Turbine engine drive shaft device
09771968 ยท 2017-09-26
Assignee
Inventors
- Thierry Francois Maurice Duchatelle (Meigneux, FR)
- Virginie Guilbert (Corbeil Essonnes, FR)
- Cedric Magret (Paris, FR)
- Thierry Georges Paul Papin (Varennes-Jarcy, FR)
Cpc classification
F16C3/023
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/32
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D9/065
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F01D25/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D9/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C3/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A vaned wheel device traversed by a radial drive shaft includes radial arms, one of which contains the shaft, and stationary vanes manufactured separately from the casing and a ferrule and assembled thereto. A sleeve encompassing the shaft traverses the casing and serves to support a bearing for supporting the shaft with positional accuracy, and maintaining tightness by forming a single cavity with the radial arm cavities traversing the shaft.
Claims
1. A turbine engine drive shaft device comprising: a shaft; a circular casing; a circular ferrule encompassing the casing; a hollow radial arm connecting the casing to the ferrule and traversed by the shaft, also extending into the casing; a shaft support bearing mounted on a supporting member secured on the casing; the radial arm being assembled with the casing without being integral therewith, the radial arm including a boss including a borehole; and further comprising a sleeve to couple the arm with the casing, the boss and the sleeve are assembled by engaging into each other, the shaft extends through the boss and the sleeve, a seal creates tightness between the sleeve and the boss, and the bearing is mounted in the sleeve, wherein the bearing is held against opposite shoulders of the sleeve and the shaft by nuts respectively screwed on the shaft and in the sleeve.
2. A turbine engine drive shaft device according to claim 1, wherein the sleeve is integral with the casing.
3. A turbine engine drive shaft device according to claim 1, wherein the sleeve is assembled with a boss of the casing, the boss of the casing including a borehole through which the shaft extends, the boss of the casing and the sleeve are engaged into each other, and a seal creates tightness between the sleeve and the boss of the casing.
4. A turbine engine drive shaft device according to claim 1, wherein the radial arm is also assembled with the ferrule without being integral therewith, the radial arm and the ferrule comprise further bosses including extending boreholes, and further comprising a coupling sleeve, connecting the ferrule to the arm while being engaged in the boreholes of the further bosses, and further seals creating tightness between the further sleeve and each of the boreholes of the further bosses, the shaft passing through the further sleeve.
5. A turbine engine drive shaft device according to claim 1, wherein the sleeve extends through the casing from an outer radius to an inner radius, and the casing comprises a second bored boss extending from the boss, the sleeve being inserted through the bosses, a seal being arranged between the second boss and the sleeve.
6. A turbine engine drive shaft device according to claim 1, wherein the casing includes a casing sleeve integral therewith and extending from the borehole of the boss of the casing and a borehole of a second boss, the boss and the second boss being at an outer radius and at an inner radius of the casing, and the sleeve is inserted into the casing sleeve.
7. A turbine engine drive shaft device according to claim 5, wherein the casing is an intermediate casing separating two concentric gas flow passages, the radial arm passes through an outer secondary passage, and the second boss extends as far as a further radial arm traversing an inner primary passage.
8. A turbine engine drive shaft device according to claim 1, further comprising a lubrication conduit created in the shaft, drilled holes traversing the shaft from the conduit to the bearing, and the shaft includes two parts joined by grooves, and drilled holes traverse the shaft from the conduit to a circular chamber where the grooves lead.
9. A turbine engine drive shaft device according to claim 1, wherein the shaft is inclined in an axial direction of the turbine engine and the radial arm is also inclined in the axial direction, while being constantly adjacent to a rear edge of the radial arm.
10. A turbine engine comprising a device according to claim 1.
11. An aircraft, comprising a turbine engine according to claim 10.
Description
(1) The invention shall now be described with reference to the figures, wherein:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7) and
(8) With reference to
(9) With reference also to
(10) This design has disadvantages mentioned above due to the presence of the sheaths in the radial arms and the type of supporting member used for the bearing.
(11) An embodiment of the invention shall now be described using the following figures, and firstly
(12) The unitary vaned wheel 10 is replaced by a vaned wheel of a similar shape but where the guide vanes and the radial arms are bolted to the elements connected thereto, the intermediate casing portion (now 114) and the ferrule portion (now 111) now being manufactured separately.
(13) The intermediate casing portion 114 is provided with a boss 30 at the outer periphery thereof, which is positioned in front of an outer radial arm 112. The boss 30 comprises a cylindrical borehole 31. A further boss 32 is arranged in front of an inner radial arm 115 (passing through the primary passage 6) also comprising a borehole 33, extending from the previous borehole 31. A sleeve 34 is inserted into the boreholes 31 and 33, the ends thereof being cylindrical bearings pressing on the boreholes 31 and 33, provided with O-rings 35 creating the tightness at said boreholes 31 and 33. The sleeve 34 is held by the bolts 36 inserted into the boss 30. The bosses 30 and 32 are arranged at the ends of the intermediate casing portion 14, supported by ribs 28 and 29. The inner boss 32 opens directly into the inner radial arm 115, which is integral with the intermediate casing portion 114 and with the inner skin 117.
(14) According to an alternative design illustrated in
(15) The sleeves 234 and 235 together thus replace the sleeve 34, with the advantages that the second sleeve 235, which is short and secured in a single borehole 31, is easy to install, and that there is no sealing device for the inner borehole 33.
(16) The drive shaft comprises two parts, one whereof is a primary shaft 37 which extends into the sleeve 34, and then inwards and ends on the driving pinion, now 103. A bearing 38 (
(17) The radial arm 112 comprises (
(18) It should be noted that the primary shaft 37 and the second shaft 49 may be inclined towards the engine axis, in this case to the rear towards the engine periphery, and that the radial arm 112 is then advantageously inclined by an equivalent angle so that the secondary shaft is constantly in the same zone adjacent to the wider rear edge of the cavity 42 and that there is thus no obligation to widen the radial arm 112 elsewhere.
(19) A centring bowl 54 (
(20) The lubrication of the device may be performed as follows. Oil originating from the engine unit 102 is injected into a conduit of the secondary shaft 49, which is hollow similar to the primary shaft 37. On arriving at the end of the secondary shaft 49, the oil enters the drilled holes 51 produced through the primary shaft 37 in front of the bearing 38 and lubricates same. A further portion of the oil reaches drilled holes 52 at the end of the secondary shaft 49 and helps lubricate the grooves 50 reaching a circular chamber 53 situated in front thereof. The oil consumed in this way reaches the enclosed cavity encompassing the drive shaft, where it cannot join the flow in the engine or be dispersed in excess and where it can be recovered.
(21) Further solutions are also possible for embodying the invention, which may notably be used in single-flow turbine engines.
(22) One of these solutions is thus represented using
(23) One advantage of this design is that the seals which were required between the sleeve 34 and the casing 114 may in this case be omitted. This embodiment may otherwise be identical to the first. However, a further alternative embodiment may be envisaged: the bearing, now 338, housed in the same location as the bearing 38 according to the previous embodiment, may be a smooth bearing instead of a roller bearing as previously represented. Furthermore, this freedom to choose the type of bearing is found in all the embodiments of the invention.