The present invention relates to the general field of turbomachine blades of composite material comprising fiber reinforcement densified by a matrix.
The intended field is that of rotors having composite material blades for aeroengines or for industrial turbines.
Proposals have already been made to use composite material for making turbomachine blades. By way of example, reference may be made to patent application FR 08 58090 (not yet published) filed in the joint names of Snecma and Snecma Propulsion Solide, describing the fabrication of a turbomachine blade by making a fiber preform by three-dimensional weaving and densifying the preform with a matrix.
For a rotor having metal blades, the rotor generally has a plurality of metal blades mounted via their roots on a metal disk, together with a metal casing placed around the rotor. During assembly (when cold) of the rotor inside the casing, it is necessary to leave radial clearance between the tips of the blades and the casing that surrounds the rotor. However, in operation (when hot), this clearance can give rise to leaks of gas between the tips of the blades and the casing.
In order to reduce the risk of such leaks appearing, the free ends of the blades are generally provided with radial labyrinth teeth, and an abradable material is mounted on the inside surface of the casing facing the labyrinth teeth. In operation of the rotor, the disks, the blades, and the casing surrounding the rotor all expand in such a manner that the labyrinth teeth carried by the blades abrade the abradable material carried by the casing. As a result, the clearance left on assembly between the tips of the blades and the casing tends to disappear, thereby limiting gas leakage.
In contrast, with a rotor having blades made of composite material, the expansion differences between the rotor (made in part out of the composite material of its blades) and the casing (made of metal) can become large. As a result, when operating hot, the radial clearance left during assembly between the labyrinth teeth of the blades and the abradable material of the casing does not disappear completely, thereby having the consequence of sealing between the rotor and the casing no longer being fully ensured.
A main object of the present invention is thus to mitigate such drawbacks by proposing a turbomachine rotor having composite material blades in which sealing relative to the surrounding casing can be ensured in operation.
According to the invention, this object is achieved by a rotor comprising an assembly disk, a plurality of composite material blades mounted on the assembly disk via their roots and each provided at its free end with a platform, and a metal shroud positioned on the blade platforms concentrically around the assembly disk and including labyrinth teeth that project radially outwards in order to abrade an abradable material carried by a casing surrounding the rotor, the casing being held stationary both axially and circumferentially relative to the blade platforms and being suitable for moving radially outwards in operation relative to the blade platforms.
The rotor of the invention is mounted while cold inside the casing, with radial clearance being left between the labyrinth teeth of the shroud and the abradable material carried by the casing. In operation, the shroud expands thermally under the effect of the heat given off by the gas passing through the rotor, and under the effect of the centrifugal force exerted by the rotor it moves radially towards the abradable material. As a result, the radial clearance between the labyrinth teeth of the blades and the abradable material carried by the casing can be eliminated in operation. Sealing between the rotor and the surrounding casing is thus properly ensured in operation.
In an advantageous disposition, the rotor further comprises at least one pin passing through the shroud and the platform of at least one blade in a direction that is substantially radial, the pin being fastened to the shroud and being suitable for moving radially relative to the blade platforms so as to prevent the shroud from moving axially and circumferentially relative to the blade platforms while allowing the shroud to move radially relative to the blade platforms.
Preferably, each pin passes through an orifice formed in the platform of a blade at a junction between two adjacent blade platforms. Furthermore, each pin may be welded to the shroud. A plurality of pins may also be regularly distributed around the shroud.
The platform of each blade may present a rim projecting radially outwards, the shroud having a circumferential groove that is inwardly open and in which the rim of each blade platform is received so as to guide the shroud during its radial movement relative to the blade platforms.
The invention also provides a turbomachine having at least one rotor as defined above.
Other characteristics and advantages of the present invention appear from the following description made with reference to the accompanying drawings that show an embodiment having no limiting character. In the figures:
The invention is applicable to various types of rotor carrying composite material blades in a turbomachine, and in particular compressor and turbine rotors of various gas turbine spools, e.g. a low pressure turbine rotor of an aviation turbomachine, of the kind shown in
The rotor 2 shown in
In the example of
Each blade 8 is made of composite material using methods known to the person skilled in the art. Reference may be made for example to patent application FR 08 58090 which describes the fabrication of one such blade comprising fiber reinforcement obtained by three-dimensional weaving of yarns and densifying with a matrix.
Each of the blades 8 is provided at its free end (or tip) with a top platform 14 of composite material, this platform being disposed facing an abradable material 16 mounted on the inside surface of a metal annular casing centered on the axis of rotation 6 and surrounding the rotor (not shown in the figures).
According to the invention, a metal shroud 18 centered on the axis of rotation 6 is positioned on the platform 14 of the blades concentrically about the assembly disk 4. The shroud 18 is made as a single part extending around 360°.
The shroud 18 has metal labyrinth teeth 20 that project radially outwards (i.e. away from the axis of rotation 6) and that are designed, while the turbine is in operation, to abrade the abradable material 16 carried by the casing surrounding the rotor.
Furthermore, the shroud 18 is mounted on the platform 14 of the blades 8 so as to possess a single freedom of movement in radial displacement, i.e. it is held axially and circumferentially relative to the blade platforms while being capable of moving radially outwards (i.e. away from the axis of rotation 6) relative to the blade platforms.
For this purpose, the rotor 2 is provided with at least one pin 22 (or peg) that passes in a substantially radial direction D through an orifice 24 formed in the shroud 18 and an orifice 26 formed in the platform 14 of at least one blade, the orifices 18 and 26 being radially in alignment with each other. The rotor preferably has a plurality of such pins 22 that are regularly spaced apart around the shroud.
Each pin 22 is fastened to the shroud 18 via its outer end, e.g. by beads of welding 28, and its inner end that passes through the orifice 26 formed in the platform 14 of the blade is free. As a result, the pin 22 allows the shroud 18 to be held stationary both axially and circumferentially relative to the platform 14 of the blades while enabling the platform to move radially outwards relative to the blade platforms.
In an advantageous disposition of the invention shown in particular in
Under such circumstances, it is preferable for only one of the platforms 14 of the two adjacent blades to present an orifice 26 for passing the pin, said orifice being semicylindrical in shape, for example. The corresponding orifice 24 that is formed in the shroud is substantially cylindrical. With this disposition, each pin 22 is generally L-shaped in radial section perpendicular to the axis of rotation 6 (see
Naturally, it is equally possible to envisage that two platforms of two adjacent blades are machined with respective semicylindrical orifices so as to form a cylindrical hole, with the pin then being likewise cylindrical in shape. Nevertheless, compared with a cylindrical pin, the particular arrangement shown in
In another advantageous disposition of the invention, the platform 14 of each blade 8 presents a rim 30, e.g. at its end that is downstream (relative to the flow direction of gas passing through the turbine), the rim 30 projecting radially outwards, and the shroud 18 presenting a circumferential groove 32 that is open towards the inside (i.e. towards the axis of rotation 6). Thus, when the shroud is assembled on the blade platforms, the rim 30 of each platform is received in the groove 32 of the shroud so as to guide the shroud during its radial displacement relative to the blade platforms.
The operation of the rotor 2 of the invention is as follows. When cold (
When hot (
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
08 59000 | Dec 2008 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2610823 | Knowlton, Jr. | Sep 1952 | A |
3048365 | Foster et al. | Aug 1962 | A |
3095138 | Warnken | Jun 1963 | A |
3556675 | Howald et al. | Jan 1971 | A |
3680977 | Rabouyt et al. | Aug 1972 | A |
3728044 | Fujita et al. | Apr 1973 | A |
3857650 | Cerrato | Dec 1974 | A |
3918840 | Haworth et al. | Nov 1975 | A |
4028006 | Kuroda et al. | Jun 1977 | A |
4832568 | Roth et al. | May 1989 | A |
5037273 | Krueger et al. | Aug 1991 | A |
5253978 | Fraser | Oct 1993 | A |
6371725 | Manteiga et al. | Apr 2002 | B1 |
6976824 | Nottin | Dec 2005 | B2 |
7393182 | Matheny | Jul 2008 | B2 |
7798778 | Martensson | Sep 2010 | B2 |
20070086889 | Matheny | Apr 2007 | A1 |
20070147993 | Lhoest et al. | Jun 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
38 42 710 | Aug 1989 | DE |
195 31 561 | Mar 1997 | DE |
1 469 165 | Oct 2004 | EP |
1 299 929 | Dec 1972 | GB |
WO 2006062451 | Jun 2006 | WO |
Entry |
---|
U.S. Appl. No. 12/636,041, filed Dec. 11, 2009, Blanchard, et al. |
U.S. Appl. No. 12/646,454, filed Dec. 23, 2009, Blanchard, et al. |
U.S. Appl. No. 13/141,857, filed Jun. 23, 2011, Blanchard, et al. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20100158675 A1 | Jun 2010 | US |