Fluid circuit in a turbine engine
11066997 · 2021-07-20
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F01M2005/004
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01M5/002
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2220/32
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/232
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01M5/007
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02C7/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
An assembly for a turbine engine having an oil circuit. The oil circuit includes an air/oil heat exchanger, a primary bypass pipe connecting an intake of the air/oil heat exchanger to an outlet of the air/oil heat exchanger and surrounding the air/oil heat exchanger so as to exchange heat with the air/oil heat exchanger. The oil circuit further includes and a secondary bypass pipe of the primary pipe connecting the upstream end of the primary bypass pipe to the downstream end of the primary bypass pipe. The oil circuit also includes at least one valve for controlling the passage of the flow of oil into the primary and secondary bypass pipes and means for controlling the opening of said at least one valve for a temperature lower than a threshold temperature.
Claims
1. An assembly for a turbine engine, comprising an oil circuit including an air/oil heat exchanger, a primary bypass pipe connecting an intake of the air/oil heat exchanger to an outlet of the air/oil heat exchanger and surrounding the air/oil heat exchanger so as to exchange heat with the air/oil heat exchanger and a secondary bypass pipe of the primary bypass pipe connecting an upstream end of the primary bypass pipe to a downstream end of the primary bypass pipe, the oil circuit also comprising at least one valve for controlling the passage of a flow of oil into the primary and secondary bypass pipes and means for controlling the opening of said at least one valve for a temperature lower than a threshold temperature, said secondary bypass pipe) having a length at least ten times shorter than a length of the primary bypass pipe.
2. The assembly according to claim 1, wherein the at least one valve is a single valve arranged at an outlet of the primary bypass pipe and downstream of an outlet of the secondary bypass pipe.
3. The assembly according to one of claim 1, wherein the at least one valve is a valve capable of adopting at least two positions, a first open position of which allows the passage of oil and a second closed position blocks the passage of oil through the valve.
4. The assembly according to claim 1, wherein the threshold temperature is 70° C.
5. The assembly according to claim 1, wherein the at least one valve is a unidirectional two-way valve.
6. The assembly according to claim 1, wherein a diameter of the secondary bypass pipe is at least three times smaller than a diameter of the primary bypass pipe.
7. A turbine engine comprising the assembly according to claim 1, wherein the oil/air heat exchanger radially outwardly delimits a discharge surface of a secondary air flow.
Description
(1) The invention will be better understood, and other details, characteristics and advantages of the invention will appear upon reading the following description given by way of a non restrictive example while referring to the appended drawings wherein:
(2)
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(10) Reference is made to
(11) As shown in
(12) The downstream end of the primary bypass pipe 26 is connected to the intake of a valve 22 the opening/closing of which is controlled by control means 35 authorizing/blocking the flow of fluid through the valve 22 for an oil temperature below a given threshold temperature, for example 70° C. In a particular embodiment of the invention, the means of control of the valve are passive and are made of wax capable of varying in volume according to the surrounding temperature. The volume variation of the wax within the valve allows the oil to selectively pass through the valve or block the oil flow upstream of the valve. The valve outlet 22 is connected to an outlet pipe 34 of the heat exchanger matrix.
(13) In an alternative embodiment (not shown), the valve 22 could be mounted upstream of the upstream end of the primary bypass pipe 26 so as to allow fluid to flow in the primary bypass pipe 26 for a temperature below the threshold temperature and prohibit oil flow for a temperature above the threshold temperature, the oil flow being allowed in the supply pipe 30 of the oil matrix regardless of the temperature. In this configuration, the upstream end of the secondary bypass pipe 28 is connected to the outlet of the valve 22 or downstream of the downstream end of the primary bypass pipe 26.
(14) In yet another embodiment of the invention, it would be possible to use one valve for each primary 26 and secondary 28 bypass pipe, the opening and closing of these valves being simultaneously controlled by the control means.
(15) In the embodiment of
(16) The oil flow in the matrix 33 is represented by the solid pipe arrows in
(17) According to the invention, when the oil in the matrix 33 is frozen, the oil flows through the primary pipe 26 and the secondary pipe 28 as represented by the dotted arrows in
(18) The dual oil flow in the primary pipe 26 and the secondary pipe 28 increases the flow rate of the moving oil when the matrix 33 is frozen, reducing the overpressure in the oil circuit 24, particularly in the primary pipe for a given oil flow in the supply pipe 34.
(19) Preferably, the secondary pipe 28 has an oil passage cross-section less than or equal to the diameter of the oil passage cross-section of the primary pipe 26 so that the oil flows mainly through the primary pipe 26 and thus ensures that the matrix 33 is defrosted.
(20) Similarly, it is understood that the secondary pipe should be as short as possible to reduce the pressure drop in the primary pipe while ensuring proper defrosting. Thus, for example, the secondary pipe can be defined by a length at least ten times shorter than that of the primary pipe, and/or a diameter three times smaller than the first pipe.
(21)
(22) In practice, it is understood that the air/oil heat exchanger 31 is in the form of a ring arranged around the axis 42 of the turbine engine 36.
(23) In the description, the term “secondary pipe” is to be understood as referring to any fluid passage allowing oil to flow between the upstream and downstream ends of the primary pipe.
(24) Thus, in the heat exchanger described above, the secondary pipe can be a simple orifice provided in a wall separating the oil flowing in the supply pipe 30 and the oil flowing in the downstream part of the primary pipe 33.
(25) In one embodiment of the invention, the primary pipe has a diameter of about 12 mm and the secondary pipe is an orifice as indicated in the previous paragraph and has a diameter of 5 mm.
(26) The length of the primary pipe is, in one exemplary embodiment, around several metres.
(27)
(28) The first half ring 46 comprises a first semi-circular pipe branch 46a and a second semi-circular pipe branch 46c connected to each other by a connecting branch 46b formed at the circumferential end opposite the central part 50 (
(29) The second half ring 48 comprises a first semi-circular pipe branch 48a and a second semi-circular pipe branch 48c connected to each other by a connecting branch 48b formed at the circumferential end opposite the central part 50. The first branch 48a is formed upstream of the second branch 48c and the connecting branch 48b extends substantially axially. The first branch 48a, the second branch 48c and the connecting branch 48b of the second half ring 48 together form a second part 54 of the primary bypass pipe 26. The first part 52 of the primary bypass pipe and the second part 54 of the primary bypass pipe together fully define the primary bypass pipe 26.
(30) More specifically, as shown in
(31) As shown in
(32) The primary pipe 26 and the secondary pipe 28 are supplied through the oil intake 30 of the matrix 33. The oil in the primary pipe 26 and the secondary pipe 28 then flows to the valve 22, which blocks the oil at the outlet 60 of the primary pipe 26 or allows the oil to escape through the outlet 34 of the oil matrix 33.
(33) The flow in the primary pipe 26 includes in particular, a flow in the first half ring 46 and then in the second half ring 48 before reaching the valve 22. More specifically, the oil flows into the first semi-circular branch 46a, then the connecting branch 46b and finally the second semi-circular branch 46c of the first half ring 46. Once the oil is at the downstream end of the second semi-circular branch 46c of the first half ring 46, the oil then flows into the second half ring 48 at the second semi-circular branch 48c, then at the connecting branch 48b and finally at the first semi-circular branch 48a before reaching the outlet 34 of the oil matrix 33 through the valve 22.