TURBINE SECTION OF A GAS TURBINE ENGINE
20230323836 · 2023-10-12
Inventors
- Paul R. Adams (Riviera Beach, FL, US)
- Frederick M. Schwarz (Glastonbury, CT)
- Shankar S. Magge (South Windsor, CT, US)
- Joseph B. Staubach (Colchester, CT)
- Wesley K. Lord (South Glastonbury, CT, US)
- Gabriel L. Suciu (Glastonbury, CT, US)
Cpc classification
F01D25/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2240/35
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K3/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D29/545
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/606
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/40311
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2220/323
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2220/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C3/107
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2240/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D5/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2220/3215
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2250/283
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2240/129
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02K3/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A turbofan engine has an engine case and a gaspath through the engine case. A fan has a circumferential array of fan blades. The engine further has a compressor, a combustor, a gas generating turbine, and a low pressure turbine section. A speed reduction mechanism couples the low pressure turbine section to the fan. A bypass area ratio is greater than about 6.0. The low pressure turbine section airfoil count to bypass area ratio is below about 170.
Claims
1. A gas turbine engine comprising: a propulsor including a circumferential array of blades; a compressor in fluid communication with the propulsor; a combustor in fluid communication with the compressor; a turbine section in fluid communication with the combustor, the turbine section having a two-stage high pressure turbine section coupled to drive a portion of the compressor and a low pressure turbine section; and a speed reduction mechanism coupling the low pressure turbine section to the propulsor, wherein the speed reduction mechanism comprises gearbox coupled to the propulsor and rotatable by the low pressure turbine section such that the low pressure turbine section rotates faster than the propulsor, the gear box having a speed reduction ratio between 2:1 and 13:1, wherein: a maximum gaspath radius along the low pressure turbine section to a maximum radius of the blades of the propulsor is greater than 0.35 and less than 0.55.
2. The engine as recited in claim 1, wherein a hub-to-tip ratio (R.sub.I:R.sub.O) of the low pressure turbine section is between 0.4 and 0.5 measured at the maximum R.sub.O axial location in the low pressure turbine section.
3. The engine as recited in claim 2, wherein, an airfoil count of the low pressure turbine section is below 1600.
4. The engine as recited in claim 1, wherein the compressor comprises a low pressure compressor section and a high pressure compressor section.
5. The engine as recited in claim 4 wherein, the high pressure turbine section is coupled to drive the high pressure compressor section.
6. The engine as recited in claim 5, wherein there are no additional compressor or turbine sections.
7. The engine as recited in claim 6, wherein blades of the low pressure compressor section and low pressure turbine section share a shaft and the speed reduction mechanism comprises an epicyclic transmission that couples the shaft to a propulsor shaft to drive the propulsor with a speed reduction.
8. The engine as recited in claim 1, wherein the speed reduction mechanism comprises an epicyclic transmission.
9. The engine as recited in claim 1, wherein the low pressure turbine section has 2 to 6 blade stages.
10. The engine as recited in claim 1, wherein an airfoil count of the low pressure turbine section is below 1600.
11. The engine as recited in claim 1, in combination with a mounting arrangement wherein an aft mount reacts at least a thrust load.
12. The engine as recited in claim 1, wherein the low pressure turbine section has blade stages interspersed with vane stages.
13. A gas turbine engine comprising: a core engine case; a gaspath through the core engine case, the gas path having a maximum gas path radius; a propulsor section fan having array of blades, wherein the array of blades have a maximum blade radius; a compressor in fluid communication with the propulsor; a combustor in fluid communication with the compressor; a turbine in fluid communication with the combustor, the turbine having a low pressure turbine section, wherein a ratio of a maximum gaspath radius along the low pressure turbine section to the maximum blade radius is greater than 0.35 and less than 0.55; and a speed reduction mechanism coupling the low pressure turbine section to the fan.
14. The engine as recited in claim 12 wherein a hub-to-tip ratio (R.sub.I:R.sub.O) of the low pressure turbine section is between about 0.4 and about 0.5 measured at the maximum R.sub.O axial location in the low pressure turbine section.
15. The engine as recited in claim 14, wherein the low pressure turbine section has 3 to 6 blade stages.
16. The engine as recited in claim 15, wherein the ratio of the maximum gaspath radius along the low pressure turbine section to the maximum blade radius is less than 0.50.
17. The engine as recited in claim 16, wherein an airfoil count of the low pressure turbine section is below about 1600.
18. The engine as recited in claim 17, wherein the compressor comprises a low pressure compressor section and a high pressure compressor section and the turbine has a high pressure turbine section coupled to drive the high pressure compressor section.
19. The engine as recited in claim 18, wherein blades of the low pressure compressor section and low pressure turbine section share a shaft and the speed reduction mechanism comprises an epicyclic transmission that couples the shaft to a propulsor shaft to drive the propulsor at a speed different than a speed of the low pressure compressor.
20. The engine as recited in claim 19, wherein the speed reduction mechanism comprises an epicyclic transmission that defines a gear ratio between 2:1 and 13:1.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022] Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0023]
[0024] The engine extends along a longitudinal axis 500 from a fore end to an aft end. Adjacent the fore end, a shroud (fan case) 40 encircles the fan 42 and is supported by vanes 44. An aerodynamic nacelle around the fan case is shown and an aerodynamic nacelle 45 around the engine case is shown.
[0025] The low shaft portion 25 of the rotor shaft assembly 23 drives the fan 42 through a speed reduction mechanism 46. An exemplary speed reduction mechanism is an epicyclic transmission, namely a star or planetary gear system. As is discussed further below, an inlet airflow 520 entering the nacelle is divided into a portion 522 passing along a core flowpath 524 and a bypass portion 526 passing along a bypass flowpath 528. With the exception of diversions such as cooling air, etc., flow along the core flowpath sequentially passes through the low pressure compressor section, high pressure compressor section, a combustor 48, the high pressure turbine section, and the low pressure turbine section before exiting from an outlet 530.
[0026]
[0027] The star gears 56 are positioned between and enmeshed with the sun gear and ring gear. A cage or star carrier assembly 60 carries the star gears via associated journals 62. The exemplary star carrier is substantially irrotatably mounted relative via fingers 404 to the case 22.
[0028] Another transmission/gearbox combination has the star carrier connected to the fan and the ring is fixed to the fixed structure (case) is possible and such is commonly referred to as a planetary gearbox.
[0029] The speed reduction ratio is determined by the ratio of diameters within the gearbox. An exemplary reduction is between about 2:1 and about 13:1.
[0030] The exemplary fan (
[0031] To mount the engine to the aircraft wing 92, a pylon 94 is mounted to the fan case and/or to the other engine cases. The exemplary pylon 94 may be as disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/832,107 (US2009/0056343A1). The pylon comprises a forward mount 100 and an aft/rear mount 102. The forward mount may engage the engine intermediate case (IMC) and the aft mount may engage the engine thrust case. The aft mount reacts at least a thrust load of the engine.
[0032] To reduce aircraft fuel, burn with turbofans, it is desirable to produce a low pressure turbine with the highest efficiency and lowest weight possible. Further, there are considerations of small size (especially radial size) that benefit the aerodynamic shape of the engine cowling and allow room for packaging engine subsystems.
[0033]
[0034] An alternative may be an unshrouded blade with a rotational gap between the tip of the blade and a stationary blade outer air seal (BOAS)). Each exemplary shroud 224 has outboard sealing ridges which seal with abradable seals (e.g., honeycomb) fixed to the case. The exemplary vanes in stages 206 and 208 include airfoils 230 extending from ID platforms 232 to OD shrouds 234. The exemplary OD shrouds 234 are directly mounted to the case. The exemplary platforms 232 carry seals for sealing with inter-disk knife edges protruding outwardly from inter-disk spacers which may be separate from the adjacent disks or unitarily formed with one of the adjacent disks.
[0035] Each exemplary disk 210, 212, 214 comprises an enlarged central annular protuberance or “bore” 240, 242, 244 and a thinner radial web 246, 248, 250 extending radially outboard from the bore. The bore imparts structural strength allowing the disk to withstand centrifugal loading which the disk would otherwise be unable to withstand.
[0036] A turbofan engine is characterized by its bypass ratio (mass flow ratio of air bypassing the core to air passing through the core) and the geometric bypass area ratio (ratio of fan duct annulus area outside/outboard of the low pressure compressor section inlet (i.e., at location 260 in
[0037] By employing a speed reduction mechanism (e.g., a transmission) to allow the low pressure turbine section to turn very fast relative to the fan and by employing low pressure turbine section design features for high speed, it is possible to create a compact turbine module (e.g., while producing the same amount of thrust and increasing bypass area ratio). The exemplary transmission is an epicyclic transmission. Alternative transmissions include composite belt transmissions, metal chain belt transmissions, fluidic transmissions, and electric means (e.g., a motor/generator set where the turbine turns a generator providing electricity to an electric motor which drives the fan).
[0038] Compactness of the turbine is characterized in several ways. Along the compressor and turbine sections, the core gaspath extends from an inboard boundary (e.g., at blade hubs or outboard surfaces of platforms of associated blades and vanes) to an outboard boundary (e.g., at blade tips and inboard surfaces of blade outer air seals for unshrouded blade tips and at inboard surfaces of OD shrouds of shrouded blade tips and at inboard surfaces of OD shrouds of the vanes). These boundaries may be characterized by radii R.sub.I and R.sub.O, respectively, which vary along the length of the engine.
[0039] For low pressure turbine radial compactness, there may be a relatively high ratio of radial span (R.sub.O-R.sub.I) to radius (R.sub.O or R.sub.I). Radial compactness may also be expressed in the hub-to-tip ratio (R.sub.I:R.sub.O). These may be measured at the maximum R.sub.O location in the low pressure turbine section. The exemplary compact low pressure turbine section has a hub-to-tip ratio close to about 0.5 (e.g., about 0.4-0.5 or about 0.42-0.48, with an exemplary about 0.46).
[0040] Another characteristic of low pressure turbine radial compactness is relative to the fan size. An exemplary fan size measurement is the maximum tip radius R.sub.Tmax of the fan blades. An exemplary ratio is the maximum R.sub.O along the low pressure turbine section to R.sub.Tmax of the fan blades. Exemplary values for this ratio are less than about 0.55 (e.g., about 0.35-55), more narrowly, less than about 0.50, or about 0.35-0.50.
[0041] To achieve compactness the designer may balance multiple physical phenomena to arrive at a system solution as defined by the low pressure turbine hub-to-tip ratio, the fan maximum tip radius to low pressure turbine maximum R.sub.O ratio, the bypass area ratio, and the bypass area ratio to low pressure turbine airfoil count ratio. These concerns include, but are not limited to: a) aerodynamics within the low pressure turbine, b) low pressure turbine blade structural design, c) low pressure turbine disk structural design, and d) the shaft connecting the low pressure turbine to the low pressure compressor and speed reduction device between the low pressure compressor and fan. These physical phenomena may be balanced in order to achieve desirable performance, weight, and cost characteristics.
[0042] The addition of a speed reduction device between the fan and the low pressure compressor creates a larger design space because the speed of the low pressure turbine is decoupled from the fan. This design space provides great design variables and new constraints that limit feasibility of a design with respect to physical phenomena. For example, the designer can independently change the speed and flow area of the low pressure turbine to achieve optimal aerodynamic parameters defined by flow coefficient (axial flow velocity/wheel speed) and work coefficient (wheel speed/square root of work). However, this introduces structural constraints with respect blade stresses, disk size, material selection, etc.
[0043] In some examples, the designer can choose to make low pressure turbine section disk bores much thicker relative to prior art turbine bores and the bores may be at a much smaller radius RB. This increases the amount of mass at less than a “self sustaining radius”. Another means is to choose disk materials of greater strength than prior art such as the use of wrought powdered metal disks to allow for extremely high centrifugal blade pulls associated with the compactness.
[0044] Another variable in achieving compactness is to increase the structural parameter AN.sup.2 which is the annulus area of the exit of the low pressure turbine divided by the low pressure turbine rpm squared at a redline or maximum speed. Relative to prior art turbines, which are greatly constrained by fan blade tip mach number, a very wide range of AN.sup.2 values can be selected and optimized while accommodating such constraints as cost or a countering, unfavorable trend in low pressure turbine section shaft dynamics. In selecting the turbine speed (and thereby selecting the transmission speed ratio, one has to be mindful that at too high a gear ratio the low pressure turbine section shaft (low shaft) will become dynamically unstable.
[0045] The higher the design speed, the higher the gear ratio will be and the more massive the disks will become and the stronger the low pressure turbine section disk and blade material will have to be. All of these parameters can be varied simultaneously to change the weight of the turbine, its efficiency, its manufacturing cost, the degree of difficulty in packaging the low pressure turbine section in the core cowling and its durability. This is distinguished from a prior art direct drive configuration, where the high bypass area ratio can only be achieved by a large low pressure turbine section radius. Because that radius is so very large and, although the same variables (airfoil turning, disk size, blade materials, disk shape and materials, etc.) are theoretically available, as a practical matter economics and engine fuel burn considerations severely limit the designer's choice in these parameters.
[0046] Another characteristic of low pressure turbine section size is airfoil count (numerical count of all of the blades and vanes in the low pressure turbine). Airfoil metal angles can be selected such that airfoil count is low or extremely low relative to a direct drive turbine. In known prior art engines having bypass area ratio above 6.0 (e.g. 8.0-20), low pressure turbine sections involve ratios of airfoil count to bypass area ratio above 190.
[0047] With the full range of selection of parameters discussed above including, disk bore thickness, disk material, hub to tip ratio, and R.sub.O/R.sub.Tmax, the ratio of airfoil count to bypass area ratio may be below about 170 to as low as 10. (e.g., below about 150 or an exemplary about 10-170, more narrowly about 10-150). Further, in such embodiments the airfoil count may be below about 1700, or below about 1600.
[0048] One or more embodiments have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made. For example, when reengineering from a baseline engine configuration, details of the baseline may influence details of any particular implementation. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.