Jet engine
10975775 · 2021-04-13
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F02C7/042
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K1/165
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K1/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2240/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C9/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2220/327
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K3/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D17/162
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2270/101
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2270/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2220/326
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
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
International classification
F02C9/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/042
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D17/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C3/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K3/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A jet engine which includes: a fan with a plurality of stages of rotor blades; a compressor compressing air sent from the fan; a combustor generating combustion gas by using compressed air generated by the compressor; a turbine generating a driving force from the combustion gas; a nozzle discharging the combustion gas; a variable guide vane disposed upstream of the rotor blades of a second and later stage of the rotor blades of the fan and adjusts an inlet angle of air flow against the second and later stage of the rotor blades; a fluid resistance adjusting device adjusting a fluid resistance at the nozzle; and a controller which controlling the variable guide vane such that the inlet angle at the time of cruise flight is smaller than the inlet angle at the time of acceleration.
Claims
1. A jet engine comprising: a fan provided with a plurality of stages of rotor blades; a compressor which compresses air which is sent from the fan; a combustor which generates combustion gas by using compressed air generated by the compressor; a turbine which generates a driving force from the combustion gas; a nozzle which discharges the combustion gas; a cylindrical casing accommodating the fan, the compressor, the combustor, and the turbine; a core channel and a bypass channel which are radially divided parts of an inside of the casing downstream of the fan; a variable guide vane disposed upstream of the rotor blades of a third and later stage and downstream of the rotor blades of a first stage and second stage of the rotor blades of the fan and configured to adjust an inlet angle of airflow against the third and later stage of the rotor blades; and a movable portion comprising: flaps arranged in a circumferential direction of the nozzle; and an actuator adjusting an angle of the flaps, and configured to adjust a fluid resistance at the nozzle, wherein no branch of the airflow is provided at intermediate stages of the fan.
2. The jet engine according to claim 1, wherein tips of the rotor blades which are disposed downstream of the variable guide vane are disposed closer to a center of rotation of the rotor blades than tips of the rotor blades disposed upstream of the variable guide vane.
3. The jet engine according to claim 1, further comprising: an intermediate channel which changes a region where air flows from a radially outer side of the casing to a radially inner side of the casing where the variable guide vane is provided, wherein the variable guide vane is disposed adjacent to and upstream of the rotor blades disposed downstream of the intermediate channel.
4. The jet engine according to claim 3, further comprising: an intermediate channel which changes a region where air flows from a radially outer side of the casing to a radially inner side of the casing where the variable auide vane is provided, wherein the variable guide vane is disposed adjacent to and upstream of the rotor blades disposed downstream of the intermediate channel.
5. A control method of the jet engine according to claim 1, the method comprising: maximizing a rotating speed of the fan and maintaining a high intake flow volume of the engine at a time of cruise flight; suppressing an increase in air pressure at the fan by setting the inlet angle of airflow at the time of cruise flight smaller than the inlet angle of airflow at a time of acceleration by the variable guide vane; adjusting an opening space of the nozzle and increasing the opening space of the nozzle by the movable portion; and suppressing an increase in the fluid resistance due to an increase in a volume flow at an outlet of the fan corresponding to the smaller inlet angle of airflow.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(8) Hereinafter, an embodiment of an jet engine according to the present disclosure will be described with reference to the drawings. In addition, in the following drawings, the scale of each member is appropriately changed such that each member can be recognized.
(9)
(10) The casing 2 is a cylindrical member which accommodates the fan 3, the low-pressure compressor 4, the high-pressure compressor 5, the combustor 6, the high-pressure turbine 7, the low-pressure turbine 8, the shaft 9, and the augmentor 10. An opening at a first end (left side of
(11) A core channel 2b which is a channel provided radially inner side of the casing 2 and a bypass channel 2c which is a channel provided radially outer side of the casing 2 are formed inside of the casing 2. As shown in
(12) The fan 3 is provided at the most upstream portion inside of the casing 2.
(13) The inlet guide vane mechanism includes inlet guide vanes which are fixed to the casing 2 and plurally disposed in the circumferential direction of the casing 2, and an actuator (not shown) which adjusts angles of the inlet guide vanes 3a1. Under the control of the controller 12, the inlet guide vane mechanism 3a rectifies flow of air which is taken into the fan 3 by adjusting angles of the inlet guide vanes 3a1.
(14) The first stage rotor blade row 3b is composed of rotor blades 3b1 which are fixed to a low-pressure axis 9a of the shaft 9 which will be described later and plurally disposed in the circumferential direction of the shaft 9, and is disposed downstream of the inlet guide vanes 3a1. The rotor blades 3b1 rotate in accordance with rotation of the shaft 9 and force feed air which has passed the inlet guide vanes 3a1 downstream.
(15) The first stage stator vane row 3c is composed of stator vanes 3d which are fixed to the casing 2 and plurally disposed in the circumferential direction of the casing 2, and is disposed downstream of the first stage rotor blade row 3b. The stator vanes 3c1 rectify flow of air which is discharged from the first stage rotor blade row 3b.
(16) The second stage rotor blade row 3d is composed of rotor blades 3d1 which are fixed to a low-pressure axis 9a of the shaft 9 and plurally disposed in the circumferential direction of the shaft and is disposed downstream of the first stage stator vane row 3c. The rotor blades 3d1 rotate in accordance with rotation of the shaft 9 and force feed air which has passed the first stage state vane row 3e downstream.
(17) The second stage stator vane row 3e is composed of stator vanes 3e1 which are fixed to the casing 2 and plurally disposed in the circumferential direction of the casing 2, and is disposed downstream of the second stage rotor blade row 3d. The stator vanes 3e1 rectify flow of air which is discharged from the second stage rotor blade row 3d, Here, the stator vanes 3e1 rectify air flow such that air flows in parallel with the shaft 9 (such that air flows axially).
(18) The variable guide vane mechanism 3f is provided with variable guide vanes 3f1 which are fixed to the casing 2 and plurally disposed in the circumferential direction of the casing 2, and an actuator (not shown) which adjusts angles of the variable guide vanes 3f1. Under the control of the controller 12, the variable guide vane mechanism 3f adjusts angles of the variable guide vanes 3f1 and changes inlet angle of air against rotor blades 3g1 of the third stage rotor blade row 3g which is disposed downstream. Here, the inlet angle θ is an angle of air flow (shown as an arrow F.sub.air) against a chord (C.sub.h) which is a line connecting a leading edge and a trailing edge of the rotor blade 3g1 in
(19) As shown in
(20) The third stage rotor blade row 3g is composed of rotor blades 3g1 which are fixed to the low-pressure axis 9a of the shaft 9 and plurally disposed in the circumferential direction of the shaft 9, and is disposed downstream of the variable guide vanes 3f1. The rotor blades 3g1 rotate in accordance with rotation of the shaft 9, force feed air which has passed the variable guide vane mechanism 3f downstream when the inlet angle of air is great. The rotor blades 3g1 let air which has passed the variable guide vane mechanism 3f pass downstream without increasing air pressure when the inlet angle of air is small.
(21) The third stage stator vane row 3h is composed of stator vanes 3h1 which are fixed to the casing 2 and plurally disposed in the circumferential direction of the casing 2, and is disposed downstream of the third stage rotor blade row 3g. The stator vanes 3h1 rectify flow of air which is discharged from the third stage rotor blade row 3g.
(22) Returning to
(23) The high-pressure compressor 5 is disposed downstream of the low-pressure compressor 4 in the core channel 2b. The high-pressure compressor 5 is made of rotor blade rows composed of rotor blades fixed to a high-pressure axis 9b of the shaft 9 which will be described later and stator vane rows composed of stator vanes fixed to the casing 2 arranged one after the other in a plurality of stages. In the high-pressure compressor 5, the rotor blades rotate in accordance with rotation of the shaft 9 and further compress air compressed by the low-pressure compressor 4 while the stator vanes are rectifying the flow of the air.
(24) The combustor 6 is disposed downstream of the high-pressure compressor 5 in the core channel 2b. The combustor 6 is provided with a fuel nozzle and an ignition device which are not shown. The combustor 6 generates combustion gas by burning an air-fuel mixture gas composed of a compressed air generated in the high-pressure compressor 5 and a fuel.
(25) The high-pressure turbine 7 is disposed downstream of the combustor 6 in the core channel 2b. The high-pressure turbine 7 is made of rotor blade rows composed of rotor blades fixed to the high-pressure axis 9b of the shaft 9 and stator vane rows composed of stator vanes fixed to the casing 2 arranged one after the other in a plurality of stages. In the high-pressure turbine 7, the rotor blades rotate by the rotor blades receiving the combustion gas generated in the combustor 6 while the stator vanes are rectifying the combustion gas. Accordingly, the high-pressure turbine 7 rotates the high-pressure axis 9b of the shaft 9.
(26) The low-pressure turbine 8 is disposed downstream of the high-pressure turbine 7 in the core channel 2b. The low-pressure turbine 8 is made of rotor blade rows composed of rotor blades fixed to the low-pressure axis 9a of the shaft 9 and stator vane rows composed of stator vanes fixed to the casing 2 arranged one after the other in a plurality of stages. In the low-pressure turbine 8, the rotor blades rotate by the rotor blades receiving the combustion gas which has passed the high-pressure turbine 7 while the stator vanes are rectifying the combustion gas. Accordingly, the low-pressure turbine 8 rotates the low-pressure axis 9a of the shaft 9.
(27) The shaft 9 is provided with the low-pressure axis 9a of radially inner side and the high-pressure axis 9b of radially outer side. The shaft 9 has a double-axis structure in which the low-pressure axis 9a and the high-pressure axis 9b can rotate individually. The rotor blades of the low-pressure turbine 8, the rotor blades of the low-pressure compressor 4, the rotor blades of the fan 3 (the rotor blades 3b1, the rotor blades 3d1, and the rotor blades 3g1) are fixed to the low-pressure axis 9a. The low-pressure axis 9a transfers a rotating power, which is generated by the rotor blades of the low-pressure turbine 8 receiving the combustion gas and rotating to the rotor blades of the low-pressure compressor 4 and the rotor blades of the fan 3, and rotates the rotor blades of the low-pressure compressor 4 and the rotor blades of the fan 3. The rotor blades of the high-pressure turbine 7 and the rotor blades of the high-pressure compressor 5 are fixed to the high-pressure axis 9b. The high-pressure axis 9b transfers a rotating power, which is generated by the rotor blades of the high-pressure turbine 7 receiving the combustion gas and rotating to the rotor blades of the high-pressure compressor 5, and rotates the rotor blades of the high-pressure compressor 5.
(28) The augmentor 10 is disposed downstream of the low-pressure turbine 8. The augmentor 10 is provided with a fuel injection device 10a, a flame stabilizer 10b, and an ignition device (not shown), and strengthens thrust by afterburning the fuel by using oxygen included in an air-fuel mixture gas composed of the combustion gas which has passed the low-pressure turbine 8 and air which has passed the bypass channel 2c. The variable exhaust nozzle 11 is disposed at a downstream end portion of the casing 2. The variable exhaust nozzle 11 discharges the combustion gas exhausted from the core channel 2b and air flow exhausted from the bypass channel 2c backward of the jet engine 1. The variable exhaust nozzle 11 is provided with a nozzle 11a which is an open end discharging the combustion gas and the air flow, and a movable portion 11b (flow resistance adjusting device and opening space varying mechanism) which changes an opening space of the nozzle 11a. The movable portion 11b is provided with flaps 11c arranged in circumferential direction of the nozzle 11a and an actuator 11d and the like which adjusts an angle of the flaps 11c. The movable portion 11b adjusts fluid resistance at the nozzle 11a by changing the opening space of the nozzle 11a.
(29) The controller 12 controls overall jet engine 1 of the present embodiment. For example, the controller 12 controls rotating speed of the fan 3, angles of the variable guide vanes 3f1, opening space (throat area) of the nozzle 11a, fuel supply amount to the augmentor 10, and the like based on instructions from a throttle lever (a throttle lever angle). In the present embodiment, when an airplane is in cruise flight, the controller 12 maximizes the rotating speed of the fan 3 in the same manner as when an airplane is accelerating and controls the angles of the variable guide vanes 3f1 such that the inlet angle is smaller than the inlet angle when an airplane is accelerating. At the same time, the controller 12 controls the variable exhaust nozzle 11 so as to suppress an increase in fluid resistance due to an increase in volume flow corresponding to a reduction in the inlet angle. The controller 12 may be generally known computers including CPU, RAM, ROM, and the like such that the controller 12 can perform above-described controls. Details of the control by the controller 12 may be defined by software which can be changed or updated in arbitrarily by users. As shown in an arrow extending from the controller 12 in
(30) In the jet engine 1 of the present embodiment, by driving of the fan 3, air is taken in from outside via the air intake 2a of the casing 2, and air which is taken in is distributed to the core channel 2b and the bypass channel 2c. Air which flows in the core channel 2b is compressed by the low-pressure compressor 4 and the high-pressure compressor 5, supplied to the combustor 6, and is burnt with the fuel. Accordingly, combustion gas is generated, the combustion gas flows in the core channel 2b, and the combustion gas is discharged from the variable exhaust nozzle 11. Air which flows in the bypass channel 2c flows by bypassing the low-pressure compressor 4, the high-pressure compressor 5, the combustor 6, the high-pressure turbine 7, and the low-pressure turbine 8, and is discharged from the variable exhaust nozzle 11 with the combustion gas. The combustion gas and air which flows in the bypass channel 2c are discharged from the variable exhaust nozzle 11, and a thrust is obtained accordingly.
(31) When the combustion gas which flows in the core channel 2b passes the high-pressure turbine 7, the rotor blades of the high-pressure turbine 7 are rotated, and rotational power is generated. The rotational power is transferred to the high-pressure compressor 5 vie the high-pressure axis 9b of the shaft 9, and the rotor blades of the high-pressure compressor 5 are rotated accordingly. When the combustion gas which flows in the core channel 2b passes the low-pressure turbine 8, the rotor blades of the low-pressure turbine 8 are rotated, and rotational power is generated. The rotational power is transferred to the low-pressure compressor 4 and the fan 3 vie the low-pressure axis 9a of the shaft and the rotor blades of the low-pressure compressor 4 and the rotor blades of the fan 3 are rotated accordingly.
(32) When great thrust is necessary, under the control of the controller 12, the augmentor 10 supplies feel to the combustion gas which has passed the high-pressure turbine 7 and the low-pressure turbine 8 so as to afterburn the combustion gas, and the thrust is augmented. At this time, since the volume flow of the exhaust gas is increased due to afterburning of the combustion gas, the opening space of the nozzle 11a is increased by the movable portion 11b so as not to increase fluid resistance at the nozzle 11a.
(33) In the jet engine 1 of the present embodiment, when an airplane is in cruise flight, the variable guide vanes 3f1 are controlled such that the inlet angle against the rotor blades 3g1 composing the third stage rotor blade row 3g downstream thereof is reduced compared to the inlet angle against the rotor blades 3g1 when an airplane is accelerating. Accordingly, the amount of work done by the rotor blades 3g1 disposed downstream of the variable guide vanes 3f1 against the air flow decreases, and a compression rate of the fan 3 decreases. As a result, since pressure in air supplied to the nozzle 11a is reduced, it is possible to throttle back the thrust by reducing the flow velocity of the combustion gas discharged from the nozzle 11a without reducing the flow amount of air which is taken in from the air intake 2a.
(34) In this case, pressure in air supplied to the nozzle 11a is reduced, air pressure at downstream of the combustor 6 is reduced, and volume flow of exhaust gas is increased. In order not to increase fluid resistance at the nozzle 11a due to the increase in the volume flow of the exhaust pas, the opening space of the nozzle 11a is increased by the movable portion 11b. That is, in the jet engine 1 of the present embodiment, the opening space of the nozzle 11a is increased by the movable portion 11b even when an airplane is in cruise flight in which the augmentor 10 is not used. Accordingly, since an increase in fluid resistance due to the nozzle 11a is suppressed, it is possible to smoothly discharge exhaust gas flow and to suppress increase in pressure loss.
(35) According to the jet engine 1 of the present embodiment, when an airplane is in cruise flight, it is possible to decrease only thrust compared to when an airplane is accelerating without changing intake volume of the fan 3. Accordingly, it is possible to improve fuel efficiency by reducing the intake spillage drag without providing a second bypass channel and necessitating a lot of driving mechanism.
(36)
(37) As shown in (a) of
(38) In the jet engine 1 of the present embodiment, as shown in (b) of
(39) The preferred embodiment of the present disclosure has been described above with reference to the accompanying drawings. However, the present disclosure is not limited to the embodiment described above. The shapes, the combination, or the like of the respective constituent members shown in the embodiment described above is one example and various changes can be made based on design requirements or the like within a scope of the present disclosure.
(40) For example, in the embodiment described above, a configuration is employed in which the fluid resistance at the nozzle 11a is adjusted by changing the opening space of the nozzle 11a by the movable portion 11b of the variable exhaust nozzle 11. However, the present disclosure is not limited to the configuration. For example, when the exhaust flow amount is increased, a mechanism which adjusts fluid resistance at the nozzle 11a by discharging increased amount of exhaust flow from an opening other than the nozzle 11a so as to be a thrust may be provided. Here, when the augmentor 10 is provided, an opening space varying mechanism which adjusts the opening space of the nozzle is generally included. Accordingly, by using the opening space varying mechanism as the fluid resistance adjusting device of the present disclosure, it is not necessary to add new mechanisms for adjusting fluid resistance of the nozzle.
(41) In the above-described embodiment, a configuration in which rotating speed of the fan 3 is maximized when an airplane is in cruise flight is explained. By maximizing rotating speed of the fan 3 when an airplane is in cruise flight, since the intake flow amount of the engine is maintained high, it is possible to minimize the intake spillage drag. However, the present disclosure is not limited to the configuration but it is possible to employ a configuration in which rotating speed of the fan 3 is not maximized when an airplane is in cruise flight.
(42) In the above-described embodiment, a configuration in which the fan 3 has three rotating blade rows. However, the present disclosure is not limited to the configuration but it is possible to apply the present disclosure to a jet engine which has a fan provided with two or more rotator blade rows.
(43) That is, as shown in
(44) As shown in
(45) In the same manner, as shown in
(46) A configuration in which a variable guide vane mechanism is provided in each of a plurality of rotor blade rows may be employed.
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
(47) In accordance with the present disclosure, in a jet engine, it is possible to improve fuel efficiency by reducing an intake spillage drag without providing a second bypass channel and necessitating a lot of driving mechanisms.