Fluid injector for cooling a gas turbine engine component
10480533 ยท 2019-11-19
Assignee
Inventors
- Brad Powell (Guilford, CT, US)
- Anthony R. Bifulco (Ellington, CT, US)
- Paul E. Coderre (East Hampton, CT, US)
- John P. Virtue (Middletown, CT, US)
- Brian Lucker (Shelton, CT, US)
Cpc classification
F04D29/321
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D29/584
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2220/3219
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D29/5826
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2240/127
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D25/125
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D9/065
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2220/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D29/5846
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K3/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D29/541
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F01D9/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D29/54
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D29/32
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K3/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D29/58
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
An example method of cooling a compressor of a gas turbine includes, among other things, diverting a flow from a compressor, and directing the flow at the compressor in a direction, the direction having a circumferential component and an axial component.
Claims
1. A gas turbine engine, comprising: a compressor; a fluid injector to communicate a flow at a rotor rim of the compressor in a direction having a circumferential component, wherein the fluid injector injects flow in a direction that is opposite to a general direction of flow through the gas turbine engine, and the circumferential component is in a direction that is the same as the direction of rotation of the compressor; and a low pressure compressor, wherein the compressor is a high pressure compressor axially aft of the low pressure compressor, the flow to the fluid injector is supplied by an aftmost compressor stage of the compressor, the fluid injector includes an array of nozzles that are radially aligned with an aft rotor rim below a blade platform of the compressor, and wherein the fluid injector includes an annular rim and an array of guides extending radially from the annular rim, the array of nozzles arranged circumferentially between the array of guides; wherein each guide of the array of guides is hollow and includes a planar front face and a planar rear face spaced apart by opposed side walls, the planar front face of each guide of the array of guides arranged along a common first reference plane, the planar rear face of each guide of the array of guides arranged along a common second reference plane, and adjacent side walls of the respective guides are dimensioned such that the respective nozzle of the array of nozzles accelerates the flow; and wherein the fluid injector includes an annular flange sloping radially inwardly from the annular rim to bound an annular plenum, the annular plenum configured to communicate the flow from the aftmost compressor stage of the compressor to the array of nozzles.
2. The gas turbine engine of claim 1, wherein the circumferential component is tangential to the rotor rim of the compressor.
3. The gas turbine engine of claim 1, including a heat exchanger to communicate the flow to the fluid injector.
4. A gas turbine engine comprising: a compressor; a fluid injector to communicate a flow at a rotor rim of the compressor in a direction having a circumferential component, wherein the fluid injector injects flow in a direction that is opposite to a general direction of flow through the gas turbine engine, and the circumferential component is in a direction that is the same as the direction of rotation of the compressor; and a low pressure compressor, wherein the compressor is a high pressure compressor axially aft of the low pressure compressor, the flow to the fluid injector is supplied by an aftmost compressor stage of the compressor, the fluid injector includes an array of nozzles that are radially aligned with an aft rotor rim below a blade platform of the compressor, and wherein the fluid injector includes an annular rim and an array of guides extending radially from the annular rim, the array of nozzles arranged circumferentially between the array of guides; wherein each guide of the array of guides is hollow and includes a planar front face and a planar rear face spaced apart by opposed side walls, the planar front face of each guide of the array of guides arranged along a common first reference plane, the planar rear face of each guide of the array of guides arranged along a common second reference plane, and adjacent side walls of the respective guides are dimensioned such that the respective nozzle of the array of nozzles accelerates the flow; wherein the array of nozzles each extend from a nozzle inlet to a respective nozzle outlet; wherein the nozzle outlet is oriented to direct the flow in a direction having a circumferential component and an axial component, the axial component being opposite a general direction of core flow through the gas turbine engine, the circumferential component being in a direction that is the same as a direction of rotation of the high pressure compressor, and the circumferential component being tangential to the aft rotor rim; and wherein the nozzle outlet is a slot defined along the common second reference plane, the opposed side walls include a first sidewall and a second sidewall that circumferentially bound a hollow cavity within the respective guide such that the hollow cavity follows a contour of the first and second sidewalls, the first sidewall has a convex profile, the second sidewall has a concave profile such that the respective guide tapers to a tip portion along the planar rear face to define the nozzle outlet, and the tip portion is circumferentially offset from the respective nozzle inlet.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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(10) In this example, the gas turbine engine 20 is a geared gas turbine engine, and the fan section 22 rotates at a different speed than the turbine section 28. However, the examples in this disclosure are not limited to implementation in the geared gas turbine architecture described, and may be used in other architectures such as a direct drive two-spool gas turbine engine, a three-spool gas turbine engine, or a single spool turbojet.
(11) There are various types of gas turbine engines, and other turbomachines, that can benefit from the examples disclosed herein. Also, although depicted as a turbofan gas turbine engine in the disclosed non-limiting embodiment, it should be understood that the concepts described herein are not limited to use with turbofans as the teachings may be applied to other types of turbine engines.
(12) Referring to
(13) Each of the stages 60, 62, 64 includes a disc 68, a rim 70, and a blade 72. The disc 68 supports the rim 70, which supports the blade 72. Spacers 76 are positioned axially between the rim 70 of adjacent rotor stages 60, 62, 64. The spacers 76 can interface with cantilevered stators. In another example, the spacers 76 are non-rotating and directly support stators.
(14) During operation, the core flow C flows past the blades 72 and is compressed. Core flow C exits the compressor section 24 through the aftmost stage 64. Thermal energy levels in portions of the high pressure compressor 52 increases during operation.
(15) Significant variations in thermal energy levels within portions of the high pressure compressor 52 may be undesirable. The example gas turbine engine 20 thus includes features to reduce these variations. Specifically, a fluid injector 74 is used to direct a thermal management flow F at a rotor assembly 56 of the high pressure compressor 52 to reduce these variations. The flow F may cool or heat an area of the compressor section 24 as is desired.
(16) Referring to
(17) In this example, a portion of the core flow C is diverted to provide the thermal management flow F. This flow F is directed through the fluid injector 74. The remaining core flow C continues to move aftward in the engine 20 toward the combustor section 26, and the turbine section 28.
(18) The flow F can be drawn from the core flow C using ports, scoops, slots, front-facing inlet tubes, or some other feature for diverting flow from the core flow C.
(19) The flow F is drawn from the aftmost stage 64 in this example. In another example, flow F may be drawn from an upstream (i.e. axially forward) stage 60, 62 rather than the aftmost stage 64.
(20) In one example, the flow F is drawn from the radial midpoint of the core flow C flow path. This helps ensure that the highest pressure and lowest temperature air from the core flow C is used to provide the flow F. The flow F may also be drawn from any radial point of the core flow C flow path (i.e. any point other than the midpoint).
(21) The flow F drawn from the flow C is communicated to a first plenum 80, which is annular in this example. The flow C is then passed through a heat exchanger (HEX) 82 to selectively remove thermal energy from the flow F. The heat exchanger 82 may be any type of heat exchanger, for example, an air-air cooler, an oil-air cooler, etc. The flow passing through the example heat exchanger 82 experiences only a slight change in pressure.
(22) The amount of thermal energy removed from the flow F by the heat exchanger 82 may be selectively varied to allow for optimal conditioning of the flow F. For example, in some engine 20 operating modes, the heat exchanger 82 may be turned off so effectively no thermal energy is removed from the flow F. In other modes, the heat exchanger 82 may cool the flow F by removing a substantial amount of thermal energy.
(23) After communicating through the heat exchanger 82, the flow F is moved to a second plenum 84 and then radially inward further to a third plenum 86 (
(24) The flow F moves from the third plenum 86 to the fluid injector 74 and is used to reduce temperature gradients through components of the compressor section 24 to improve component lifetimes.
(25) The fluid injector 74 has the form of a tangential on-board injector (TOBI). In this example, the fluid injector 74 directs the flow F at the rim 70 of the rotor assembly 56. The rim 70 is an aft rotor rim in this example. In another example, the fluid injector 74 directs the flow F into the under-blade inlet cavities of the rotor stage 64, which are radially inboard the aft rotor rim.
(26) The example fluid injector 74 turns and directs the flow F. That is, the fluid injector 74 directs the flow F in a direction D.sub.F that has both a circumferential component C and an axial component A (
(27) The fluid injector 74 can be further configured to direct the flow F in a tangential manner toward the rotor assembly 56, or to achieve a tangential velocity relative to the rotor assembly 56.
(28) The example fluid injector 74 can also be configured to accelerate the flow F through an array of nozzles 78. The flow F may be accelerated to a velocity that is more closely matched to a rotational velocity of the rotor assembly 56. That is, flow F which, may be accelerated, exits the nozzles with a tangential velocity that is at or near than the rotational velocities of the cooling passages of the rotor assembly 56.
(29) The array of nozzles 78 are cascading nozzles in this example and are distributed circumferentially about the axis A. Cascaded nozzles allow the flow F to accelerate with relatively little change in pressure or temperature, to have a relatively controlled flow stream direction and pattern, and with a relatively controlled Mach number and static pressure.
(30) To direct the flow circumferentially, each of the nozzles in the array of nozzles 78 extends from a nozzle inlet 90 to a respective nozzle outlet 94. Notably, the nozzle inlets 90 are circumferentially offset from the nozzle outlets 94.
(31) The example fluid injector 74 includes an inner rim 96 and an array of guides 98 extending radially from the inner rim 96. The array of guides 98, in this example, extend from the inner rim 96 to an outer rim 100 that is radially outside the inner rim 96. In another example, the outer rim 100 is not utilized. The inner rim 96 and outer rim 100 are both annular.
(32) The array of nozzles 78 are arranged circumferentially between the array of guides 98. The guides 98, in some examples, can be hollow (
(33) The fluid injector 74 is machined, in one example, from a single piece of material. The fluid injector 74 may also be fabricated to final net shape using any number of other manufacturing methods, either alone or in combination, including but not limited to casting, forging, drawing, additive, powder metallurgy, or a multi-piece welded assembly.
(34) Notably, the example fluid injector 74 directs flow F at the rotor assembly 56 without relatively elaborate inboard and outboard seals. Instead, a pressure balance approach is used to prevent undue losses or mixing with the core flow C. In the example fluid injector 74, the static pressures across the lap seal at position 104 are balanced. This design approach effectively balances static pressures at areas 106 and 108, which inhibits significant inflow and outflow of air at the position 104.
(35) This design approach can balance flows at specific operating conditions, such as a takeoff condition or takeoff rotational velocity, when cooling demand is the greatest. At other conditions, such as idle and cruise, where moving flow to the rotor assembly 56 through the fluid injector 74 may not be necessary, the heat exchanger 82 can be shut down or tapered down. If the flow F is not cooled with the heat exchanger 82, the efficiency impact due to the ingestion or outflow is negligible.
(36) Referring to
(37) Features of the disclosed examples may include identifying an efficient method for delivering cooling air onto or into a stage of a compressor. The disclosed TOBI may have a relatively low weight impact, and of significantly physical size, as compared to prior art TOBIs used with turbines. Smaller size and weight is enabled by the cascaded nozzle design which facilitates static pressure balancing between streams F and C, thereby allowing for, in some examples, a design with relatively simplified inboard seals compared to prior art TOBI designs. The example fluid injector may be scalable to a number of different compressor designs. The example fluid injector may be modular and may be used with a number of possible air extraction techniques/systems, and a number of possible heat exchanger solutions.
(38) 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.