The invention relates generally to gas turbine engines and, more particularly, to an improved vane mounting arrangement.
In a typical turbine vane mounting arrangement, the vane ring segments are first fixedly mounted to an intermediate inner ring, known as a squirrel cage, or alternatively directly to the outer case by means of a forward hook and an aft hook extending from the outer band of each segment. Then, the inner band of the segments is mounted to a two-piece inner ring. Due to assembly geometry, the inner ring must necessarily be provided in two pieces and assembled, such as by bolting, to the vane ring. That is because it is not possible to simultaneously insert two ends of a rigid object into fixed geometry endpoints.
The above assemblies require that several parts be bolted or otherwise fixedly secured together which significantly increase the weight and the cost of the overall vane assembly.
It is therefore an object of this invention to provide an improved vane ring mounting arrangement suited for use in a gas turbine engine.
In one aspect, the present invention provides a vane mounting arrangement for a gas turbine engine, comprising an outer casing ring, and a segmented vane ring pre-assembled on a one-piece inner ring to form therewith a vane ring sub-assembly adapted to be directly mounted to the outer casing ring as a unitary component.
In another aspect, the present invention provides a stationary vane ring assembly for a gas turbine engine, comprising a vane ring having a number of circumferentially spaced-apart vanes extending radially between inner and outer arcuate bands, the vane ring being mounted to an inner ring to form therewith a pre-assembled vane ring sub-assembly, the pre-assembled vane ring sub-assembly being mountable as a unit directly to an outer casing.
In another aspect, the present invention provides a vane mounting arrangement comprising: an outer casing, a vane ring comprising circumferentially spaced-apart vanes extending radially between inner and outer arcuate bands, the vane ring being hooked at one of a front and a rear end thereof directly to the outer casing while being floatingly maintained in radial abutment relationship with the outer casing at another one of said front and rear ends by gas flow pressure during use.
In another aspect, the present invention provides a method of assembling a stage of stationary gas turbine engine vanes, comprising the steps of: a) assembling a number of vane ring segments to a one-piece inner ring to form a pre-assembled vane ring sub-assembly, and then b) installing the pre-assembled vane ring sub-assembly as a unit in an outer casing ring. In a further aspect, the present invention provides a vane assembly for a gas turbine engine, the vane comprising a plurality of airfoils extending between an inner platform and an outer platform; at least one hook extending radially outward from the outer platform and adpated to hookingly engage the gas turbine engine; and at least one reaction leg extending radially outward from the outer platform and adapted to abut the gas turbine engine when the hook hookingly engages the gas turbine engine, wherein the hook and reaction leg are positioned on the vane assembly such that, in use, pressure exerted on the vane assembly by combustion gases exiting an upstream combustor urges the reaction leg into contact with the gas turbine engine.
Further details of these and other aspects of the present invention will be apparent from the detailed description and figures included below.
Reference is now made to the accompanying figures depicting aspects of the present invention, in which:
As shown in
The vane ring segments 26 are pre-assembled onto a one-piece inner ring 36 prior to being mounted into the turbine support case 19. The use of a one-piece inner ring is preferred to facilitate the vane assembly procedure while providing for a simpler, lighter and cheaper vane mounting arrangement as compared to conventional bolted multi-pieces inner supports. In the past, multi-pieces inner supports have been required because the vane segments were first secured to the outer intermediate ring and then bolted or otherwise attached to the inner support.
As shown in
As will be seen hereinafter, the turbine support case 19 and the outer band 32 of the vane ring segments 26 have a mounting interface which is specifically designed to permit the vane ring segments 26 and the one-piece inner ring 36 to be pre-assembled and then mounted as a single unit directly to the case 19. For that purpose, the outer band 32 is integrally provided with a forward retention hook 48 and an aft radially outwardly extending reaction leg 50. The forward retention hook 48 is adapted to be axially slid in engagement with a corresponding forward annular support flange 52 integrally formed on the inner surface of the annular turbine support case 19. The support flange 52 is spaced radially inwardly from the inner surface of the case 19 to form therewith an annular groove in which is axially received the forward retention hook 48 of the outer band 32. The forward retention hook 48 and the support flange 52 thus provide an axial tongue and groove arrangement which radially support the forward end of the vane ring segments 26.
According to the illustrated embodiment, the aft reaction leg 50 has no intrinsic axial connection to case 19 and only abuts against the inner surface of the case 19 in a radially outward direction. This provides a non-secured fixing or floating connection at the aft end of the vane ring 22. There is thus no special action required to fix the aft leg 50. This mounting arrangement rather relies on the dynamic gas pressure of the combustion gases flowing between the inner and outer bands 30 and 32 to secure the vane ring 22 in place. In use, the aft leg 50 is pushed radially outwardly against the case 19 as the gas path dynamic pressure tends to rotate the vanes 28 about the hook point formed by the forward retention hook 48 and the forward flange 52.
After the forward retention hook 48 has been axially slid in engagement with the forward flange 52 of the case 19, an annular retainer 54 is mounted in a radially inwardly facing slot 56 defined in the case 19 to form an axial aft stop against which the aft leg 50 can abut to retain the vane ring 22 against axially aft movement during engine operation. A W-shaped annular spring seal 58 extends between a radially inwardly extending shoulder 59 defined in the inner surface of the case 19 and a front face of the aft reaction leg 50. The W-seal 58 seals the air cooling cavity (not indicated) defined between the outer band 32 and the case 19 and urges the aft reaction leg 50 against the axial retainer 54 to help maintain aft reaction leg 50 generally abutting case 19 while the engine is not in operation (i.e. when there is no dynamic gas pressure exerted on the vane ring 22).
An annular S-shaped spring seal 60 is installed in the annular cavity 42 of the inner ring 36 over the aft leg 46 of the inner band 30 to seal cavity 42 and provide a forward spring force to keep the vane ring 22 in place when the engine 10 is shut down (i.e. when there is no dynamic gas pressure exerted on the vane ring 22). As shown in
The S-shaped seal 60 has two axial contact points C1 and C2 with leg 46 and one axial contact point C3 with flange 40. S-seal 60 also has two radial contact points C4 and C5 with the inner ring 36, one against the bottom surface of the cavity 42 and the other one against the undersurface of rim 62. The radial contact points C4 and C5 are used for sealing and fixing the seal 60 in cavity 42. The multiple point of contacts or sealing points provide improved sealing to prevent cooling air leakage from cavity 42 via the radial and axial gaps GR and GA, which are designed to accommodate the thermal growth differential between vane ring 22 and inner ring 36 during engine operation. S-shaped seal 60 advantageously seals under all running conditions by accommodating thermal expansion.
In addition to its enhanced sealing function, the S-seal 60 provides the required forward spring force to push vane segments 26 forward in order to maintain the forward retention hooks 48 axially engaged with the forward flange 52 when there is no dynamic gas pressure, i.e. when the engine 10 is not running. Spring loading the inner ring 36 backwards also avoids any rubs at the leading edge of the vane ring 22 when the pressure Pa is equal or near equal to Pb. Furthermore, it ensures that the brush seal 66 (
The principle advantages of S-seal 60 are: improved sealing efficiency, low cost and easy to assemble to the inner ring 36 and vane segments 26. During assembly, the vane segments 26 are first radially inserted into the inner ring 36 between the axially spaced-apart flanges 38 and 40 with the aft radially inwardly extending legs 46 of the segments 26 received in the forward U-shaped grasping portion 60a of the S-seal 60. The seal 60 has been previously fitted in radial compression between the rim 62 and the bottom surface of groove 42. Then, the vane segments 26 and the inner ring 36 are axially inserted as a single unit into outer case 19 so as to engage the forward hooks 48 onto the forward flange 52 and abut the front face of the aft reaction legs 50 against W-seal 58. Thereafter, the retainer 54 is radially engaged in groove 56 to prevent backward movement of the vane assembly. In use, the hot combustion gases flowing between inner band 30 and the outer band 32 pushes the reaction leg 50 radially outwardly against the case 19, thereby securing each vane segment 26 in place.
As mentioned above, the support ring 36 is preferably one-piece, and therefore preferably seal 60 is circumferentially discontinuous (i.e. includes at least one radial cut therethrough) to facilitate insertion as mentioned above. Where support 36 is provided in more than one piece, a circumferentially continuous seal 60 is preferably provided.
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 department from the scope of the invention disclosed. For example, various types of biasing members could be used to spring load the vane segments 26 relative to the inner ring 36 and to urge the aft leg 50 against the axial retainer 54. Also, the inner ring 36 does not necessarily have to be of unitary construction. The aft leg 50 could have various configuration has long as it does not require any special action to secure it in place. For instance, it could have an axial component. Still other 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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0018892 | Nov 1980 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060045745 A1 | Mar 2006 | US |