standard atmosphere at sea level.
The increase in the bypass ratio affects the diameter of the turbomachine, which is constrained by the minimum ground clearance required due to the integration of the turbomachine most often under the wing of an aircraft. The increase in the bypass ratio takes place primarily on the diameter of the fan. The fan is enclosed by a fan casing which surrounds the fan vanes and is connected to the gas generator by stator vanes known as flow-straighteners or “Outlet Guide Vanes” (abbreviated to OGV). These flow-straightener vanes are arranged radially from the gas generator casing, downstream of the fan vanes, and serve to rectify the flow generated by the latter. These vanes must be arranged at a predetermined minimum axial distance from the fan vanes so as to limit the acoustic interactions responsible for significant noise. The predetermined axial distance between the vanes determines the length of the fan casing. In addition, the weight of the fan casing and in particular its length affects the drag of the turbomachine.
A turbomachine flow-straightener vane arranged downstream of the fan vanes is known from U.S. Pat. No. 6,554,564. This flow-straightener vane has a leading edge with a sweep angle pointing upstream (along the longitudinal axis of the turbomachine) or a trailing edge with a sweep angle pointing downstream (along the longitudinal axis of the turbomachine) so that the chord of these flow-straightener vanes varies from the root end to the tip end. This influences the axial length of the vane and the mass of the vane. These flow-straightener vanes may also comprise a portion of their body with the leading edge and trailing edge having a sweep angle pointing in the same direction, either upstream or downstream. However, for these latter examples of flow-straightener vanes, the sweep angle, formed between two segments of the leading edge or two segments of the trailing edge, forms an obtuse angle or an acute angle. In other words, the sweep angles of the leading and trailing edges form an abrupt change of direction. There is therefore no curvature between two segments of the leading or trailing edge. An example of a flow-straightener vane shown in
The present invention has in particular the objective of limiting the drag of the turbomachine nacelle and of limiting the mass of the propulsion assembly while acting on acoustic phenomena occurring in the vicinity of a flow-straightener vane.
This is achieved in accordance with the invention by means of a flow-straightener vane of a bypass turbomachine with a longitudinal axis, the vane comprising a plurality of vane sections stacked radially with respect to the longitudinal axis along a stacking line between a root end and a tip end, each vane section comprising an pressure-face surface and a suction-face surface extending axially between an upstream leading edge and a downstream trailing edge and being tangentially opposed, between the leading and trailing edges of each vane section being formed a profile chord the length of which is substantially constant between the tip end and the root end, and the stacking line having a curvature in a plane passing substantially through the longitudinal axis and through the stacking line, located in the vicinity of the tip end and oriented from downstream to upstream.
This solution thus achieves the above-mentioned objective. In particular, the shape of the flow-straightener vane with this curvature makes it possible to shorten the length of the nacelle surrounding the fan casing intended to carry this stator vane, thereby advantageously reducing the drag. It also reduces the noise generated towards the end of the vane tip when the vane tip is mounted in the nacelle. In particular, the sound intensity increases with the proximity between the fan vanes and the flow-straightener vanes. The zones located around 75% of the vane height are particularly affected by these interactions because of the speeds observed and the aerodynamic load involved. The profile of the flow-straightener vane thus makes it possible to maintain the required minimum axial distance to the top of the flow-straightener vanes.
According to one characteristic, the curvature of the stacking line is continuous and progressive. Such a configuration reduces the formation of vortices, which also generate noise. Indeed, a sudden change would significantly affect the vortices that can form in the upper part of the vane and which are a source of noise.
According to a characteristic of the invention, the curvature is between 50% and 95% of the height of the vane between the root end and the tip end. This configuration allows to act at the location where the acoustic and velocity interactions are highest and where the aerodynamic load is involved.
According to a characteristic of the invention, the shape of the vane, between 50% and 95% of the height of the vane, is determined by the following relationship: 0.1<(L2/L1)50% H<H<95% H<0.5, L2 corresponding to the minimum distance between the leading edge of the vane and a line passing through the root end and the tip end of the vane, L1 corresponding to the length between this same line and the trailing edge of the flow-straightener vane and H being the height of the vane. This configuration makes it possible, on the one hand, to limit the maximum angle at the root end of the vane and, on the other hand, to limit the structural stresses. In other words, the curvature of the flow-straightener vane is defined between 50% and 95% of its height.
According to another characteristic, the vane has a first root portion whose stacking line extends along a straight line and a second tip portion whose stacking line comprises the curvature. This configuration thus only changes the upper part of the flow-straightener vane.
As a further characteristic, the stacking line extending along a straight line is inclined with respect to the longitudinal axis.
According to another characteristic, the leading edge has a concave portion and the trailing edge has a convex portion at the curvature. Thus, the directions of the leading and trailing edges of the vane are substantially parallel to the direction of the stacking line.
The invention also relates to an assembly comprising a bypass turbomachine nacelle extending along a longitudinal axis and a fan casing secured to the nacelle, the fan casing surrounding a fan and delimiting downstream of the fan an annular vein in which an air flow circulates, the fan casing comprising an annular row of flow-straightener vanes having any of the above-mentioned characteristics arranged downstream of the fan vanes transversely in the annular vein. Such a characteristic reduces the length of the nacelle and reduces the acoustic criterion in the upper part of the nacelle. In particular, for a given fan diameter, an acoustic gain of approximately 2 EPNdB (“Effective Perceived Noise” or “Effective Perceived Noise Level in Decibels”) is observed.
According to a characteristic of the invention, the nacelle has a length substantially along the longitudinal axis between 3000 and 3800 mm.
According to another characteristic, the nacelle has a length substantially along the longitudinal axis and the fan has a diameter substantially along the radial axis, the ratio of the length of the nacelle to the diameter of the fan being between 1 and 3. In particular, the diameter of the fan is measured at a leading edge at its fan vane tip.
According to a characteristic, the relative axial distance between a fan vane and a flow-straightener vane is determined by the following condition: (d/C) where d is the distance between a trailing edge of the fan and the leading edge of the flow-straightener vane, and C is the length of the axial chord of the fan vane, wherein the curvature of the stacking line verifies the following relationship: (d/C)50% H<H<95% H>(d/C)100% H, where H is the height of the flow-straightener vane between the tip end and the root end. (d/C)50% H<H<95% H is the distance between the trailing edge of the fan and the leading edge of the flow-straightener vane divided by the length of the axial chord of the fan vane between 50% and 95% of the height of the flow-straightener vane, and (d/C)100% H is the distance between the trailing edge of the fan and the leading edge of the flow-straightener vane divided by the length of the axial chord of the fan vane at the tip of the flow-straightener vane. In particular (d/C) 100% H corresponds to the vane height at the contact between the flow-straightener vane and the fan casing.
The invention furthermore concerns an assembly comprising a nacelle of a bypass turbomachine extending along a longitudinal axis and a fan casing secured to the nacelle, the fan casing surrounding a fan and delimiting, downstream of the fan, an annular vein in which an air flow circulates, the nacelle comprising an annular row of flow-straightener vanes having any of the above characteristics arranged downstream of the fan vanes transversely in the annular vein and having a downstream end of the tip end located downstream of a downstream end of the fan casing. Such a characteristic reduces the length of the nacelle and reduces the acoustic criterion in the upper part of the nacelle. In particular, for the same given fan diameter, a sound gain of approximately 2 EPNdB (“Effective Perceived Noise” or “Effective Perceived Noise Level in Decibels”) is observed.
The invention also relates to a turbomachine comprising at least one flow-straightener vane having at least one of the above-mentioned characteristics.
The invention shall be better understood, and other purposes, details, characteristics and advantages of the invention shall appear more clearly on reading the following detailed explanatory description of the embodiments of the invention given as purely illustrative and non-limitative examples, with reference to the attached schematic drawings in which:
In this example, the gas generator 102 comprises, from upstream to downstream, a low-pressure compressor 104, a high-pressure compressor 105, a combustion chamber 106, a high-pressure turbine 107 and a low-pressure turbine 108. The gas generator 102 is housed in an internal casing 109.
The fan 103 is shrouded here and is also housed in the nacelle 101. In particular, the turbomachine comprises a fan casing 56 which surrounds the fan. To this fan casing 56 is attached a retention casing 50 which surrounds the plurality of fan mobile vanes 51 which extend radially from the fan shaft mounted along the longitudinal axis X. The fan casing 56 and the retention casing 50 are integral with the nacelle 101 which surrounds them. The nacelle 101 is generally cylindrical in shape. The fan casing 56 is located downstream of the retention casing 50 ensuring the retention of the fan vanes 51.
The fan 103 compresses the air entering the turbomachine 100, which is divided into a hot flow circulating in an annular primary vein V1 which passes through the gas generator 102 and a cold flow circulating in an annular secondary vein V2 around the gas generator 102. In particular, the primary vein V1 and the secondary vein V2 are separated by an annular inter-vein casing 110 arranged between the nacelle 101 and the internal casing 109. During operation, the hot flow circulating in the primary vein V1 is conventionally compressed by compressor stages before entering the combustion chamber. The combustion energy is recovered by turbine stages that drive the compressor stages and the fan. The fan is rotated by a power shaft of the turbomachine via, in this example, a power transmission mechanism 57 to reduce the rotation speed of the fan. Such a power transmission mechanism is provided in part because of the large diameter of the fan. The large diameter of the fan makes it possible to increase the bypass ratio. The power transmission mechanism 57 comprises a reduction gear, here arranged axially between a fan shaft attached to the fan and the power shaft of the gas generator 102. The cold air flow F circulating in the secondary vein V2 is oriented along the longitudinal axis X and contributes to provide the thrust of the turbomachine 100.
With reference to
At least one stator vane 1 or radial stationary vane known as a fan flow-straightener vane or fan flow guide vane is arranged in the secondary vein V2. The flow-straightener vane is also known by the acronym OGV for “Outlet Guide Vane” and thus straightens the cold flow generated by the fan 103. In the present invention, the term “stationary vane” or “stator vane” means a vane that is not rotated about the axis X of the turbomachine 100. In other words, this flow-straightener vane is distinct from and contrary to a moving vane or rotor vane of the turbomachine 100. In the present example, a plurality of flow-straightener vanes 1 is arranged transversely in the fan nacelle 101 substantially in a plane transverse to the longitudinal axis X. The nacelle 101 then surrounds the flow-straightener vanes. To straighten the flow of the fan 103, between ten and fifty flow-straightener vanes 1 are distributed circumferentially to form a flow-straightener stage. These flow-straightener vanes 1 are arranged downstream of the fan 103. In this example, they are attached to the fan casing 56. They are evenly distributed around the axis X of the turbomachine.
With reference to
The stacking line L of the vane sections 2 forming the vane has a curvature in the vicinity of the tip end 4 of the vane. The flow-straightener vane 1 here is approximately boomerang-shaped. As shown in
Each flow-straightener vane 1 is attached to the inner casing 110 and the fan casing 56 attached to the nacelle 101. The flow-straightener vanes 1 provide a structural function, providing load take-up. With reference to
Similarly, according to
The angles β1 of the trailing edge 6 to the longitudinal axis are plotted in a graph of
In particular, a distinction must be made between at least two ranges of angle variation at the trailing edge of the flow-straightener vane according to the invention. According to a mathematical representation with P a point belonging to the curve representing the height H of the flow-straightener vane 1 and in particular between 50% and 95% of the height H:
We can thus see in
More precisely, the arrangement of the vane 1 according to the invention allows the reduction of the length of the nacelle 101 without aggravating the acoustic nuisance for the same given fan diameter. The gain in length makes it possible to reduce the aerodynamic drag of the turbomachine and/or the integration of larger surfaces of acoustic panels for equivalent drag as described later in the invention. The acoustic gain is approximately 2 EPNdB (Effective Perceived Noise or Effective Perceived Noise in decibels).
For the same given fan diameter, and at acoustic iso margin, the ratio of the length of the nacelle to the diameter of the fan (LN/DF) can be between −5% and −15% compared to a turbomachine without the invention, which implies a reduction in the length of the nacelle of between −5% and −15% compared to the turbomachine without the invention. In particular, the LN/DF ratio is for example between 1 and 3. Preferably, but not restrictively, the ratio is between 2.1 and 2.8.
The relative minimum axial distance between the fan vanes and the flow-straightener vanes is determined by the relationship d/C. d is the predetermined minimum axial distance between the trailing edge 53 of the fan and the leading edge 5 of the flow-straightener vane 1, and C is the length of the axial chord of the fan. The fan chord length C is measured between the leading edge 52 and the trailing edge 53 of the fan vane.
The solution can also result in the following condition to be observed:
H corresponds to the outer radius of the flow-straightener vane 1 taken between the root end and the tip end of the vane 1. In other words, between 50% and 95% of the vane height H, the relative minimum axial distance between the fan 103 and the flow-straightener vane 1 is greater than the relative minimum axial distance measured at the tip end of the vane, i.e. for 100% of the height H of the flow-straightener vane 1.
According to a further characteristic of the invention, the following two conditions can be implemented:
The parameter α corresponds to an efficiency factor. The parameter α considered to be greater than 1.1 is defined as a condition for guaranteeing the effectiveness of the invention. The parameter Ω is a parameter characterizing the condition Ω<3 to constrain the length of the nacelle and to maintain the desired performance advantage. In particular, we consider d the distance between the fan vane and the flow-straightener vane as a function of the height H (d(H)), the percentage height of vane 1 with 0% H (at the root end of the vane 1) and 100% H (at the tip end of the vane 1). For each distance d considered between 50% and 95% of the vane height, the vane height is greater than the distance d at the tip end of the vane 1 (100% H): d(r [50%−95%])>d(100%). This allows the flow-straightener vane to be brought closer to the fan vane at the root and tip end of the vane 1 without impacting the distance from the vane 1 on the portion of the vane height between 50% and 95% where the aeroacoustics phenomena are most intense. In other words, the distance of propagation of the wake of the fan as well as its dissipation are maximized and optimized.
Since the length of the nacelle after the vanes (between the tip end of the vane 1 and the downstream end 21 of the nacelle) is not shortened, an acoustic treatment of the nacelle can be considered. Such acoustic treatment may include the arrangement of acoustic panels to further reduce noise. Such acoustic panels are advantageously, but not restrictively, placed on an inner face of the nacelle 101 downstream of the flow-straightener vanes 1.
Following an embodiment illustrated in
L2 corresponds to the minimum distance between the leading edge 5 of the flow-straightener vane 1 and the line A passing through the root end and the tip end of the vane taken at the leading edge 5. L1 corresponds to the length between this same line A and the trailing edge 6 of the flow-straightener vane. The lower (0.1) and upper (0.5) boundaries are determined in such a way as to limit the maximum angle of inclination of the stacking line L at the root end 3 of the flow-straightener vane 1 while limiting the curvature of the stacking line. The result is a curvilinear shape that limits structural stresses (flexibility of the flow-straightener vane). This is a particular advantage for a flow-straightener vane that is not very structural (which does not contribute to the suspension of the engine).
Following yet another embodiment illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1757896 | Aug 2017 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FR2018/052114 | 8/28/2018 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2019/043330 | 3/7/2019 | WO | A |
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Entry |
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Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority dated Nov. 15, 2018, issued in corresponding International Application No. PCT/FR2018/052114, filed Aug. 28, 2018, 5 pages. |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20200355085 A1 | Nov 2020 | US |