None.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to a turbopump for a rocket engine, and more specifically to a tapered hydrostatic bearing for a turbopump.
2. Description of the Related Art Including Information Disclosed Under 37 CFR 1.97 and 1.98
Turbopumps operate at high rotating speeds to maximize efficiency and reduce size and weight. Additionally, they are often designed to operate over a wide throttle range (speed range) and to be reusable for up to 50-100 missions. Current rotor support systems often experience rotor dynamics instabilities, which can require the identification of “stay out” zones and limit the operating throttle range. Additionally, bearings fail due to excessive wear or excessive loading due to these rotor dynamic instabilities or cavitation induced dynamic loading.
Conventional rotor support systems mount the pumping and/or turbine element(s) on a rotating shaft supported by rolling element or hydrostatic bearings. The inner rings of the rolling element bearing are mounted to the shaft and rotate with the shaft. The outer ring is mounted in the housing and has an anti-rotation feature. The hydrostatic bearing (orifice and pocket) is mounted in the housing, is non-rotating, and is supplied with high-pressure fluid from the pump discharge from the outer diameter of the bearing, making it an external-fed hydrostatic bearing. The hydrostatic bearing journal is typically the outer diameter of the shaft or shaft mounted sleeve.
In both of these configurations, the shaft and bearing diameters must be sized to fit within the inner annulus line of the flow path. The small shaft and bearing diameters result in rigid body and bending mode critical speeds that make it extremely challenging to achieve a stable and robust rotor support system that has long-life and the ability to throttle over a wide speed range.
Additionally, turbopumps that have used externally-fed hydrostatic bearings, have relied on either a rolling element ball bearing, rub stop, or a hydrostatic thrust bearing to react transient axial loads. This additional bearing or rub stop introduces another potential component to fail and reduces the reliability of the turbopump. Additionally, the wear associated with the rub stop limits the ability of the turbopump to throttle below the pressurization point of the balance piston, which prohibits its use on long-life deep throttling turbopumps.
An internally-fed tapered hydrostatic bearing to eliminate the need for a rolling element bearing, rub stop, or hydrostatic thrust bearing that can be used in an inducer for a turbopump used in a rocket engine, where the inducer is rotatably supported by a hydrostatic bearing configuration. There are a variety of options for angle of the bearing, placement of the pocket axially, the pocket shape, axial and circumferential position of the orifice within the pocket, as well as tangential and axial injection angles of the orifice. These parameters can be varied to tune axial and radial stiffness and load capacity, as well as to prescribe desired flow splits between left and right vents—even compensate for asymmetric vent pressures. A rotor support system is shown in which the bearings are shown opposing each other; however, with the thrust load always in one direction, the bearings could be tapered in the same direction to provide twice the load capacity.
A tapered hydrostatic bearing to support a rotor such as an inducer for a turbopump like one used in a rocket engine in which the inducer supplies a lower pressure liquid to an inlet of a higher pressure impeller. An example rotor is shown in
The inducer hub 12 has a central opening about a rotational axis of the inducer in which the stator vane hub extension fits within. A hub end 17 threads onto the hub extension 21 and secures the inducer hub 12 axially. Fluid from the inducer flows through a stator vane 22 that extends from a stator vane hub 23 and rotates within a stator 25 housing in which the fluid flows into a higher pressure impeller (not shown). A high pressure supply line 24 passes through the stator vane assembly (including the hub 23 and the hub extension 21) to channel high pressure fluid from the impeller outlet to the two hydrostatic bearings 15 and 16. The forward bearing 15 fits over the end of the stator vane hub extension 21 so that the inducer hub can be fitted onto the hub extension 21. Because of the slanted surfaces of the two bearings 15 and 16, the forward bearing 15 must be a separate piece in order to assemble the inducer to the stator vane assembly.
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This invention was made with Government support under contract number FA9300-07-C-0001 awarded by the US Air Force. The Government has certain rights in the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4884899 | Schwartzman | Dec 1989 | A |