1. Technical Field
This invention relates to aircraft gas turbine engines and, particularly, to variable stator vane buttons.
2. Background Information
Variable stator vanes are commonly used in aircraft gas turbine engine compressors and fans and in some turbine designs. Non-rotating or stationary stator vanes typically are placed downstream or upstream of rotor blades of the fans, compressors, and turbines. These vanes reduce the tangential flow component leaving the rotors, thereby increasing the static pressure of the fluid and setting the flow angle to a level appropriate for the downstream rotor. The stator vanes carry a lift on the airfoil of the stator vane due to a higher static pressure on the pressure side of the airfoil and a lower static pressure on the suction side of the airfoil.
Due to the large range of operating conditions experienced by an axial flow compressor over a typical operating cycle, flow rates and rotational speeds of the compressor also vary widely. This results in large shifts in the absolute flow angle entering the stator vanes. To allow the vanes to accommodate these shifts in flow angle without encountering high loss or flow separation, circumferential rows of variable stator vanes are constructed so that the vanes can be rotated about their radial (or approximately radial) axis.
Generally, variable stator vanes (VSVs) have spindles through their rotational axis that penetrate the casing, allowing the vanes to be rotated using an actuation mechanism. At the flowpath, there will typically be a button of material around the spindle which rotates along with the vane. However, the size of this button is normally limited by the pitchwise spacing of the VSVs, resulting in a portion of the vane chord at the endwalls where a gap exists between the flowpath and the vane.
Because there is a large pressure gradient between the pressure and suction sides of the vane, leakage flow is driven across this gap, resulting in reduced fluid turning and higher loss at the endwalls.
This leakage flow also causes flow non-uniformities (i.e. wakes) at the adjacent rotor blades, which may excite these blades causing potentially damaging vibrations in the rotor blades. It is, thus, desirable to reduce the chordwise extent of this gap and the accompanying leakage flow. To this end, VSV buttons have been designed to cover inner and outer diameter ends of the VSV airfoil. The coverage of the ends is desirable because it minimizes endwall losses due to leakage flow at the endwall gap between the vanes and the walls of the flow passageway.
Conventional VSV buttons typically have diameters equal to or slightly less than the pitchwise spacing between vanes at their respective locations. This is because larger buttons would overlap with one another making it physically impossible to fit the vane assemblies together. In some cases, designers have specified flats or arched cuts on the sides of the buttons to allow the use of larger button diameters, thereby achieving greater endwall coverage. However, these configurations typically result in large cavities between buttons and often have large flowpath gaps near the vane leading edges leading to undesirable losses and large wakes.
Thus, it is highly desirable to provide buttons which minimize endwall leakage and operate over a wide range of vane angle settings.
A variable stator vane includes an airfoil mounted on a button centered about a rotational axis and leading and trailing edges and pressure and suction sides of the airfoil. The button has circular leading and trailing edges circumscribed about the rotational axis at a button radius and that generally correspond to the airfoil leading and trailing edges respectively. The circular leading edge is upstream of the circular trailing edge. contoured pressure and suction sides of the button extend from the circular leading edge to the circular trailing edge and are recessed inwardly from a perimeter circumscribed about the rotational axis at the button radius. The contoured pressure side has upstream and downstream pressure side portions and the suction side has upstream and downstream suction side portions. One of the upstream and downstream pressure side portions is substantially straight and another of the upstream and downstream pressure side portions is substantially convexly curved. One of the upstream and downstream suction side portions is substantially straight and another of the upstream and downstream suction side portions is substantially convexly curved. One of the upstream pressure side portion and the upstream suction side portion is substantially straight and another of the upstream pressure side portion and the upstream suction side portion is substantially convexly curved.
Another embodiment of the variable stator vane includes a circular second curved section of the downstream pressure side portion of the button and the circular second curved section extends from a downstream end point of the downstream pressure side portion to the trailing edge.
The downstream suction side portion of the button may generally coincide with the suction side of the airfoil.
A more particular embodiment of the variable stator vane includes the airfoil disposed between spaced apart outer and inner buttons centered about a rotational axis. An outer spindle may extend outwardly from the outer button and an inner spindle may extend inwardly from the inner button.
The variable stator vane design may be incorporated in a gas turbine engine variable vane assembly having at least one circular row of variable stator vanes wherein each of the variable stator vanes includes an airfoil disposed between spaced apart outer and inner buttons centered about a rotational axis.
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Another way of describing this is as follows: one of the upstream and downstream pressure side portions 24, 26 is substantially straight and another of the upstream and downstream pressure side portions 24, 26 is substantially convexly curved; one of the upstream and downstream suction side portions 28, 30 is substantially straight and another of the upstream and downstream suction side portions 28, 30 is substantially convexly curved; and one of the upstream pressure side portion 24 and the upstream suction side portion 28 is substantially straight and another of the upstream pressure side portion 24 and the upstream suction side portion 28 is substantially convexly curved.
The button 54 illustrated herein has a linear upstream pressure side portion 24 and a linear downstream suction side portion 30. Thus, the button 54 illustrated herein also has a convexly curved upstream suction side portion 28 and a convexly curved downstream pressure side portion 26. Alternatively, the upstream pressure side portion 24 and the downstream suction side portion 30 may be convexly curved and the upstream suction side portion 28 and the downstream pressure side portion 26 may be straight. The combinations are designed to maximize the area A of the button 54 while accommodating a large turning angle (not shown) of the variable stator vanes 15. In order to further maximize the area A of the button 54, the downstream suction side portion 30 of the button 54 generally coincides with the suction side SS of the airfoil 31 in the exemplary embodiment of the button 54 illustrated in
The contoured pressure and suction sides 58, 59 are cut out or recessed in from the perimeter 22 and shaped to accommodate button diameters 44 of the buttons that are greater than pitchwise spacing SP between adjacent ones of the airfoils 31 as measured from rotational axes 20 of the airfoils 31 of adjacent ones of the variable stator vanes 15 as illustrated in
Step 1, the first and second button templates 60, 62 are rotated so the airfoil templates 66 are positioned at their maximum closed position as illustrated by the narrowest allowable opening 94 between the leading edge LE and the suction side SS of adjacent airfoil endwalls or airfoil template 66. A first point P1 is located on the perimeter 22 of the second button template 62 substantially nearest the leading edge LE of the airfoil template 66 of the second button template 62. Point P1 is generally located within 50%-200% of an airfoil max thickness TM of the leading edge LE.
A second point P2 is located substantially near an intersection of the perimeter 22 of the first button template 60 and the suction side SS of the airfoil template 66 on the adjacent first button template 60. Point P2 is generally located within 50% of airfoil max thickness TM of the airfoil suction side SS. A first straight line 90 between the first and second points P1, P2 defines the upstream pressure side portion 24 of the contoured pressure side 58 and the downstream suction side portion 30 of the contoured suction side 59 of the button 54. The first point P1 also defines the intersection of the circular leading edge 52 and the upstream pressure side portion 24 of the contoured pressure side 58 of the button 54.
The airfoil templates 66 are then rotated incrementally open until the airfoil templates 66 are positioned at their maximum open position as illustrated by the widest allowable opening 95 between the leading edge LE and the suction side SS of adjacent airfoil endwalls or airfoil template 66. By rotating the respective button templates 62 third and fourth points P3 and P4 are defined on the buttons to clear the corners (the first and second points P1, P2) of the adjacent buttons. This process is repeated to define or locate fifth through tenth points P5-P10 until the corners clear the adjacent button. Then, the points are connected to create first and second smooth curve 126, 127 and combined with the first and a second straight lines 90, 91 respectively, as illustrated in
If the vanes are rotated to their full open position, and the second point P2 on the first button template 60 has not cleared the trailing edge 53 of the second button template 62, then a second curved section 133 of the downstream pressure side portion 26 of the button 54 is needed. The second curved section 133 is defined by a circular curve between the tenth point P10, or last point, of the first smooth curve 126 and the trailing edge 53 of the second button template 62 and is concentric with the trailing edge 53 of the first button template 60. The above process describes how to generate first and second nominal button cutouts 158, 159 for the first and second button templates 60, 62 used to define the contoured pressure and suction sides 58, 59 of the buttons 54. The nominal cutouts will be offset closer to each other by a small amount, typically 0-0.02″, to allow actual parts to be assembled with normal manufacturers variation, internal corners between adjacent surfaces of the upstream and downstream suction side portions 28, 30; upstream and downstream pressure side portions 24, 26; and the second curved section 133 will be blended, typically, with a fillet radius in a range of about 0.03-0.10 inches, for manufacturability and mechanical robustness.
The preferred embodiment provides a minimum overall gap between the buttons, although not necessarily the minimum pocket at the nominal design angle, and provides another potential benefit in that, in the event of a broken lever arm 80 (which sets the angle of the VSV), the affected vane will actually be guided to follow the adjacent vanes (without broken arms), rather than simply be subject to aero loads or lock in place due to friction, which can cause excessive aero distortion and induce damaging vibration to the rotor blades.
While there have been described herein what are considered to be preferred and exemplary embodiments of the present invention, other modifications of the invention shall be apparent to those skilled in the art from the teachings herein and, it is therefore, desired to be secured in the appended claims all such modifications as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, what is desired to be secured by Letters Patent of the United States is the invention as defined and differentiated in the following claims.
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20100232936 A1 | Sep 2010 | US |