Oil collector for a mechanical reduction gear of an aircraft turbomachine
11578664 · 2023-02-14
Assignee
Inventors
- Mathieu Jean Charrier (Moissy-Cramayel, FR)
- Boris Pierre Marcel Morelli (Moissy-Cramayel, FR)
- Jean-Pierre Serey (Moissy-Cramayel, FR)
Cpc classification
F02C7/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16H57/0427
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K3/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16H57/0486
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/98
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16H57/082
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/40311
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
F05D2220/323
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F16H57/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16H57/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
An oil collector for a mechanical reduction gear of a turbomachine, in particular for an aircraft, the reduction gear including a body having two opposite lateral faces configured to extend in part around planet gears of the reduction gear, the collector further including an internal oil circulation cavity connected firstly to oil inlets located on the faces, and on the other hand to at least one oil outlet, characterised in that at least one of the faces comprises includes columns and rows of several inlets each having a recess with a progressively increasing cross-section, each recess being delimited by walls, at least some of the walls having a hydrodynamic profile.
Claims
1. An oil collector for a mechanical reduction gear of a turbomachine, in particular for an aircraft, the reduction gear comprising a body comprising two opposite lateral faces each configured to extend in part around a planet gear of the reduction gear, the collector further comprising an internal oil circulation cavity connected to oil inlets located on said faces, and to at least one oil outlet, wherein at least one of said faces comprises columns and rows of several inlets each having a recess with a progressively increasing cross-section, each recess being delimited by walls, and wherein at least some of said walls have a shape that is non planar and has no edges.
2. The collector according to claim 1, wherein the number of rows is greater than or equal to three.
3. The collector according to claim 1, wherein the number of columns is greater than or equal to five.
4. The collector according to claim 1, wherein the inlets of one row are offset in the direction of the column arrangement with respect to the inlets of at least one of the adjacent rows.
5. The collector according to claim 4, wherein the inlets of the even rows are aligned with each other in the direction of the column arrangement, and the inlets of the odd rows are aligned with each other in the direction of the column arrangement.
6. The collector according to claim 1, wherein one of said walls comprises an oil passage window inside said cavity.
7. The collector according to claim 6, wherein the walls of the recess comprise two facing lateral walls and a ramp extending between the lateral walls and configured to convey the oil from the face to a bottom wall comprising said window.
8. The collector according to claim 7, wherein the lateral walls diverge from each other towards said window such that the recess has a generally flared shape towards that window.
9. The collector according to claim 1, wherein the inlets located on each of the faces occupy a surface area representing more than 50% of the total surface area of this face.
10. The collector according to claim 1 wherein each of the two opposite lateral faces comprises the columns and rows of several inlets each having a recess of progressively increasing cross-section, each recess being delimited by walls, at least some of said walls having a shape that is non planar and has no edges.
11. A mechanical reduction gear for a turbomachine, in particular for an aircraft, comprising a sun gear, a ring gear extending around the sun gear, planet gears meshed with the sun gear and the ring gear, and collectors according to claim 1 arranged between the planet gears.
12. A turbomachine, in particular for an aircraft, comprising a mechanical reduction gear according to claim 11.
13. The collector according to claim 1, wherein the number of columns is greater than or equal to eight.
14. An oil collector for a mechanical reduction gear of a turbomachine, in particular for an aircraft, the reduction gear comprising a body comprising two opposite lateral faces each configured to extend in part around a planet gear of the reduction gear, the collector further comprising an internal oil circulation cavity connected to oil inlets located on said faces, and to at least one oil outlet, wherein at least one of said faces comprises columns and rows of several inlets each having a recess with a progressively increasing cross-section, each recess being delimited by walls, and wherein at least some of said walls have a ramp with a slope of less than 20%.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
(1) Other features and advantages will be apparent from the following description of a non-exhaustive embodiment of the invention with reference to the annexed drawings on which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(11)
(12) The fan S is driven by a fan shaft 4 which is driven to the LP shaft 3 by means of a reduction gear 6. This reduction gear 6 is usually of the planetary or epicyclic type.
(13) Although the following description refers to a planetary or epicyclic reduction gear, it also applies to a mechanical differential in which the three components, namely the planet carrier, the ring gear and the sun gear, are rotatable, the speed of rotation of one of these components depending in particular on the speed difference of the other two components.
(14) The reduction gear 6 is positioned in the upstream part of the turbomachine. A fixed structure comprising schematically, here, an upstream part 5a and a downstream part 5b which makes up the engine casing or stator 5 is arranged so as to form an enclosure E surrounding the reduction gear 6. Here, this enclosure E is closed upstream by seals at a bearing level allowing the fan shaft 4 to pass through, and downstream by seals at the level of the LP shaft 3.
(15)
(16) All planet gears 8 are held by a frame called planet carrier 10. Each planet gear 8 rotates around its own axis Y and meshes with the ring gear 9.
(17) On the output we have: In an epicyclic configuration, all planet gears 8 rotate the planet carrier 10 around the axis X of the turbomachine. The ring gear is fixed to the engine casing or stator 5 via a ring gear carrier 12 and the planet carrier 10 is fixed to the fan shaft 4. in a planetary configuration, all planet gear 8 are held by a planet carrier 10 which is fixed to the engine casing or stator 5. Each planet gear drives the ring gear which is connected to the fan shaft 4 via a ring gear carrier 12.
(18) Each planet gear 8 is freely rotatably mounted by means of a bearing 11, e.g. a rolling or hydrostatic bearing. Each bearing 11 is mounted on one of the axes 10b of the planet carrier 10 and all axes are positioned relative to each other by means of one or more structural frames 10a of the planet carrier 10. There is a number of axes 10b and bearings 11 equal to the number of planet gears. For operational, mounting, manufacturing, testing, repair or spare parts reasons the axes 10b and the frame 10a can be separated into several parts.
(19) For the same reasons as mentioned above, the toothing 8d of a reduction gear can be divided into several helices, each with a median plane P. In our example, we show in detail the operation of a multi-helix reduction gear with a ring gear separated into two half-ring gear: an upstream half-ring gear 9a consisting of a rim 9aa and a fastening half-flange 9ab. On the rim 9aa is located the upstream helix of the toothing of the reduction gear. This upstream helix meshes with that of the planet gear 8 which meshes with that of the sun gear 7. a downstream half-ring gear 9b consisting of a rim 9ba and a fastening half-flange 9bb. On the rim 9ba is the downstream helix of the toothing of the reduction gear. This downstream helix meshes with that of the planet gear 8 which meshes with that of the sun gear 7.
(20) If the helix widths vary between the sun gear 7, the planet gears 8 and the ring gear 9 because of toothing overlaps, they are all centred on a median plane P for the upstream helixes and on another median plane P for the downstream helixes. In the other figures, in the case of a double row roller bearing, each row of rolling elements is also centred on two median planes.
(21) The fastening half flange 9ab of the upstream ring gear 9a and the fastening half flange 9bb of the downstream ring gear 9b form the fastening flange 9c of the ring gear.
(22) The ring gear 9 is fixed to a ring gear carrier by assembling the fastening flange 9c of the ring gear and the fastening flange 12a of the ring gear carrier using a bolted assembly for example.
(23) The arrows in
(24) Due to the centrifugal forces, so-called hot oil Hc for lubrication of the toothings is sprayed radially outwards with respect to the axes Y of the planet gears, as shown in
(25)
(26) The collector 20 comprises a body, here in one piece, which comprises two opposite lateral faces 20a intended to extend partly around two adjacent planet gears 8. These lateral faces advantageously have a concave curved shape whose radius of curvature can be centred on the axis Y of rotation of the planet gear 8 to which this face 20a faces.
(27) The collector 20 also comprises a top face 20b or radially outer face, here flat, intended to extend opposite the ring gear 9 or a wall of a cage in the case where the sun gear 7 and the planet gears 8 of the reduction gear 6 are arranged in a cage.
(28) The collector 20 furthermore comprises a lower face 20c or a radially inner face, here flat, intended to extend opposite the sun gear 7.
(29) Finally, the collector 20 comprises two faces 20d , respectively upstream and downstream. As in the example shown, one of these faces 20d can include a member 22 for fastening to the reduction gear. In the above-mentioned case of a caged reduction gear, the member 22 can be formed by a circular cover which would cover an opening of the cage for the passage and mounting of the collector in the cage. This member 22 or this cover may have orifices 24 on its periphery for the passage of screws for fastening to the cage.
(30) The opposite face 20d of the collector 20 may comprise a common oil outlet 26 which is for example in the form of a tubular fluid connection nozzle. This nozzle can be configured to pass through a lumen in the reduction gear cage, for example.
(31) The collector 20 also comprises an internal oil circulation cavity 28 connected to the oil outlet 26 and to oil inlets 30 located on the faces 20a.
(32)
(33) According to the invention, the inlets 30 each have an increasing cross-section and preferably at least one wall with a hydrodynamic profile and in particular NACA, these inlets being arranged in columns and rows.
(34) In the example shown, the collector 20 comprises on each of these faces 20a three rows of ten inlets 30 or ten columns of three inlets. There are therefore thirty inlets 30 on each of the faces of the collector 20 in this example.
(35) Naturally, the number of rows and columns can vary depending on the dimensions of the inlets 30 and the faces 20a , for example. The number of rows is preferably greater than or equal to three. The number of columns is advantageously greater than or equal to five, and preferably greater than or equal to eight.
(36) The inlets 30 of a row can be staggered with respect to the inlets of at least one of the adjacent rows.
(37) In the example shown, the inlets in one row are staggered in the direction of the column arrangement with respect to the inlets in at least one of the adjacent rows. Specifically, the inlets in the even rows are aligned with each other in the direction of the column arrangement, and the inlets in the odd rows are aligned with each other in the direction of the column arrangement.
(38) Thus, the oil flowing on the face 20a , between two adjacent inlets, can be captured and flow through the inlet disposed on the other row, between these two adjacent inlets.
(39)
(40) Each of the inlets 30 comprises a recess 32 formed in the face 20a . This recess 32 is delimited by walls 32a, 32b, 32c, 32d, one of which 32c comprises an oil passage window 34 inside the cavity 28. The window 34, for example, has a general rectangular or trapezoidal shape.
(41) The recess 32 comprises two opposing lateral walls 32a, 32b and an inclined wall 32d forming a ramp which extends between the lateral walls 32a, 32b and which is configured to convey oil from the face 20a to the wall 32c which is a bottom wall and comprises the window 34.
(42) The wall 32d preferably has a small slope (preferably between 5 and 30°—see
(43) As shown in
(44) In the example shown, it is the lateral walls 32a, 32b that have a NACA profile. They each have an evolutionary shape that is non-planar and has no edges. For example, each wall 32a, 32b comprises a first convexly curved portion 32a1, 32b1 followed by a second concavely curved portion 32a2, 32b2.
(45) As can be seen in
(46) During operation, the oil sprayed on each face 20a flows radially outwards on this face, i.e. from the face 20c to the face 20d , due to the centrifugal forces and the concave curved shape of this face. The oil can then flow into the cavity 28 of the collector 20 through the inlets 30 located on the faces 20a . The oil first flows over the inclined wall 32d and over and along portions 32a1, 32b1 of the walls 32a, 32b, then it still flows over the inclined wall and over and along portions 32a2, 32b2 of the walls 32a, 32b, and finally reaches and flows through the windows 34.
(47) Preferably, each of the opposite lateral faces 20a comprises columns and rows of several inlets 30 each having a recess 32 with a progressively increasing cross-section.
(48) The invention brings several advantages and in particular: reduction of losses by ventilation of the reduction gear, reduction of the temperature of the planet gears, reduction of the oil outlet temperature for the dimensioning of the exchangers, reduction of the air-to-oil ratio, etc.