RAPID ASSISTANCE DEVICE FOR A FREE TURBINE ENGINE OF AN AIRCRAFT
20170226933 · 2017-08-10
Assignee
- SAFRAN HELICOPTER ENGINES (BORDES, FR)
- SAFRAN ELECTRONICS & DEFENSE (Boulogne-Billancourt, FR)
- SAFRAN ELECTRICAL & POWER (Blagnac Cedex, FR)
Inventors
- Thomas Klonowski (Sedzere, FR)
- Michel NOLLET (Boulogne Billancourt, FR)
- Frederic PAILHOUX (Saint-Mammes, FR)
Cpc classification
H01M2010/4271
ELECTRICITY
F05D2220/32
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02P70/50
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F02C3/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H01M10/425
ELECTRICITY
F02C7/26
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K9/38
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/32
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2270/09
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C9/42
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/268
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H01G11/08
ELECTRICITY
H01G11/14
ELECTRICITY
Y02E60/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
H01M2220/20
ELECTRICITY
F02K9/95
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D15/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02C7/268
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H01M10/42
ELECTRICITY
F01D15/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C3/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C6/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H01G11/08
ELECTRICITY
H01G11/14
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
The rapid assistance device applies to a free turbine engine of an aircraft having at least a first free turbine engine provided with a gas generator and associated with an electrical machine capable of operating both as a starter and as a generator, the first engine being capable of being put into a standby mode or into an unwanted shut-down mode, the electrical machine being powered from on on-board electrical energy power supply network. The device further includes at least one electrical energy storage member adapted to be electrically connected to the electrical machine associated with the first engine in order to provide a burst of assistance to the gas generator of that engine. The electrical energy storage member constitutes a non-rechargeable “primary” energy storage member that can be used once only. The device includes a system for activating the electrical energy storage member and a device for coupling the electrical energy storage member with an electrical power supply system of the electrical machine.
Claims
1. An aircraft including at least one first free turbine engine having a gas generator and associated with an electrical machine capable of operating both as a starter and as a generator, the first engine being capable of being put into a standby mode or into an unwanted shut-down mode, the electrical machine being connected to a specific electrical energy power supply network, the aircraft further including a rapid assistance device with at least one electrical energy storage member adapted to be electrically connected to said electrical machine associated with said first engine in order to provide a burst of assistance to the gas generator of that engine, wherein said electrical energy storage member constitutes a non-rechargeable “primary” energy storage member suitable for use once only after activation, to the exclusion of any “secondary” energy storage member comprising a storage battery, a supercapacitor, or a hybrid capacitor configured to be rechargeable and to be activated permanently, and wherein the rapid assistance device includes means for activating the electrical energy storage member and coupling means for coupling the electrical energy storage member with an electrical power supply system of said electrical machine.
2. The aircraft according to claim 1, wherein the electrical energy storage member comprises a ready-for-use device with low self-discharge incorporating an anode and a cathode in contact with an electrolyte.
3. The aircraft according to claim 1, wherein the electrical energy storage member comprises a device that is inert prior to activation, incorporating an anode, a cathode, and an electrolyte that does not wet the anode and the cathode.
4. The aircraft according to claim 3, wherein the electrical energy storage member comprises a battery with separate electrolyte, having a separate tank for storing the electrolyte and means for releasing the electrolyte from the separate tank in order to enable the electrolyte to come into contact with the anode and the cathode on activating the electrical energy storage member.
5. The aircraft according to claim 3, wherein the electrical energy storage member comprises a thermopile adapted to keep the electrolyte solid at ambient temperature during storage and to liquefy the electrolyte by heating on activation of the electrical energy storage member.
6. The aircraft according to claim 1, wherein said means for activating the electrical energy storage member comprise pyrotechnic activation means.
7. The aircraft according to claim 1, wherein said means for activating the electrical energy storage member comprise electrical activation means.
8. The aircraft according to claim 1, wherein the electrical energy storage member is connected in parallel with said specific electrical energy power supply network.
9. The aircraft according to claim 8, wherein a diode is interposed between the electrical energy storage member and a rectifier member or an AC/DC converter powered by said specific electrical energy power supply network.
10. The aircraft according to claim 1, wherein the electrical energy storage member is connected in series with a rectifier member or an AC/DC converter powered by said specific electrical energy power supply network, and in parallel with a diode.
11. The aircraft according to claim 10, wherein said diode is constituted by a controlled switch of electromechanical type or of static type.
12. The aircraft according to claim 10, wherein said diode is constituted by a semiconductor element.
13. The aircraft according to claim 1, wherein the electrical energy storage member comprises one or more elements or sets of elements connected in series, in parallel, or in series-parallel.
14. The aircraft according to claim 1, including a plurality of free turbine engines, each having a gas generator and each associated with an electrical machine capable of operating both as a starter and as a generator, at least one of the plurality of engines being capable of being put in a standby mode, while at least one other one of the plurality of engines is in a mode of normal operation.
15. The aircraft according to claim 14, wherein the rapid assistance device has a single electrical energy storage member adapted to be electrically connected via a switch device to said electrical machine that is associated with that one of the plurality of engines that requires a burst of assistance to the gas generator of the engine previously put on standby.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0048] Other characteristics and advantages of the invention appear from the detailed description of particular embodiments of the invention given with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
[0049]
[0050]
[0051]
[0052]
[0053]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0054] With reference to
[0055] This architecture is advantageous in the context of economic cruising flight on one engine, since it guarantees functional and organic independence between generating electricity and operating the turboshaft engines 11, 21, thus making it possible to retain a sufficient level of availability and of redundancy for generating electricity when in economic cruising flight, while one of the two engines 11, 21 is kept on standby, which is not compatible with taking any power from the gas generator of that engine operating on standby.
[0056] In addition, this architecture is less penalizing for the operation of the engines 11, 21 than taking power from the gas generators of the engines 11, 21, in particular in terms of impact on their acceleration and on their specific consumption performance, insofar as the electrical power consumed by the on-board network 17 of the aircraft is taken mechanically from the free turbine and not from the gas generator.
[0057] The alternators 18, 19 (ALT1 and ALT2) power the electricity network 17 of the aircraft. Thus, the on-board network 17 is powered by one or more alternators 18, 19 that are driven directly or indirectly via at least one of the engines 11, 21. When one of the engines 11, 21 is shut down, it is necessarily the other engine that powers the on-board network 17 in prolonged manner.
[0058] Nevertheless, there may be other sources of energy available for powering the network 17 and serving in particular for powering all of the electrical system 100 associated with the engines 11, 21, which other sources may be constituted by an on-board auxiliary power unit 53 (abridged APU), by one of more storage batteries 51, or indeed, when on the ground, by a ground power unit 52.
[0059] The main gearbox 20 (MGB) is driven by the engines 11, 21. In this embodiment they are free turbine turboshaft engines. Each of them comprises a gas generator and a power turbine (free turbine) driving the MGB 20 via an overrunning clutch, or “freewheel”.
[0060] Each engine 11, 21 is associated with a respective rotary machine 12, 22 that is suitable for operating both as a starter and as a generator, and that can be powered from the on-board network 17 of the aircraft via an electrical control system 50 that includes the device of the invention.
[0061] First and second embodiments of the invention are described with reference to
[0062] In the embodiment of
[0063] In accordance with the invention, a diode 15 may be connected between the DC/AC converter 13 and the AC/DC converter 16. This diode is useful when the DC network is used by equipment other than the EM 12. It serves to reserve for the EM 12 all of the power produced by the storage unit 14 (described below) when the voltage produced by the storage unit 14 is greater than the voltage Vcc of the DC network. It enables the DC network to contribute to powering the EM 12 when the voltage produced by the storage unit 14 is less than the voltage Vcc of the DC network. The anode of the diode 15 is connected to the positive pole of the output from the AC/DC converter 16, and the cathode of the diode 15 is connected to the positive pole of the DC/AC converter 13. Naturally, and in equivalent manner, the cathode of the diode 15 could be connected to the negative pole of the output from the AC/DC converter 16, with the anode of the diode 15 being connected to the negative pole of the DC/AC converter 13. The diode 15 may be a semiconductor, or a controlled switch that may be static or electromechanical.
[0064] Furthermore, a primary storage unit 14, i.e. a non-rechargeable electrical energy storage member suitable for single use, is connected in parallel with the converters 13 and 16, the positive pole of the primary storage unit 14 being connected to the cathode of the diode 15 and the negative pole of the primary storage unit being connected to the negative poles of the converters 13 and 16.
[0065] The primary storage unit 14 is optimized for power discharges that are short and intense. By way of example, it may be a ready-for-use device with low self-discharge that incorporates an anode and a cathode in contact with an electrolyte.
[0066] Nevertheless, the primary storage unit 14 could be a device that is inert prior to being activated, incorporating an anode, a cathode, and an electrolyte that does not wet the anode and the cathode.
[0067] Under such circumstances, the electrical energy storage member 14 may comprise a battery with electrolyte that is separate, the battery having a separate tank for storing the electrolyte together with means for releasing the electrolyte from the separate tank so as to enable it to come into contact with the anode and the cathode when the electrical energy storage member 14 is activated.
[0068] Alternatively, for a device that is inert prior to being activated, the electrical energy storage member 14 may comprise a thermopile adapted to keep an electrolyte solid at ambient temperature during storage and to liquefy the electrolyte by heating when the electrical energy storage member 14 is activated.
[0069] The primary electrical storage unit 14 is activated when the engine 11 needs to be restarted in an emergency.
[0070] By way of example, the means for activating the electrical energy storage member 14 may comprise pyrotechnic activation means, or indeed mechanical activation means, or indeed electrical activation means.
[0071] In the embodiment of
[0072] When the voltage delivered by the storage unit 14 loaded by the DC/AC converter 13 and the EM 12 is less than the voltage Vcc of the DC network, the diode 15 conducts, thereby enabling the DC network to contribute to powering the EM 12.
[0073] Finally, if it is desired that the DC network does not participate in powering the EM 12 when the voltage from the storage unit 14 is less than that of the DC network, and given that the diode 15 may be a controlled switch, as mentioned above, it is possible to control the switch 15 so that it does not conduct under such circumstances.
[0074]
[0075] Since it is never necessary to restart both engines 11 and 12 at the same time, it is possible to have only one on-board storage unit 14 for restarting one or the other of the two engines 11 and 21. An electrical or electromechanical switch member 38, 48 connects the single storage unit 14 either to the DC/AC converter 13 (as shown in
[0076] As shown in
[0077] In a variant, the DC/AC converter 23 of
[0078] Thus, the systems of elements 13 to 16 and 23 to 26 can be implemented in full or in part by using single elements, the switching taking place where the systems duplicate each other.
[0079] It is also possible to make provision for only one of the engines, e.g. the engine 11, to be suitable for being put on standby, while the other engine 21 always operates at high power, in which case the elements 24 and 25 could be omitted without a switching function being necessary, since no rapid reactivation needs to be performed for the second engine 21.
[0080]
[0081] Thus, in
[0082] When the primary storage unit 114 is not in operation, the EM 12 can be powered by the DC on-board network via the diode 115. If the engine 11 that was previously on standby needs to be rapidly reactivated, the diode 115 becomes non-conductive and the primary storage unit 114 is connected in series with the converters 13 and 16.
[0083] Thus, when the primary energy storage unit is activated, it is in series switch the on-board network 17 associated with the AC/DC converter 16. The electrical energy needed for rapidly reactivating the gas turbine of the engine 11 is delivered by the primary energy storage unit 114 and by the on-board network 17, which, in comparison with the solution of the embodiment shown in
[0084] The solution of the embodiment in
[0085] Compared with the solution of the embodiment of
[0086] In the embodiment of
[0087] As in the first embodiment, it is nevertheless possible to switch a single storage unit 114 to the engine 11 or to the engine 21, or else for example to allocate the role of being in standby mode to the first engine 11 only, in which case it is possible to omit the elements 124 and 125.
[0088]
[0089] The nature of the storage member 24, 114, or 124 can be entirely analogous to that described above with respect to the storage member 14.
[0090] In the present invention, the storage member 14 or 114, or 24 or 124 as the case may be, that is integrated in the electrical system of an engine that might be put on standby, i.e. the engine 11 or the engine 21 as the case may be, is necessary in order to enable the corresponding gas turbine that is initially in standby mode to be reactivated rapidly, e.g. because of a problem with the gas turbine that was operating previously. The above-described situation is assumed to be extremely rare, and it necessarily requires a maintenance operation to be performed subsequently on the gas turbine. It therefore appears that there is no major drawback in the storage member 14 or 114, or 24 or 124 as the case may be, being a storage unit that can be used once only and that needs to be replaced when performing maintenance on the engine.
[0091] In this concept where the storage member 14 or 114, or 24 or 124 as the case may be, is a one-shot member, it becomes possible to use so-called “primary” storage technology, i.e. the storage units are not rechargeable.
[0092] As mentioned above, primary couples come in two families:
1/ Family of Primary Couples that are Ready for Use
[0093] In this situation, the electrolyte wets the anode and the cathode.
[0094] Various high-performance primary couples are in existence that present very low self-discharge, so they do not degrade over time, and thus do not require periodic recharging, thereby making it possible to avoid using a battery management system (BMS) which constitutes equipment that is complex and also increases both the weight of the system and its probability of failing.
[0095] By way of example, mention may be made of the following couples Li—SO.sub.2, Li—MnO.sub.2, LiSOCl.sub.2, Zn—MnO.sub.2 (saline or alkaline), Zn—Ag.sub.2O, this list not being exhaustive.
2/ Family of Inert Primary Couples
[0096] Their electrolyte does not wet the anode and the cathode. This family comprises two sub-families:
[0097] 2.1/ A battery with a separate electrolyte: the electrolyte is taken from an auxiliary tank, and is released on activation.
[0098] By way of example, mention may be made of the silver-zinc (Zn—Ag.sub.2O) couple, this list not being exhaustive.
[0099] 2.2/ Thermopile: the electrolyte is solid at ambient temperature and is heated and thus liquefied very quickly on activation.
[0100] By way of example, mention may be made of the Ca/CaCrO.sub.4 and Li/FeS.sub.2 couples, this list not being exhaustive.
[0101] These couples have the advantage of being electrically and chemically inert so long as they are not activated.
[0102] They provide a solution to all of the prior art drawbacks that make use of electrical energy storage members of the so-called “secondary” type.
[0103] a/ They do not require a BMS.
[0104] b/ No self-discharge takes place. There is no need to charge them.
[0105] c/ No degradation takes place over time and they can be guaranteed for a period of 15 or 20 years, for example.
[0106] d/ There is no electrical danger nor any risk of unwanted discharge, since the energy storage members 14, 114, 24, 124 are electrically inert.
[0107] e/ Since the energy storage members 14, 114, 24, 124 are chemically inert, they withstand severe environmental conditions very well.
[0108] f/ There is no risk of thermal runaway in the inert state.
[0109] g/ When the energy storage members 14, 114, 24, 124 are in an inactive state, they have the property whereby the insulation resistance between the + and − polarities of the storage member is very high, thus enabling such a member to be installed in an electrical architecture without taking prior precautions, and an electrically inert battery can thus be coupled to the on-board network 17 very simply by means of a parallel connection (the storage unit 14 is in an insulating state) or a series connection (the storage unit accommodates the zero voltage state).
[0110] Even though the present description states that the storage unit 14 or 114, 24, or 124 is single in terms of a functional entity, it should be observed that it need not be constituted by a single member, but could in fact comprise one or more couples or sets of couples connected in parallel, or in series, or in series-parallel.
[0111] Furthermore, the description above relates to two engines 11 and 21, however the invention applies in the same manner to a smaller or greater number of engines that can be used on a single aircraft, with one or more devices of the invention, or with a device of the invention having switching, being applied to one or more of the engines.
[0112] When a single-engined aircraft has a single engine 11, corresponding to the situation of the embodiments of
[0113] In general manner, the invention is not limited to the embodiments described, but extends to any variant within the ambit of the scope of the accompanying claims.