Wear-resistant shield for a rotating blade of a gas turbine
10753213 ยท 2020-08-25
Assignee
Inventors
- Martin Pernleitner (Dachau, DE)
- Rudolf Stanka (Rattenkirchen, DE)
- Manfred Dopfer (Unterschleissheim, DE)
Cpc classification
F05D2260/30
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2240/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D5/3007
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D29/322
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2250/711
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D5/3092
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D29/324
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
The invention relates to a wear-resistant shield for a rotating blade root of a rotating blade of a gas turbine, especially an aircraft gas turbine, having a base and two side walls connected to the base, wherein the side walls lie opposite each other and are shaped so as to be substantially complementary to an outer contour of a particular rotating blade root, and wherein the wear-resistant shield for this purpose is set up in such a way that, in an installed state, it is to be taken up between the respective rotating blade root and a rotating blade root mount of a rotor, especially between the respective rotating blade root and an axial securing element arranged in the rotating blade root mount.
Claims
1. A wear-resistant shield for a rotating blade root of a rotating blade of a gas turbine, comprising: a rotating blade root having a blade root mount of a rotor; the wear-resistant shield, comprising, a base; and two side walls connected to the base, wherein the side walls lie opposite each other and are shaped so as to be substantially complementary to an outer contour of a rotating blade root; and an axial securing element; wherein the wear-resistant shield, in an installed state, is disposed between a respective rotating blade root and a rotating blade root mount of a rotor, and the wear-resistant shield is disposed between the respective rotating blade root and the axial securing element arranged in the rotating blade root mount; wherein the two side walls project at least at one of their axial ends by a respective lateral end section beyond an axial end of the base and a guide section extends from the axial end of the base, the guide section starting from the base and arcing in the direction of the axial end of the side walls.
2. The wear-resistant shield as claimed in claim 1, wherein the guide section is arced to have substantially the same curvature as a rotating blade root region in contact with or coming into contact with the guide section.
3. The wear-resistant shield as claimed in claim 1, wherein the guide section has a projected length, in terms of a projection onto an axial direction, corresponding to approximately 0.75 to 1.0 times a radius by which the guide section is arced.
4. The wear-resistant shield as claimed in claim 1, wherein the guide section is located at an axial inserting end of the rotating blade root so that the wear-resistant shield and the associated rotating blade root are movable together in the axial inserting direction relative to the respective rotating blade root mount of the rotor.
5. A rotor for a gas turbine, comprising: a rotor base body with at least one rotating blade root mount, in which a rotating blade root of an associated rotating blade is arranged, and which is secured by an axial securing element, and with a wear-resistant shield with a base and two side walls connected to the base, wherein the side walls lie opposite each other in the peripheral direction and are shaped so as to be substantially complementary to an outer contour of the rotating blade root, and wherein the wear-resistant shield is configured and arranged, in an installed state, to be taken up between the respective rotating blade root and the axial securing element; the side walls of the wear-resistant shield project at least at one of their axial ends by a respective lateral end section beyond an axial end of the base and in that a guide section extends from the axial end of the base, the guide section extending from the axial end of the base and arcing in the direction of the axial lateral end sections of the side walls and arcing outward in the radial direction.
6. The rotor as claimed in claim 5, wherein the axial securing element has a first securing section and a second securing section, which are joined together by a securing base, wherein the first securing section is configured and arranged such that it includes a first end stop for the rotating blade root in the axial direction, wherein the first securing section and the securing base are joined together by a curvature section, and wherein the guide section is arranged in the region of the curvature section between the rotating blade root and the axial securing element.
7. The rotor as claimed in claim 6, wherein the first securing section and the securing base are oriented substantially orthogonal to each other, so that the curvature section has an arc length corresponding substantially to /2 rad, wherein the arc length of the guide section of the wear-resistant shield is less than /2 rad and greater than or equal to /4 rad.
8. The rotor as claimed in claim 6, wherein the second securing section of the axial securing element includes a second stop for the axial securing element on the rotor base body.
9. The rotor as claimed in claim 5, wherein at least one of the rotor is configured and arranged in an aircraft gas turbine.
10. The rotor as claimed in claim 9, wherein the at least one of the rotor is configured and arranged in a compressor or a high-speed low-pressure turbine of the aircraft gas turbine.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING FIGURES
(1) The invention shall be described below with reference to the enclosed figures by way of example and not in limiting fashion.
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(7) In a schematic and highly simplified cross-sectional representation in the cross-sectional plane defined by the radial direction RR and peripheral direction UR,
(8) The rotating blade root 10 has an outer contour 16, which is arranged in an inner contour 18 of the rotating blade root mount. The outer contour 16 and the inner contour 18 are formed substantially complementary to each other. The rotating blade root 10 is inserted into or removed from the rotating blade root mount 12 in the axial direction AR (substantially orthogonal to the cross-sectional plane of
(9) In order to protect the rotating blade root 10 against wear, a wear-resistant shield 20 may be arranged between the rotating blade root 10 and the rotating blade mount 12. In
(10) In a simplified and schematic perspective representation,
(11) The base 22 extends substantially in the axial direction AR and in the peripheral direction UR. In the example of
(12) At an axial end or end section 26 of the base 22, there is arranged a guide section 28. The guide section 28 may also be formed as a single piece with the base 22. The guide section 28 has an arced or curved shape. The curvature here is formed concave on the side facing the rotating blade root. In other words, the guide section 28 is arced in the direction of the side walls 24a, 24b, especially in the direction of their lateral end sections 30a, 30b. With respect to an installed position on a rotor, the guide section 28 is bent radially outward.
(13) The lateral end sections 30a, 30b project in the axial direction AR beyond the end section 26 of the base 22. This is particularly evident from
(14)
(15) If one projects the arced guide section 28 onto a line parallel with the axial direction AR, the length of the guide section 28 will lie in a region which is larger than or equal to 75% of the inner radius IR but smaller than the inner radius IR or equal to the inner radius IR. In other words, the guide section 28 extends radially outward at most up to the axial inserting end 32 of the wear-resistant shield, the end of the guide section being situated in a region that starts from the inserting end 32 and amounts to approximately 25% of the inner radius IR (=*IR).
(16)
(17) The axial securing element 40 moreover comprises a securing base 46, which extends between the first securing section 42 and the second securing section 44, substantially along the axial direction AR. The first securing section 42 is oriented substantially orthogonal to the securing base 46, in particular it extends substantially in the radial direction RR. A transition between the first securing section 42 and the securing base 46 is formed by a curvature section 48. The curvature section 48 has an arc length substantially corresponding to /2 rad.
(18) The guide section 28 of the wear-resistant shield is arranged or taken up between the curvature section 48 and the rotating blade root 10, especially at a rounded or curved radially inward edge 50 of the rotating blade root. The arc length of the guide section 28 of the wear-resistant shield 20 is less than /2 rad and greater than or equal to /4 rad.
(19) As emerges from viewing
(20) Thus, the guide section 28 serves particularly so that, when introducing the rotating blade root 10, the wear-resistant shield 20 is, as it were, automatically brought into a desired or correct position relative to the rotating blade root mount 12 or the axial securing element 40. Accordingly, one may avoid having to correct the position of the wear protection plate 20 after installing the rotating blade root 10, which minimizes or even rules out the risk of damaging the wear-resistant shield 20.
(21) It would be appreciated by those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications can be made to the illustrated embodiments without departing from the spirit of the present invention. All such modifications and changes are intended to be covered by the appended claims.