This invention refers to a turbine engine with variable pitch rotor blades having a drop shape; the engine according to the invention can advantageously also incorporate a “twisted” or a “constant deflection” stator blade row in the Air-Intake and, in the nozzle, a stator blade row with a movable twisted part.
The propulsion system, wherein the movable parts are controlled and actuated electrically, can be employed both for the aeronautic propulsion and for the marine propulsion.
As it is well known in the state of the art, running a fix pitch fan to high speed, it's necessary to design the twist of the rotor blades with high pitch angles. This implies the ejected air speeds to be high also in the low advancement speed (i.e. lending and take-off phases). But, high difference of speed amongst the inlet and the outlet of a fan mean great power to be supplied, low efficiency and high noise emissions. Hence from the 70's have been developed the turbo-fan with high by-pass ratio; these last allow accelerating less the higher capacity of air, achieving the same thrust but with higher efficiency, in respect with the jet.
It's also known that the best way to reduce the ejection air speeds in the low speed phases is to adapt the pitch of the rotor blades. In this manner, amongst the inlet and the outlet of a fan, it's possible to obtain reasonable difference of velocity in all the flight phases. Moreover, reducing the ejection air speed in the low flight velocity allows to abate the noise emission and to increase the static pressure downstream the fan. The increase of the static pressure, further associated to the higher rotor blades surface projected in the thrust sense, allows achievement of high thrust.
It's further known that the variable pitch fan can be used as a brake or as a thrust reverser, thus reducing the weight of the whole fan by eliminating the normal thrust reverser system.
It's for those reasons that the variable pitch fan, particularly for turbine engines, has been widely disclosed in the state of art. But no one arrangement has been yet developed and commercialised. The variable pitch rotor blades have been practically employed only in the open propeller, generally matched to turbo-prop.
The solutions proposed until today, which have some comparisons to this invention, are focused on solving the following matters: deal with the high dynamic turning moment due to the centrifugal forces (i.e. U.S. Pat. No. 3,870,434); reduce the loads due to actuator contained in the rotor (i.e. U.S. Pat. No. 3,922,852); realize a simple actuation system (i.e. U.S. Pat. No. 6,071,076); increase the overall efficiency modifying also the pitch of the stator blades (i.e. U.S. Pat. No. 5,911,679, U.S. Pat. No. 5,794,432 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,215,434); turn the rotor with a gearbox by way of an external engine (i.e. U.S. Pat. No. 3,146,755).
Currently, the turbine engines utilised in propulsion are predominantly of the Turbo-Engine type; as it is known, in this type of engines a turbine/compressor group rotates a power shaft to which a fixed pitch propeller located at the end of a divergent duct is connected; this duct called Air Intake, usually free of stator blades, has the scope to decelerate the air processed by the rotor in order to increase the efficiency.
These propulsion systems have the same limits of the fixed pitch propeller, which can be summarized as follows:
In the Engines with ducted propellers, which have the scope to generate a thrust useful for the propulsion, none of the expedients which are proposed and justified in this analysis has been utilised.
In some jet engines, stator blade row (in some cases with movable twisted part) are located upstream of the rotor in the stages of the axial compressors, but to vary the performance modifying the pressure and to avoid the stall.
The variable pitch technique is instead widely utilised but only in he outside propellers for reasons that will be discussed hereinafter.
It's the aim of this invention to solve the problems described above by using much simpler solutions.
According to the invention, a variable pitch fan is provided, particularly for propulsion and power generation, comprising at least one stator row upstream and/or downstream the rotor, characterized by the rotor blades having a sinusoidal shape that allows reduction of both the torque necessary to activate the variable pitch systems (lither actuator system) and the turning moments due to the centrifugal force. The proposed fan can be set in rotation by a conic couple of gears, contained in a gear oil sump positioned downstream the rotor, by means of one power shaft contained inside the stator blade.
It's also an object of this invention to provide, in one hand, a stator row upstream the rotor (the “nozzle” ones because are suitable to increase the relative speeds) which are twisted in a such particular way that allows increased efficiency; in the other hand, a stator row downstream the rotor (the “diffuser” ones because are suitable to decrease the absolute speeds) that has a movable twisted part actuated by way of a simple electro mechanic system.
A still further object of this invention is to provide a light screw female system, actuated by an electric motor, to rotate the variable pitch rotor blades.
These objects and other advantages of this invention will become readily apparent from the following drawings and description, all of which are intended to be representative of, rather than in any way limiting on, the scope of invention.
We will now describe the engine according to the invention, with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
a,
9
b,
9
c, and 9d show a twisted stator blade from the a), b), c) and d) views which are the plan, front, side and perspective views, respectively;
a,
10
b,
10
c, and 10d show a constant deflection stator blade from the a), b), c) and d) views which are the plan, front, side and perspective views, respectively;
a and 11b are assembled and exploded, perspective views of the propeller cuff with the twisted stator blade;
a,
12
b and 13a are the exploded, assembled and sectional views of a rotor with variable pitch blades according to the invention;
b is a view of the variable pitch blade according to the invention;
a and 14b are partially assembled and exploded views, respectively, of the stator part downstream of the rotor;
a and 15b are partially assembled and exploded views, respectively, of the engine casing downstream of the rotor;
a and 17b are assembled and exploded views, respectively, of the stator part downstream of the rotor;
To explain the introduced features in relation to the known art, this description will begin from the speed triangles known in this section.
The field diagram is a vectorial diagram in which are represented the speed triangles of all the rotor blade sections. The main purpose of this diagram is to determine geometrically the twist of the propellers. The twist is defined from the stagger angles θ along the rotor blades. θ are the angles subtended from the turning speed U and the relative speed W (also defined with the symbol β) determined in the design phase (refer to FIG. 1). In the field diagrams outlined in the enclosed figures, only the speed triangles to the root m and to the tip e of the blades have been represented. The values of the speeds are brought back in this diagram transforming them from m/sec in cm. The reference necessary to draw this diagram is the propeller spin axe A.R. The speeds U are perpendicular to A.R., proportional to the radius and depend from the number of turns of the impeller. The direction of the speeds V depends instead from the type of the fan/propeller:
Thus the deflection angles λ: are zero in the external propellers and in the fans that don't have stators upstream the rotor, are design data in the fans with constant deflection angles; while, in the fans with twisted stator row according to the invention are determinate imposing that, in the design phase, the relative speeds W along all the rotor leading edges have the same direction of the tip relative speed Ws. in
The twisted stator row has been designed in such a way, to increase the propeller efficiency. The propeller efficiency η is the ratio between the work L yield and the one spent:
As it can be seen, η is proportional to the aerodynamic efficiency E and should increase, increasing the ratio V/U. In reality η increases up to a definite value of V/U, but then it decreases. Indeed, by increasing V, the angles β increase and cause E to decreases more than the increase of the ratio V/U. The aerodynamic efficiency E is the ratio between the thrust T produced from the propeller and the drag force Fr which resists to the propeller rotation. T and Fr are respectively the forces which act along the parallel and the perpendicular direction to A.R.; they are equal, in module, to the algebraic sum of the vectorial components of the Lift L and of the Drag D along said directions. Referring to FIG. 5:
From this last equation it is understood that the lower the value of β, the higher is E. To increase the propeller efficiency it's thus necessary to reduce the value of the angles β. That can be done adding one “nozzle” stator row upstream the impeller. Adopting constant deflection ones, all the angles β will be reduced along the rotor blades. But, for the continuity, the relative speed W will assume everywhere higher values, even on the tip of the fan. The increase of the speed W on the tip could produce the speed to become supersonic. To avoid the speed W become supersonic it should be reduced the number of turns “n”, however this would also reduce the overall turbine performance. Thus, the better way to reduce the β angles, without obtaining supersonic W speeds to the tip of the fan and without reducing the overall turbine efficiency, is to adopt the twisted stator row according to the invention.
Analysing the field diagram of a traditional fan, shown in
Conclude the description of the twisted stator row located in the Air-Intake, we call the attention to
The use of the variable pitch propeller in the engine according to the invention is motivated by the benefits already disclosed in the background.
The proposed variable pitch system, which is activated by an electric motor, is of the screw/female thread type and is contained in the rotor represented by
The motor 10 is directly connected to a planetary gearbox 11 and to an encoder 12, and is powered by a slip-rings (not shown) positioned close to the front bearing. The reduction gear shaft 11 is fixed to a worm screw (formed by the parts 12 and 13) on which a threaded ring nut 14 moves axially when the screw turns. In the groove 15 obtained in the treated nut 14 are constrained the bushes 16, these last connected to the eccentric arms 18 of the plate 19 by means of elastic rings 17. When the nut 14 moves axially, the eccentric arms 18 and thus the plate 19 causes the blade 8 to rotate, transferring the rotation from the cavities 20 to the slots 21 (see
The axial loads transferred from the nut 14 to the screw (12 and 13) are unloaded on the rotor parts 6b and 6c through thrust bearings 22 (
The rotor is set in rotation by a conic couple of gears, contained in the gear oil sump 33 downstream of the rotor, by means of a power shaft 34 contained inside the stator blades (see FIG. 17). The rotor is constrained to the gear oil sump 33 and to the propeller cuff 3 by means of ball or roller angular bearings mounted with an O disposition.
The sinusoidal shape, of the rotor blade 8 according to the invention, is obtained by locating some of the pressure centres of the airfoils Cp (points on which the resultants of the aerodynamic forces are applied) upstream and others downstream of the variable pitch rotation axis x, so that the torques, which are generated because of the aerodynamic forces, balance each other, thus allowing the use of a low power input to activate the variable pitch. Moreover, such a radial disposition of the airfoils, allows moving the centre of mass of the rotor blades coincident to the pitch rotation axis x or even located downstream it. This aspect is important because it counters the inherent turning moments of variable pitch fan blades, due to the high centrifugal forces, but without adopting any counterbalance weight.
The “diffuser” stators downstream of the rotor are useful to eliminate the swirl of the air-flow processed by the rotor in order to increase the pressure and therefore the thrust; and the movable twisted part is mainly necessary to decrease the pressure losses. Indeed, especially in the high speed fan, the speed triangles both upstream and downstream the rotor change during the fan operating range thus changing both the amplitude and the orientation of the absolute air-speed downstream the rotor. This means that, by controlling the position of the twisted movable parts, it is possible to always have low attach angle and thus reduce the energy losses and avoid stall flutter.
The exploded and assembled views, of the proposed electro-mechanics actuation system according to the invention, are represented in
The actuation and the control of the movable parts are electric, because this type of technology is light, easy to control and allows use of a redundant system. At lest one electronic central unit processes the advancement speed, the number of turns of the propeller and the position of the blades, and it drives the electric motors, which activate both the rotor pitch mechanisms and the stator ones.
The positions of the blades 8 and 25 are respectively activated through the feedback by the encoders 12 and 32, which send to the central processing unit a comparison electric signal which is proportional to the instantaneous position.
The control of the fan pitch is different from the one of the movable part 25 because there is the possibility to position, through a control in the cockpit, the blade 8 at an offset angle with respect to the position determined by the central unit. This control allows the pilot to directly manage the performance of the propulsion system.
The description of the innovations introduced in the variable pitch fan according to the invention is concluded by comparing the propulsion efficiencies of four high speed fan designed with the same operating range.
Finally,
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BA2001A0002 | Jan 2001 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP02/00132 | 1/9/2002 | WO | 00 | 6/18/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/055845 | 7/18/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3146755 | Morse | Sep 1964 | A |
3799698 | Haworth | Mar 1974 | A |
3814549 | Cronstedt | Jun 1974 | A |
3860361 | McMurtry et al. | Jan 1975 | A |
3870434 | Paulson | Mar 1975 | A |
3910721 | McMurtry | Oct 1975 | A |
3922852 | Drabek | Dec 1975 | A |
5205712 | Hamilton | Apr 1993 | A |
5215434 | Greune et al. | Jun 1993 | A |
5311736 | Lardellier | May 1994 | A |
5597138 | Arlton et al. | Jan 1997 | A |
5794432 | Dunbar et al. | Aug 1998 | A |
5911679 | Farrell et al. | Jun 1999 | A |
6071076 | Ansari et al. | Jun 2000 | A |
6071077 | Rowlands | Jun 2000 | A |
6292763 | Dunbar et al. | Sep 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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WO 9915399 | Apr 1999 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040042897 A1 | Mar 2004 | US |