GAS TURBINE ENGINE ROTATION UNIT CONSTITUENT MEMBER AND METHOD FOR PRODUCING SAME
20230313693 · 2023-10-05
Assignee
Inventors
- Yoshikatsu SATO (Kobe-shi, JP)
- Ryo MORIHASHI (Kobe-shi, JP)
- Toshiro TSUJI (Kobe-shi, JP)
- Hiroshi TAKI (Kobe-shi, JP)
- Kazushige FUJIMITSU (Kobe-shi, JP)
Cpc classification
F05D2300/2282
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2230/90
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2300/611
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D5/288
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2250/221
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2300/2284
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2240/307
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2230/31
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
A rotor assembly component which is a component of a gas turbine engine is provided with a rotor assembly component body made from a metal, and a hard particle layer including a mass of hard particles and a matrix material, with the hard particles being made from a material harder than a material forming the rotor assembly component body. The matrix material is made solely from the material forming the rotor assembly component body. The hard particle layer is supported directly on a surface of the rotor assembly component body.
Claims
1. A rotor assembly component for constituting a rotor assembly of a gas turbine engine, the component comprising: a rotor assembly component body made from a metal; and a hard particle layer including a mass of hard particles made from a material harder than a material forming the rotor assembly component body, and a matrix material retaining the hard particles and made solely from the material forming the rotor assembly component body, the hard particle layer being supported directly on a surface of the rotor assembly component body.
2. The rotor assembly component as claimed in claim 1, wherein the hard particle layer is formed by a powder of the hard particles delivered in the form of a jet stream onto an area of a surface of the rotor assembly component body towards which directed energy beam is irradiated.
3. The rotor assembly component as claimed in claim 1, wherein the hard particles included in the hard particle layer are solely composed of a single material.
4. The rotor assembly component as claimed in claim 1, wherein, of the rotor assembly component body, a portion adjoining the hard particle layer and another portion different therefrom are in a continued surface condition and have a continuous shape.
5. The rotor assembly component as claimed in claim 1, wherein the hard particle layer is formed, in a radial view, within a region in which a portion of the rotor assembly component body that adjoins the hard particle layer extends.
6. The rotor assembly component as claimed in claim 1, wherein the rotor assembly component comprises a turbine blade.
7. The rotor assembly component as claimed in claim 1, wherein a percentage of embedded length for the hard particles, which represents a percentage of a length thereof that is embedded in the matrix material in a cross section of the hard particle layer, ranges from at least 70% to less than 100%.
8. The rotor assembly component as claimed in claim 1, wherein a percentage of a surface of the hard particle layer that is occupied by the hard particles is at least 55%.
9. A method for manufacturing a component that constitutes a rotor assembly of a gas turbine engine, the method comprising: constructing a rotor assembly component made from a metal; and forming a hard particle layer, the forming including irradiating of directed energy beam towards a surface of the rotor assembly component body and delivering only a powder of hard particles in the form of a jet stream onto an area thereof towards which the directed energy beam is irradiated, the hard particles being made from a material harder than a material forming the rotor assembly component body, the hard particle layer including a mass of the hard particles and a matrix material retaining the hard particles and made solely from the material forming the rotor assembly component body.
10. The method for manufacturing the rotor assembly component as claimed in claim 9, wherein the irradiating of the directed energy beam and the delivering of the hard particles in the form of a jet stream are performed by means of a directed energy deposition treatment apparatus including a centrally arranged, directed energy beam and a powder jet nozzle with an annular slit or a plurality of holes, the slit or holes being arranged coaxially about the directed energy beam.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013] The present invention will be more clearly understood from the following description of a preferred embodiment, made with reference to the accompanying drawings. However, the embodiment and the drawings are given merely for the purpose of illustration and explanation, and should not be used to delimit the scope of the present invention, which scope is to be delimited by the appended claims. In the accompanying drawings, alike symbols denote alike or corresponding parts throughout the different figures:
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0022] In the following text, an embodiment according to the present invention will be described in accordance with the drawings; however, the present invention is not limited to this embodiment.
[0023]
[0024] In the turbine 5, a plurality of nozzles (or vanes) 7 are disposed in an axial direction so as to alternate with and be adjacent to a plurality of turbine blades 11 disposed on the outer peripheral surface of a rotor 9 that constitutes a rotor unit of the gas turbine GT. The remainder of the discussion will mostly focus on a turbine blade 11 as an example rotor assembly component 1 for the instant embodiment. Each turbine blade 11 is covered by a shroud 13 (i.e., a portion of a casing of the turbine 5) from outside in a radial direction R. Consequently, the tip endwall surface of the turbine blade 11 in the radial direction R confront the shroud 13 in the radial direction R via a minute clearance.
[0025] Note that, in addition to a rotational member (e.g., the abovementioned turbine blade 11 or rotor 9), a stationary member (e.g., the abovementioned shroud 13) that opposes the rotational member in a radial direction is also encompassed herein within the term, rotor assembly component 1 which is, namely, a member that constitutes a rotor unit of the gas turbine engine. Examples of the rotor assembly component include, in addition to the example member mentioned above, a compressor impeller, a rotor, or a labyrinth seal.
[0026] Note that the terms “radial direction R” and “circumferential direction Q” herein denote a radial direction and a circumferential direction, respectively, with respect to the axis C of rotation of the rotor assembly component 1.
[0027] As illustrated in
[0028] The term “hard particles” herein denote particles made from a material harder than a material forming the rotor assembly component body 15 on which they are supported. Note that the hard particles 16 are also harder than a material forming a member to which the tip end segment 15a of the rotor assembly component 1 is to be opposed (which is, in the instant example, the shroud 13 shown in
[0029] The hard particle layer 17 provided in this fashion on a surface of the rotor body component 1 results in improved abradability of the rotor body component 1. To provide a more efficient improvement of the abradability of the rotor body component 1, a percentage of a surface of the hard particle layer 17 that is occupied by the hard particles 16 is preferably, for example, at least 55%, and more preferably at least 65%. In this context, the phrase “percentage of a surface . . . occupied . . . ” represents the percentage of an area, in which the hard particles 16 are externally exposed, relative to the total surface area of the hard particle layer 17.
[0030] In the instant embodiment, the mass of hard particles 16 included in the hard particle layer 17 are composed of a single material. With such a configuration, a treatment process is simplified. Specifically, since no cladding material is employed other than that of the rotor assembly component body 15 and that of the hard particles 16 composed of a single material, no equipment to feed multiple types of powders is required during a cladding treatment, and furthermore, the need for complex control with respect to the ratio of their feeding rates, timings, etc. is also obviated. Nevertheless, the hard particle layer 17 may include more than one type of hard particles that are composed of different materials.
[0031] Further, a material different from the hard particles 16 and present in the vicinity of these hard particles 16 so as to retain them, as shown in
[0032] Note that, while more than one type of hard particles composed of different materials may be included in the hard particle layer 17, certain type(s) of particles thereamong may be incorporated therein for the purpose of retaining the other type(s) of particles, and in that case, the certain type(s) of particles do not correspond to “hard particles” and rather qualify as the “matrix material” that is defined as such herein (also note that, in such a case, the “matrix material . . . made solely from the material forming the rotor assembly component body” is not met.)
[0033] Note that the material of the rotor assembly component 1 and the material forming the hard particles 16 are not limited to the abovementioned examples. For the material of the rotor assembly component body 15, use can be made of, for example, a titanium (Ti)-based alloy, a cobalt (Co)-based alloy, or an iron (Fe)-based alloy. Also, the construction method for the rotor assembly component body 15 is not limited to die casting. For the material of the hard particles 16, use can be made of, for example, titanium carbide (TiC), silicon carbide (SiC), tungsten carbide (WC), niobium carbide (NbC), or chromium carbide (Cr.sub.3C.sub.2).
[0034] In more detail, the hard particle layer 17 is supported directly on the tip endwall surface 19 of the rotor assembly component body 15. The expression, “directly” supported herein means that the hard particle layer 17 is supported on the tip endwall surface 19 in contact therewith by using, as the matrix material 20 for retaining the hard particles 19, the material forming the rotor assembly component body 15, not a cladding material.
[0035] In other words, a portion of the rotor assembly component body 15 that adjoins the hard particle layer 17 and is integrated with the matrix material of the hard particle layer 17 (which is, in the instant example, the tip end segment 15a) is formed of the same material as that of the major part 15b (i.e., portions other than the tip end segment 15a) of the rotor assembly component body 15, and, in addition, the peripheral edge region 15ab (i.e., a lateral surface) of the tip end segment 15a is in a continued surface condition from the major part 15b and has a continuous shape from the major part 15b. The phrase “a continued surface condition from the major part 15b” herein implies that there is no discontinuity, such as a seam, between the tip end segment 15a and the major part 15b and they have the same glossiness and surface roughness. For instance, those embodiments where a grinding treatment has been exclusively performed on a lateral surface of the tip end segment 15a do not satisfy “a continued surface condition from the major part 15b.” Further, the phrase “a continuous shape from the major part 15b” herein implies that the surface line condition or curve condition in a cross sectional view shows smooth connection between the major part 15b and the tip end segment 15a. For instance, those embodiments where only the tip end segment 15a has a such a shape that is laterally bulged do not satisfy “a continuous shape from the major part 15b.”
[0036] Further, in the instant embodiment, the hard particle layer 17 is formed, in a top view (i.e., in a view along the radial direction R), within a region in which the tip end segment 15a of the rotor assembly component body 15 extends.
[0037] Since the rotor assembly component 1 in the instant embodiment thus employs no cladding material other than that of the rotor assembly component body 15 and that of the hard particles 16, lateral bulging of the cladding zone from the rotor assembly component body 15 can be prevented. Further, bulging of the cladding zone from the tip end side can be mitigated. In this way, the rotor assembly component 1 can be applied for use in size and dimensions that are closer to those of its design specification, guaranteeing with little effort the performance of the gas turbine GT to which it is applied.
[0038] Note that, from the aerodynamic viewpoint, an edge angle α for the hard particle layer 17 shown in
[0039] In the rotor assembly component 1 according to the instant embodiment, a percentage of embedded length for the hard particles 16 ranges from at least 70% to less than 100%. The “percentage of embedded length” for the hard particles 16 herein refers to a percentage of a length thereof that is embedded in the matrix material 20 in a cross section of the hard particle layer 17. Namely, a percentage of embedded length for an individual hard particle 16 (which will hereinafter be referred to as a “percentage of embedded individual length”) is calculated by the formula: Lb/(Lp+Lb) wherein Lp and Lb represent, in a cross section of the hard particle layer 17 as shown in
[0040] As illustrated in
[0041] By choosing the percentage of embedded length to be at least 70%, the hard particles 16 are more reliably retained by the matrix material 20, and possible detachment of the hard particles 16 upon the sliding contact of the rotor assembly component 1 with its opposing member can be mitigated. In particular, by choosing the value of the percentage of embedded length to be 70% in addition to choosing the percentage of the surface occupied to be at least 55% as discussed earlier, excellent abradability can be maintained for a prolonged period of time. It should be noted that the percentage of embedded length more preferably ranges from at least 80% to no more than 95%, and further preferably ranges from at least 85% to no more than 90%. Nevertheless, the percentage of embedded length may even be less than 70%.
[0042] In the instant embodiment, the hard particle layer 17 is built on the tip endwall surface 19 of the rotor assembly component body 15 by directed energy deposition (which will hereinafter be expressed as “DED”). More specifically, in the instant embodiment, the treatment is performed by means of laser cladding that relies on laser beam for directed energy. As illustrated in
[0043] The DED apparatus 21 used in the instant embodiment includes a centrally arranged directed energy beam (which is, in this example, laser beam) and a powder jet nozzle (i.e., the aforementioned nozzle 23) with an annular slit arranged coaxially about the directed energy beam. The powder jet nozzle may, instead, be a nozzle with a plurality of holes arranged coaxially and at uniform intervals about the directed energy beam. The use of such an apparatus can provide a simplified configuration to perform a treatment that provides a hard particle layer. Nevertheless, the specific form of implementation for the treatment by DED is not limited to the illustrated example and may be any other form of implementation commonly utilized for the treatment.
[0044] The application of DED enables a cladding treatment to be accurately performed on a narrow width range (e.g, approximately between 0.3 mm and 3 mm) like the tip endwall surface 19 of the turbine blade 11. This allows the hard particle layer 17 itself to be formed, in a top view (i.e., in a view along the radial direction R), within a region in which the tip end segment 15a of the rotor assembly component body 15 extends, as discussed earlier.
[0045] Note that, while the abovementioned DED is preferred as the method for building the hard particle layer 17 because it allows a cladding treatment to be locally and accurately performed on the tip endwall surface 19 of the turbine blade 11, any method other than DED can be used so long as a high building accuracy equivalent to or better than that of DED can be achieved therewith.
[0046] Further, in order for the abovementioned highly accurate treatment to be performed with ease, it is desirable that the particle size of the hard particles 16 be smaller than the width dimension of the treating site.
[0047] Note that the tip end segment 15a of the rotor assembly component body 15 on which the hard particle layer 17 is formed or is to be formed may be provided with a layer prepared by a surface treatment such as an anti-oxidation treatment. In this case, a surface treatment may be performed on the tip end segment 15a of the rotor assembly component body 15 before the hard particle layer 17 is formed thereon by DED, or alternatively, the hard particle layer 17 may be formed before the surface treatment is performed thereon.
[0048] Also, a damaged portion on the rotor assembly component body 15 may be repaired before the hard particle layer 17 is formed thereon.
[0049] As described thus far, in the rotor assembly component 1 and with the manufacturing method therefor according to the instant embodiment, the hard particles can be supported in an exposed manner on a surface of the tip end segment 15a of the rotor assembly component 1, thereby achieving definitely improved abradability.
[0050] In addition, a significant reduction can be achieved of unused hard particles that do not provide any contribution to abradability improvement, thereby improving a cost efficiency.
[0051] While a preferred embodiment of the present invention has thus far been described with reference to the drawings, various additions, changes, or omissions can be made therein without departing from the principle of the present invention and are thus encompassed within the scope of the present invention.
REFERENCE SYMBOLS
[0052] 1 rotor assembly component [0053] 11 turbine blade [0054] 15 rotor assembly component body [0055] 16 hard particles [0056] 17 hard particle layer [0057] 20 matrix material [0058] 21 DED apparatus [0059] 25 laser beam (directed energy beam) [0060] GT gas turbine engine