SELF-STIFFENED CASING CONSISTING OF A COMPOSITE MATERIAL WITH AN ORGANIC MATRIX
20170266893 · 2017-09-21
Inventors
Cpc classification
F05D2300/603
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2300/615
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D25/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D21/045
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B29B11/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F05D2240/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/96
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B29C70/68
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02T50/60
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
F05D2300/702
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2300/6033
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B29C70/222
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F05D2250/232
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
B29C70/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A gas turbine casing made of composite material from fiber reinforcement densified by a matrix. The casing includes at least one stiffener portion extending at a radius greater than the radius of upstream and downstream portions of the casing that are adjacent to the stiffener portion so as to form an annular recess in the inside surface of the casing.
Claims
1. A gas turbine casing made of composite material comprising reinforcement densified by a matrix, said casing being in the form of a body of revolution and wherein said casing comprises at least one stiffener portion extending at a radius greater than a radius of upstream and downstream portions of the casing that are adjacent to said stiffener portion so as to form an annular recess in an inside surface of the casing.
2. The casing according to claim 1, wherein each stiffener portion presents, in axial section, an omega-type shape.
3. The casing according to claim 1, wherein the annular recess formed by each stiffener portion is filled in with a filler material or structure so as to provide continuity of the inside surface of the casing between the upstream and downstream portions of the casing that are adjacent to each stiffener portion.
4. The casing according to claim 1, wherein the annular recess formed by each stiffener portion is filled in with an acoustic attenuation material or structure.
5. The casing according to of claim 1 further comprising a retention zone presenting thickness that is greater than the remainder of the casing, said stiffener portion(s) being situated outside the retention zone.
6. A gas turbine aeroengine having a fan retention casing according to claim 1.
7. An aircraft including one or more engines according to claim 6.
8. A method of fabricating a gas turbine casing out of composite material, the method comprising weaving a fiber texture in the form of a single-piece strip by three-dimensional or multilayer weaving, shaping said texture by winding it on support tooling, and densifying the fiber reinforcement with a matrix, wherein during shaping the fiber texture is shaped so as to obtain a fiber preform having at least one stepped portion extending at a radius that is greater than a radius of upstream and downstream portions of the preform that are adjacent to said stepped portion, said stepped portion forming an annular recess in the inside surface of the casing after densification.
9. The method according to claim 8, wherein each stiffener portion presents, in axial section, an omega-type shape.
10. The method according to claim 8, wherein the annular recess formed by each stiffener portion is filled in with a filler material or structure so as to provide continuity of the inside surface of the casing between the upstream and downstream portions of the casing that are adjacent to each stiffener portion.
11. The method according to claim 8, wherein the annular recess formed by each stiffener portion is filled in with an acoustic attenuation material or structure.
12. The method according to claim 8, wherein the fiber preform has a zone of greater thickness than the remainder of the fiber preform so as to form a retention zone in the casing, said stepped portion(s) being situated outside the portion of greater thickness.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018] Other characteristics and advantages of the invention appear from the following description of particular embodiments of the invention given as non-limiting examples and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0025] The invention applies in general to any gas turbine casing made of organic matrix composite materials.
[0026] The invention is described below in the context of its application to a fan casing for a gas turbine aeroengine.
[0027] Such an engine, as shown diagrammatically in
[0028] The engine is housed inside a casing comprising a plurality of portions corresponding to different elements of the engine. Thus, the fan 1 is surrounded by a fan casing 10 in the form of a body of revolution.
[0029]
[0030] The casing 10 may be provided with external flanges 14, 15 at its upstream and downstream ends in order to enable it to be mounted with and connected to other elements. Between its upstream and downstream ends, the casing 10 presents thickness that varies, a portion 16 of the casing being thicker than the end portions and running into them progressively. The portion 16 extends across the location for the fan, from upstream to downstream so as to form a retention zone capable of retaining debris, particles, or objects ingested at the inlet of the engine, or resulting from damage to the blades of the fan, and projected radially by rotation of the fan, so as to prevent them passing through the casing and damaging other parts of the aircraft.
[0031] In accordance with the invention, the casing 10 also has a stiffener portion 17 extending at a radius that is greater than the radius of the upstream and downstream portions 18 and 19 of the casing that are adjacent to the stiffener portion 17, so as to form an annular recess 171 in the inside surface 11 of the casing 10. More precisely, the stiffener portion 17 is formed by an annular plateau 173 that is offset radially towards the outside of the casing relative to the inside surface 11 of the casing. The annular plateau 173 is connected to the upstream and downstream portions 18 and 19 defining parts of the inside surface 11 of the casing via respective annular risers 172 and 174. The angles .sup..square-solid.172 and .sup..square-solid.174 formed respectively between the risers 172 and 174 and the upstream and downstream portions 18 and 19 are preferably greater than 90° and less than 180°. These angles are defined in particular as a function of the stiffness that it is desired to impart to the casing and as a function of fabrication possibilities.
[0032] The height H.sub.173 of the plateau, corresponding to its radial offset relative to the inside surface 11 of the casing also depends on the stiffness that it is desired to give to the casing, while taking account of constraints on the size of the casing in order to enable it to be integrated in the environment of the engine.
[0033] In the presently-described embodiment, the plateau 173 and the risers 172 and 174 present profiles in axial section that are rectilinear. Nevertheless, in variant embodiments, these elements could equally well have profiles that are slightly curved or undulating.
[0034] In the presently-described embodiment, the stiffener portion 17 presents an omega-type shape, which is a shape that is well adapted to stiffening.
[0035]
[0036] Filling in the annular recess 271 formed by the stiffener portion 27 serves to provide continuity for the inside surface 21 between the upstream and downstream portions 28 and 29, and consequently to avoid modifying the passage defined by said inside surface of the casing. The filling in may be performed using any appropriate type of material or structure, and in particular a material (e.g. a foam) or a structure (e.g. a cellular structure) that serves to provide acoustic attenuation treatment. In addition to the desired stiffness, the height of the plateau in the stiffener portion may also be defined as a function of the optimum height for acoustic treatment.
[0037] The casing of the invention may have a plurality of stiffener portions similar to the above-described stiffener portions 17 and 27. Nevertheless, the stiffener portion(s) is/are preferably situated outside the retention zone formed by the portion of extra thickness corresponding to the respective portions 16 and 26 of the above-described casings 10 and 20.
[0038] A method of fabricating the casing 10 out of composite material comprising fiber reinforcement densified by a matrix is described below. The making of the casing begins by forming a fiber texture in the form of a strip.
[0039] The fiber structure 100 is obtained by three-dimensional or multilayer weaving that is performed in known manner by using a Jacquard type loom having a bundle of warp yarns 101 or strands arranged thereon in a plurality of layers, the warp yarns being interlinked by weft yarns 102.
[0040] In the example shown, the three-dimensional weaving is performed with an interlock weave. The term “interlock weave” is used herein to mean a weave in which each layer of weft yarns interlinks a plurality of layers of warp yarns with all of the yarns in a given weft column having the same movement in the weave plane.
[0041] Other known types of multilayer weaving could be used, in particular such as those described in Document WO 2006/136755.
[0042] The fiber structure may in particular be woven from yarns made of carbon fibers, of ceramic fibers, such as silicon carbon fibers, of glass fibers, or indeed of aramid fibers.
[0043] As shown in
[0044] For this purpose, the mandrel 200 presents an outside surface 201 of profile that corresponds to the inside surface of the casing that is to be made. By being wound on the mandrel 200, the fiber texture 100 is fitted closely to its profile. The mandrel 200 includes an annular projection 210 on its outside surface 201, with the shape and the dimensions of the projection corresponding to the shape and the dimensions of the stiffener portion 17 that is to be formed. The mandrel 200 also has two cheek-plates 220 and 230 to form the portions of the fiber preform that correspond to the flanges 14 and 15 of the casing 10.
[0045]
[0046] A fiber preform 300 is obtained with a stepped portion 310 extending at a radius that is greater than the radius of the upstream and downstream portions 311 and 312 of the preform that are situated on either side of the stepped portion. The stepped portion 310 corresponds to the stiffener portion 17 of the casing 10. The fiber preform also has a portion 320 of greater thickness that corresponds to the retention zone portion 16 of the casing, and end portions 330 and 340 corresponding to the flanges 14 and 15 of the casing.
[0047] Thereafter, the fiber preform 300 is densified with a matrix.
[0048] Densifying the fiber preform consists in filling in the pores of the preform, throughout part or all of its volume, using the material that constitutes the matrix.
[0049] The matrix may be obtained in known manner by using a liquid technique.
[0050] The liquid technique consists in impregnating the preform with a liquid composition containing an organic precursor of the material of the matrix. The organic precursor is usually in the form of a polymer, such as a resin, possibly diluted in a solvent. The fiber preform is placed in a mold that can be closed in sealed manner and that has a cavity with the shape of the final molded part. As shown in
[0051] The precursor is transformed into an organic matrix, i.e. it is polymerized, by means of heat treatment, generally by heating the mold, after eliminating any solvent and curing the polymer, with the preform continuing to be maintained inside the mold having a shape that corresponds to the shape of the part that is to be made. The organic matrix may be obtained in particular from epoxy resin, such as for example commercially-available high-performance epoxy resin or liquid precursors for carbon or ceramic matrices.
[0052] When forming a carbon or ceramic matrix, the heat treatment consists in pyrolyzing the organic precursor in order to transform the organic matrix into a carbon or ceramic matrix depending on the precursor used and on pyrolysis conditions. By way of example, liquid precursors of carbon may be resins having a relatively high coke content, such as phenolic resins, whereas liquid precursors of ceramic, and in particular of SiC, may be resins of the polycarbosilane (PCS) or polytitanocarbosilane (PTCS) or polysilazane (PSZ) type. A plurality of consecutive cycles from impregnation to heat treatment may be performed in order to achieve the desired degree of densification.
[0053] In an aspect of the invention, the fiber preform may be densified by the well-known resin transfer molding (RTM) method. In the RTM method, the fiber preform is placed in a mold having the shape of the casing that is to be made. A thermosetting resin is injected into the inside space defined between the rigid material part and the mold and that includes the fiber preform. A pressure gradient is generally set up in this inside space between the location where the resin is injected and resin discharge orifices in order to control and optimize impregnation of the preform by the resin.
[0054] By way of example, the resin used may be an epoxy resin. Resins suitable for RTM methods are well known. They preferably present low viscosity in order to facilitate their injection among the fibers. The choice of temperature class and/or chemical nature for the resin is determined as a function of the thermomechanical stresses to which the part is to be subjected. Once the resin has been injected throughout the reinforcement, it is polymerized by heat treatment in compliance with the RTM method.
[0055] After injection and polymerization, the part is unmolded. Finally, the part is trimmed to remove excess resin, and chamfers are machined in order to obtain the casing 10 as shown in