The application relates generally to compressor inlets, more particularly, to variable inlet guide vanes for such inlets.
Variable inlet guide vanes (IGV) are used to introduce swirl into a compressor rotor to improve low speed operability as well as increase the flow capacity at high speeds. It is known to install radial IGVs directly upstream of the rotor, which provide a close-coupled direction of the flow into the rotor. An alternative is to use axial IGVs, i.e. having a pivot axis parallel to the engine axis; such may allow for a shorter engine, but usually provide a less optimum swirl profile at the rotor leading edge.
An acoustic condition called Vortex Whistle has been found to occur in compressors with axial IGVs located in radial inlets. As the air approaches a sonic condition, a loud pure tone noise is emitted. This usually occurs during ground or flight idle engine conditions with high IGV angles and is undesirable.
In one aspect, there is provided a compressor for a gas turbine engine, the compressor comprising: an annular inlet duct having an annular hub side wall and an annular shroud side wall extending around the hub side wall spaced apart therefrom; at least one rotor having an array of blades mounted on a rotatable shaft, the blades extending across a flow path in fluid communication and in alignment with the inlet duct; and a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart inlet guide vanes extending across the inlet duct from the hub side wall to the shroud side wall, each vane being pivotable about a pivot axis thereof, each vane defining an airfoil portion with opposed leading and trailing edges, the airfoil portion being twisted such that at each location of the airfoil portion along the pivot axis, an angle is defined between a respective chord extending between the leading and trailing edges and a same reference plane containing the pivot axis and extending radially with respect to the compressor, the angle varying from a minimum value near the hub side wall to a maximum value near the shroud side wall, the angle being measured along a direction of rotation of the rotor.
In another aspect, there is provided an inlet guide vane for a compressor of a gas turbine engine, the vane comprising: a hub end configured to be received in a hub side of a gas path; a tip end configured to be received in an opposed side of the gas path, the hub and tip ends being aligned and defining an axis of the vane extending therethrough; and an airfoil portion extending between the hub end and the tip end, the airfoil portion defining opposed leading and trailing edges, the airfoil portion being twisted such that at each location of the airfoil portion along the axis, an angle is defined between a respective chord extending between the leading and trailing edges and a same reference plane containing the axis, the angle varying non-linearly along the axis as a function of a distance from the hub end.
In another aspect, there is provided a method of reducing vortex whistle in a radial inlet of a compressor having a shroud side wall surrounding a hub side wall thereof, the method comprising swirling a flow along a trailing edge of each one of a plurality of axial inlet guide vanes extending between the hub side and shroud side walls, wherein swirling the flow along the trailing edge includes generating a swirl having a first angle adjacent the hub side wall and generating a swirl having a second angle larger than the first angle adjacent the shroud side wall.
In a further aspect, there is provided a method of selecting a twist angle of an inlet guide vane for a compressor, the method comprising: determining a desired distribution of an angle of flow adjacent a leading edge of a corresponding blade of an adjacent rotor of the compressor; determining a variation in flow speed and in radial distance from a rotational axis of the compressor between corresponding points of the leading edge of the blade and of a trailing edge of the vane; determining a desired distribution of the angle of flow adjacent the trailing edge of the vane from the desired distribution of the angle of flow adjacent the leading edge of the blade and from the variation in flow speed and in radial distance; and selecting a twist angle distribution corresponding or approximately corresponding to the desired distribution of the angle of flow adjacent the trailing edge of the vane.
Reference is now made to the accompanying figures in which:
a and 4b are exemplary cross-sections for the vane of
Referring to
A plurality of circumferentially spaced apart pivotable inlet guide vanes 42 (only one of which is shown) extend across the inlet duct 32, from the hub side wall 34 to the shroud side wall 36. In the embodiment shown, the vanes 42 are located in the upstream radial portion 38 of the inlet duct 32 and the pivot axis P of each vane 42 extends substantially axially.
Each vane 42 has aligned hub and tip ends 44, 46 and an airfoil portion 48 extending between the opposed ends 44, 46, defining a leading edge 50 and a trailing edge 52. The aligned hub and tip ends 44, 46 define the pivot axis P of the vane and are pivotally received through the respective wall 34, 36. Each vane 42 is pivotable through any appropriate type of mechanism (not shown), for example a gear arrangement, a lever assembly, a pneumatic or hydraulic system, etc., engaged to one of the vane ends 44, 46.
As can be more clearly seen in
Referring back to
The relationship between the angle α1 of the flow at the vane trailing edge 52 and the angle α2 of the flow at the leading edge 58 of the first rotor blades 26 may be described as follows:
where r1 and r2 correspond to the radial distance from the central axis 56 of corresponding points (same % span) at the vane trailing edge 52 and at the rotor blade leading edge 58, respectively, and Cm1 and Cm2 correspond to the meridional velocity of the corresponding points at the vane trailing edge 52 and at the rotor blade leading edge 58, respectively. The meridional velocity Cm is defined as Cm=√{square root over (Cx2+Cr2)}, where Cx and Cr are the flow speeds along the x and r axis, respectively.
Therefore, an appropriate distribution of swirl at the vane trailing edge 52 allows a resulting swirl at the rotor entry, or leading edge 58 of the rotor blades 26, which is more constant. The distribution of swirl at the vane trailing edge 52 is created by a distribution of the twist angle α of the airfoil portion 48 along the span of the vane 42. In a particular embodiment, the vane 42 is twisted to swirl the flow such that after the swirl variation created by the geometry of the inlet duct 32, the resulting flow at the rotor entry has a uniform swirl, for example a linear or constant distribution of the swirl angle α2, or in other words with the swirl angle α2 varying linearly as a function of a distance from the hub side wall 34. Other profiles may be targeted for the distribution of the swirl angle α2.
The vane 42 is thus twisted to generate less swirl near the hub side wall 34 (lower twist angle α) and more swirl near the shroud side wall 36 (higher twist angle α), with the twist angle α being measured in a direction corresponding to the direction of rotation of the compressor rotor 24. In a particular embodiment, the vane 42 is twisted with a non-linear distribution of the twist angle α, or in other words with the twist angle α varying non-linearly along the pivot axis P as a function of a distance from the hub side wall 34. The angle α1 of the flow at the vane trailing edge 52 is assumed to correspond or approximately correspond to the twist angle α of the vane 42. As such a distribution for the twist angle α is selected to correspond or approximately correspond to the required distribution of the angle α1 of the flow at the vane trailing edge 52.
In a particular embodiment and as shown in
In the embodiment shown, the variation of the twist angle α from the hub end 44 (0% span) to a mid-point between the hub and tip ends 44, 46 (50% span) is greater than a variation of the twist angle α from the mid-point to the tip end 46 (100% span). The twist angle α continuously varies in a same direction from the hub end 44 to the tip end 46. In a particular embodiment, the vane 42 pivots between a first position in which the airfoil extends substantially radially (shown in
The twist angle α of the inlet guide vane 42 is thus selected according to the following: first, a desired distribution of the angle α2 of the flow, or swirl angle, adjacent the leading edge 58 of the blades 26 of the adjacent rotor 24 is determined. Such may be, for example, a linear distribution of the flow angle α2, i.e. varying linearly across the span of the blade 26, as shown in
The distribution of the twist angle α may be tuned to optimize the work and pressure ratio of the first stage of the compressor section 14 to better match the operating requirements of the engine 10 and/or to reduce the rotor top speed. In a particular embodiment, the distribution of the twist angle α is selected based on the desired distribution of the angle α2 of the flow adjacent the rotor blade leading edge 58 at idle conditions. Considering the work and flow at idle to select the distribution of the twist angle α of the vane 42 may improve the low speed performance of the compressor section 14 without changing the higher speed performance, improving for example the ability of the engine 10 to decouple from a helicopter transmission.
In a particular embodiment, the distribution of the twist angle α may enable the optimization of performance, acoustics and/or operability. As illustrated in the computation fluid dynamics plot of
In a particular embodiment, the twisted vane allows for reduction or elimination of vortex whistle. A parameter used to identify the potential for vortex whistle is Cu/Cx, where Cu is the tangential velocity (Cu=Cm tan(α)) and Cx is the axial velocity. As illustrated in
The twisted inlet guide vane 42 may thus benefit radial inlet compressors by reducing or eliminating vortex whistle at high vane angles and/or providing a more optimal swirl profile at entry to the first stage compressor. This may result in a lower acoustic signature, lower inlet loss and/or higher compressor efficiency at high vane angles.
The non-linear distribution of the twist angle α and/or combination of smaller twist angle α near the hub end 44 with larger twist angle α near the tip end 46 may also advantageously be used in non-axial inlet guide vanes and/or in inlet guide vanes located in inlet ducts having different geometries.
The above description is meant to be exemplary only, and one skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made to the embodiments described without departing from the scope of the invention disclosed. Modifications which fall within the scope of the present invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art, in light of a review of this disclosure, and such modifications are intended to fall within the appended claims.
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