Method, system and computer program for monitoring a turbomachine start-up sequence by monitoring the speed of the high-pressure spool
10598040 ยท 2020-03-24
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F05D2260/85
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2270/304
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/80
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D19/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2270/309
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/26
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/83
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D21/003
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2270/3011
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2220/323
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F01D21/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/264
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/26
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The invention relates to a method of monitoring a start-up sequence of a turbomachine that comprises a compressor equipped with a rotor, a starter capable of driving the rotor in rotation and a combustion chamber. The start-up sequence comprises a first phase during which the starter increases the rotation speed of the rotor up to an instant at which fuel is injected into the turbomachine combustion chamber, and a second phase after the first phase that terminates when the starter stops driving the rotor. The method includes: acquisition (ACQ) of a signal representative of the rotation speed of the rotor during the start sequence; detection (DRP1, DRP2, INT) of an instant at which there is a sudden change in the variation of said signal with time, the sudden change instant thus detected being deemed to be the instant at which an air-fuel mix is ignited in the combustion chamber.
Claims
1. A method for monitoring a start-up sequence of a turbomachine that comprises a compressor equipped with a rotor, a starter capable of driving the rotor in rotation and a combustion chamber, the start-up sequence comprising a first phase that terminates at an instant at which fuel is injected into the combustion chamber and during which the starter is controlled to increase the rotation speed of the rotor, and a second phase after the first phase that terminates when the starter stops driving the rotor, the method including the steps of: acquiring signal representative of the rotation speed of the rotor during the start sequence, and detecting an instant at which there is a sudden change in the variation of said signal with time, the sudden change instant thus detected being deemed to be the instant at which an air-fuel mix is ignited in the combustion chamber, wherein said detecting includes: determining a first variation regression curve that fits on the signal acquired during the first phase; determining a second variation regression curve (RP2) that fits on the signal acquired during the second phase; identifying the instant of ignition of the air-fuel mix in the combustion chamber using the intersection (I) of the first and the second regression curves.
2. The method according to claim 1, in which the acquired signal is directly representative of the rotation speed of the rotor during the first phase and the second phase, and in which the the first regression curve has a non-linear variation with time and the second regression curve has a linear variation with time.
3. The method according to claim 2, in which the first regression curve and the second regression curve are polynomial regression curves.
4. The method according to claim 3, in which the first regression curve is a second degree polynomial regression curve.
5. The method according to claim 1, in which each of the first and second regression curves is associated with a quality indicator, and in which the instant at which the air-fuel mix is ignited in the combustion chamber is determined as being abnormal when a quality indicator is lower than a threshold.
6. The method according to claim 1, in which the acquired signal is the derivative of a signal directly representative of the rotation speed of the rotor during the first phase and the second phase, and in the first regression curve has a linear variation and the second regression curve has a constant variation with time.
7. The method according to claim 1, further comprising acquiring a signal representative of the position of a fuel supply valve, and determining the instant at which fuel is injected into the combustion chamber using said signal representative of the position of said fuel supply valve.
8. The method according to claim 1, further comprising acquiring a signal representative of the pressure of a gas flow circulating at an inlet of the combustion chamber, and identifying the instant at which the air-fuel mix is ignited in the combustion chamber when detecting a sudden variation in the amplitude of said signal representative of said pressure.
9. The method according to claim 8, also comprising determining a turbomachine ignition duration as being the duration between the instant at which fuel is injected into the combustion chamber and the instant at which the air-fuel mix is ignited in the combustion chamber identified by detection of the sudden variation in the amplitude of said signal representative of said pressure, or in the absence of detection of a sudden variation in the amplitude of said signal representative of said pressure, as being the duration between the instant at which fuel is injected into the combustion chamber and the instant at which the air-fuel mix is ignited in the combustion chamber deemed to be the the instant at which there is a sudden change in the variation of said signal with time.
10. The method according to claim 1, detecting the instant at which there is a sudden change in the variation of said signal with time is made on the ground by a turbomachine health monitoring device.
11. The method according to claim 1, in which the second phase begins as soon as the rotation speed of the rotor exceeds a predetermined threshold.
12. A system for monitoring a turbomachine start-up sequence that comprises a compressor provided with a rotor, a starter capable of driving the rotor in rotation and a combustion chamber, the monitoring system comprising a computer configured to implement the step in the method according to claim 1 of detecting the instant at which there is a sudden change in the variation with time of the acquired signal.
13. A computer program including program code instructions for execution of the step in the method according to claim 1 of detecting the instant at which there is a sudden change in the variation with time of the acquired signal.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Other aspects, purposes, advantages and characteristics of the invention will become clear after reading the following detailed description of preferred embodiments of the invention, given as non-limitative examples, with reference to the appended drawings among which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
DETAILED PRESENTATION OF PARTICULAR EMBODIMENTS
(5) The invention relates to a method of monitoring a start-up sequence of a turbomachine. The turbomachine comprises a combustion chamber in which the ignition of an air-fuel mix takes place, an injector to supply the combustion chamber with fuel through a valve, the position of which is regulated by a metering valve.
(6) The turbomachine also comprises a compressor rotor and a starter capable of driving the rotor in rotation. The compressor is preferably located close to the combustion chamber. It may for example by the high pressure compressor in the case of a twin-spool turbomachine.
(7) The start-up sequence comprises a first phase during which the starter is controlled to increase the rotation speed of the rotor in a time window between reception of a turbomachine start order and an instant at which fuel is injected into the turbomachine combustion chamber. This first phase can be qualified as a pre-injection phase.
(8) The method may also comprise the acquisition of a signal representative of the position of the fuel combustion chamber supply valve, and determination of the instant at which fuel is injected into the combustion chamber using said signal representative of the position of said valve. Thus, the first phase terminates when opening of the valve is detected.
(9) The start-up sequence includes a second phase after the first phase that is completed when the starter stops turning the rotor (starter disengaged).
(10) This second phase ideally begins after ignition of the air-fuel mix in the combustion chamber, and can be qualified as the post-ignition phase. To achieve this, the second phase may begin in particular after a given duration after the first phase, for example 5 seconds afterwards, to assure that ignition of the air-fuel mix is effective shortly after injection of the fuel. This given duration may be translated into a threshold on the rotation speed of the rotor to assure that the rotation speed is a speed characteristic of the second post-ignition phase. For example, this threshold may be a threshold that cannot be reached during the first phase, for example 35% of the maximum speed, or a threshold sufficiently different from the rotation speed at the end of the first phase, for example by exceeding this speed by more than 5% of its value.
(11) With reference to
(12) In the framework of the invention, the identification INT of the ignition instant of the air-fuel mix in the detection chamber is made by monitoring this speed N2 during the start-up sequence More particularly, the invention proposes to monitor the variation with time of said signal representative of the speed N2. Detection of a sudden change instant in the variation with time of said signal can discriminate a variation with time characteristic of the first phase of a variation with time characteristic of the second phase. The sudden change instant thus detected can then be deemed to be the instant of ignition of an air-fuel mix in the combustion chamber.
(13) In a first embodiment, the acquired signal is directly representative of the rotation speed N2 of the rotor during the start-up sequence. On
(14) In the framework of this embodiment, detection of the sudden change instant consists of detecting the intersection of a non-linear variation with time of the speed N2 during the first phase with a linear variation with time of the speed N2 during the second phase.
(15) Once the air-fuel mix has been ignited, the turbomachine and the starter output torque. The torque output by the starter reduces (linear reduction with speed), while the turbomachine increasingly participates in the driving force. The total sum of the torques is such that acceleration of the turbomachine during the second phase is constant until the starter is disengaged. This characteristic is satisfied regardless of the external start-up conditions.
(16) Detection of the sudden change instant can include particularly the following operations: determination of a first regression curve RP1 adjusted on the signal directly representative of the rotation speed N2 of the rotor during the first phase; determination of a second regression curve RP2 adjusted on the signal directly representative of the rotation speed N2 of the rotor during the second phase; this second curve is more particularly a straight line due to the linear variation with time mentioned above, but the invention is not limited to this case and on the other contrary it includes more complex variations; identification of the instant of ignition of the air-fuel mix in the combustion chamber starting from the intersection of the first regression curve RP1 and the second polynomial regression curve RP2.
(17) The first regression curve RP1 and the second regression curve RP2 can be polynomial regression curves, and particularly a first degree polynomial regression curve for the second curve RP2.
(18) As shown on
(19) In particular, when the starter is pneumatic and is driven by air at an approximately constant pressure, the torque output by the starter reduces linearly with the increase in speed N2. Furthermore, the resisting torque of the turbomachine increases as the rotation speed increases. The result is that the acceleration of the engine reduces during the first phase. Eventually, a zero acceleration asymptote could be reached at which the engine torque would just compensate the resisting torque. Generally, the injection is made before this stage is reached, which explains the asymptotic shape of the variation with time curve of the speed N2 during the first phase.
(20) It can be seen on
(21) As shown on
(22) On
(23) In a second embodiment, the acquired signal is a derivative of a signal directly representative of the rotation speed of the rotor during the start-up sequence. In other words, in this case the acceleration is used with its variation with time to detect the ignition instant. Thus in this embodiment, the sudden change instant is detected by detecting the intersection of a linear variation with time during the first phase (decrease in acceleration until it becomes almost zero at the time of fuel injection) with a constant variation in time during the second phase (after a sudden increase at the time of ignition).
(24) As for the first embodiment, the sudden change instant can be determined as being the intersection of regression curves for each of the first and the second phases. As a variant, detection of the sudden change instant includes determination of the minimum of the derivative after fuel is injected into the combustion chamber.
(25) It is important to note that the derivative of speed N2 requires acquisition of the speed at a sufficiently high frequency to obtain sufficient precision. Therefore this second embodiment is more suitable for use by onboard software in the EEC computer. On the other hand, it enables real time detection.
(26) In one possible embodiment shown on
(27) The method according to the invention may be implemented onboard an aircraft computer, or on the other hand it can be implemented elsewhere in a station on the ground. As shown on
(28) The method according to the invention includes acquisition over time ACQ, and sampling SMP of the signal representative of the rotation speed N2 of the rotor and the signal representative of the pressure PS3 of the gas flow circulating at the input to the combustion chamber during the start-up sequence. The different samples of the signal representative of the rotation speed N2 of the rotor are recorded during an operation RCD.
(29) The method includes identification of the instant of ignition of the air-fuel mix in the combustion chamber during detection JUMP-PS3 of a sudden variation in the amplitude of said signal representative of said pressure.
(30) The operations mentioned above are implemented in the onboard domain E by software in an aircraft computer. The operations described below are implemented in the ground domain S, for example by a device monitoring the turbomachine health state.
(31) The different samples of the signal representative of the rotation speed N2 recorded during operation RCD are analysed so as to determine a first adjusted regression curve on signal N2 during the first phase during an operation DRP1, and a second adjusted regression curve on signal N2 during the second phase, during an operation DRP2. Then during an operation INT, the ignition instant is identified starting from the intersection of the first and the second regression curves.
(32) When the ignition instant has been determined by monitoring the pressure PS3, the ignition duration is determined during an operation A as being the duration between the injection instant and the ignition instant identified by the sudden change in PS3.
(33) When the ignition instant has not been determined by monitoring the pressure PS3, the operation A is performed using the ignition instant as determined by monitoring the speed N2.
(34) The ignition duration thus determined can be used by turbomachine health state monitoring algorithms, during an operation referenced HM on
(35) The principles described above have been applied on a database of 500 real start-ups.
(36) 50 ignitions out of these 500 start-ups, namely about 10% of the start-ups, were not detected by detection from the PS3 measurement.
(37) Since detection by the PS3 measurement is the reference in terms of precision, the average difference with detection by the speed measurement N2 is 0.15 seconds (N2 being detected later than detection by the sudden change in PS3). This error is negligible for the event to be detected and is of the same order of magnitude as the standard sampling time period of health state monitoring algorithms (usually a maximum of 8 Hz, which is a period of 0.125 sec). Thus, with the method illustrated on
(38) In one variant embodiment, each of the first and second regression curves is associated with a quality indicator, and the turbomachine start-up instant is determined as being abnormal when a quality indicator is lower than a threshold. Start-up sequence data can then be labelled as being invalid, and the abnormal start-up sequence is not used by health state monitoring algorithms.
(39) The invention is not limited to the method described above, but also includes a system for monitoring a turbomachine start-up sequence that comprises a compressor provided with a rotor, a starter capable of driving the rotor in rotation and a combustion chamber, the monitoring system being characterised in that it comprises a computer configured to implement the step in the method for detection of a sudden change instant in the variation with time of the acquired signal. In particular this monitoring system can be a remote system on the ground. In particular, it can implement operations DRP1, DRP2 and INT in
(40) The invention also includes a computer program product including code instructions for execution of the step in the method of detecting an instant of sudden change in the variation with time of the acquired signal.