Aft fan counter-rotating turbine engine
10723470 ยท 2020-07-28
Assignee
Inventors
- Gabriel L. Suciu (Glastonbury, CT, US)
- Jesse M. Chandler (South Windsor, CT, US)
- Wesley K. Lord (South Glastonbury, CT, US)
Cpc classification
B64D27/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F02C7/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B64D2041/002
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F05D2260/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K3/072
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K3/062
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2220/323
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2220/50
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
B64D27/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F02K3/062
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B64D35/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A boundary layer ingestion engine includes a gas generator, a turbine fluidly connected to the gas generator, and a fan mechanically linked to the turbine via at least one shaft. The linkage is configured such that rotation of the turbine is translated to the fan. The boundary layer ingestion engine further includes an exhaust duct fluidly connected to an outlet of the turbine. The exhaust duct is positioned radially inward of the fan.
Claims
1. A boundary layer ingestion engine comprising: a gas generator; a turbine fluidly connected to the gas generator; a fan mechanically linked to the turbine via at least one shaft such that rotation of the turbine is translated to the fan; an exhaust duct fluidly connected to an outlet of the turbine, wherein the exhaust duct is positioned radially inward of the fan; a static structural frame disposed aft of said turbine and fore of said fan; and a cooling passage disposed radially outward of the exhaust duct and radially inward of the fan, and being at least partially defined at a forward end by the static structural frame, and being defined at least partially by a first rotating frame and a second rotating frame.
2. The boundary layer ingestion engine of claim 1, wherein the fan comprises a first fan and a second fan downstream of the first fan, and wherein the first fan and the second fan are configured to counter rotate.
3. The boundary layer ingestion engine of claim 2, wherein the turbine section comprises a first turbine and a second turbine downstream of the first turbine, and wherein the first turbine drives the rotation of the second fan by means of a first shaft of the at least one shaft, and the second turbine drives rotation of the first fan by means of a second shaft of the at least one shaft, and wherein the first shaft and the second shaft are concentric.
4. The boundary layer ingestion engine of claim 2, wherein the first fan and the second fan each have a corresponding rotating tip shroud with a first fan shroud defining a fan inlet and a second fan shroud defining a fan exit nozzle configured to axially straighten airflow exiting the fan.
5. The boundary layer ingestion engine of claim 1, wherein the gas generator is an auxiliary power unit (APU).
6. The boundary layer ingestion engine of claim 5, wherein the APU is configured to operate as a starter-generator in at least one mode of operations.
7. The boundary layer ingestion engine of claim 1, wherein the gas generator is in-line with the turbine.
8. The boundary layer ingestion engine of claim 1, wherein the gas generator is out of line with the turbine.
9. The boundary layer ingestion engine of claim 1, wherein the boundary layer ingestion engine is configured to be a tail mounted engine for an aircraft including at least two wing mounted engines.
10. The boundary layer ingestion engine of claim 1, wherein an inlet of the gas generator is fluidly connected to a boundary layer separator duct.
11. The boundary layer ingestion engine of claim 10, wherein the boundary layer ingestion engine is configured to be mounted aft of an aircraft tail section, and wherein the boundary layer separator duct is configured to connect an inlet to the inlet of the gas generator.
12. The boundary layer ingestion engine of claim 1, wherein the static structural frame further includes a cooling air duct connecting a radially outward pressurized cooling air source to a radially inward cooling air system.
13. The boundary layer ingestion engine of claim 1, wherein the cooling passage is configured to receive cooling air from a pressurized cooling air source.
14. The boundary layer ingestion engine of claim 1, wherein the static structural frame includes at least one airflow correcting vane.
15. The boundary layer ingestion engine of claim 1 wherein the exhaust duct is at least partially defined by the first rotating frame and the second rotating frame.
16. The boundary layer ingestion engine of claim 1, wherein the first rotating frame is configured to rotate a first direction and the second rotating frame is configured to rotate a second direction, opposite the first direction.
17. The boundary layer ingestion engine of claim 1, wherein the first rotating frame is configured to rotate a first direction, and the second rotating frame is configured to rotate a second direction opposite the first direction.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF AN EMBODIMENT
(5)
(6) In the example of
(7) In some examples, the aft fan engine 120 can generate up to 15% of the required thrust power for the aircraft. In such an example, the wing mounted engines 110 can be downsized to a corresponding 85% of the size that would be required absent the aft fan engine 120. In yet further examples, a gas generator, which drives the aft fan, can perform some or all the duties defined as offtakes power extraction to support aircraft operation not directly associated with propulsive thrust generation. Such mechanical shaft horsepower, or bleed extraction from engines 110, can be extracted from the gas generator of the dedicated boundary layer ingestion engine. A generator can be placed on the low spool shaft of the gas generator such that potentially large amounts of electrical power could be extracted without the need to extract that power from the high spool. In some configurations, the APU can operate as a starter-generator for the aircraft 100.
(8) With continued reference to
(9) With continued reference to
(10) The compressed gas exits the gas generator 310 and is provided to the free turbine 320. The free turbine 320 includes a first turbine section 322 and a second turbine section 324. Each of the turbine sections includes rotor blades, and the expansion of the compressed gas across the turbine section drives the turbine sections 322, 324 to rotate. In one example, the turbine sections 322, 324, as well as the fan sections 332, 334 (described below), are counter rotating. In other words, the first turbine section 322 rotates in a first direction about an axis defined by the engine, and the second turbine section 324 rotates in a second direction about the axis defined by the engine. While described as a first turbine section 322 and a second turbine section 324, it should be understood that each turbine section 322, 324 can include one or more turbine stages.
(11) The free turbine 320 is connected to a fan 330 via concentric shafts 340. In the illustrated example, the fan 330 includes a first fan section 332 and a second fan section 334. As with the free turbine 320, the first fan section is configured to rotate in a first direction about the axis, and the second fan section is configured to rotate in a second direction, opposite the first direction about the axis. By utilizing counter rotating turbine 320 and a corresponding counter rotating tip-shrouded fan 330, the boundary layer ingestion engine 300 allows airflow through the fan 330 to be straightened without the utilization of an exit guide vane or a static nacelle structure. In an exemplary embodiment, the fan tip speeds are set low enough such that a full ring integral shroud is structurally feasible, and the external windage loss of the rotating shrouds is not a significant performance penalty.
(12) In some examples, the gas generator 310 is mechanically decoupled from the free turbine and can be angled relative to the turbine 320 and the fan 330. In alternative examples, such as the illustrated example, the gas generator 310 can be inline with the turbine 320 and the fan 330.
(13) With continued reference to
(14) Positioned downstream of the turbine 520, but upstream of the rotation frames 452, 454, is a static structural frame 460. The static structural frame 460 maintains the position and stability of the fan and free turbine sections of the boundary layer ingestion engine 400. In some examples, the static structural frame 460 can include vanes 462 having a flow correcting structure. In yet further examples, a passage can be included within the static structure and allow pressurized cooling air 470 to pass from a cooling air source 472 radially outward of the turbine 420 to a cooling cavity 474 radially inward of the fan 430, through the static structural frame. In the exemplary embodiment, the cooling air 470 passes along two flowpaths 476, 478. The first flowpath 476 passes between the exhaust duct and the fan, while the second flowpath passes through a cooling cavity 474 radially inward of the exhaust duct.
(15) The cooling air in flowpath 476 provides active cooling to the fan hubs, thermally isolating them from the high temperatures of the exhaust duct. The active cooling of the fan hubs reduces the material temperature of the fan components and reduces the chance of buckling, or other thermal stress related damage to the blades. The cooling air in flowpath 478 provides active cooling to the shafts and bearing compartments.
(16) While described herein with specific regards to a boundary layer ingestion engine having counter rotating turbines and counter rotating fans, one of skill in the art will appreciate that the radial inward ducting, and the cooling provided from the radially outward cooling source provide the same benefits, and could be adapted to, any other aft fan turbine engine and are not limited to the specific example described herein.
(17) It is further understood that any of the above described concepts can be used alone or in combination with any or all of the other above described concepts. Although an embodiment of this invention has been disclosed, a worker of ordinary skill in this art would recognize that certain modifications would come within the scope of this invention. For that reason, the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this invention.