Assembly for turbine machine with open rotor contra-rotating propellers, comprising a small duct for the passage of ancillaries
10479514 ยท 2019-11-19
Assignee
Inventors
- Clementine Charlotte Marie Mouton (Tourman en Brie, FR)
- Olivier BELMONTE (Perthes En Gatinais, FR)
- Jeremy Phorla Lao (Remire-Montjoly, GF)
- Didier Jean-Louis Yvon (Savigny sur Orge, FR)
Cpc classification
B64D2027/005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F05D2220/325
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B64C11/48
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F05D2240/90
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2270/64
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
F02K3/072
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C3/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D9/065
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2220/323
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/79
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2230/60
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D7/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B64C11/306
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
F02K3/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D7/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B64C11/48
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F01D9/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K3/072
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C3/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B64C11/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
An assembly for an aircraft turbine machine including a receiver for a pair of open rotor contra-rotating propellers, the assembly including a duct, ancillaries routed inside the duct, an attachment case, attachment device of the duct on an annular installation portion of the case. The attachment device in an assembled configuration include a split ring fitted with internal projections housed inside orifices in the duct; a radial loading surface of the ring made on the portion the surface being tapered and narrowing along a first axial direction, and being in contact with a peripheral surface of the complementary shaped tapered split ring; device of axially loading the ring along the first direction, the device being blocked in the axial direction on the portion.
Claims
1. An assembly for an aircraft turbine machine comprising a receiver for a pair of open rotor contra-rotating propellers, the assembly comprising a duct, ancillaries routed inside the duct, and an attachment case comprising an annular installation portion on which a first end of the duct is fixed by attachment means, the annular installation portion of the attachment case being arranged around the first end of the duct, wherein the attachment means in an assembled configuration include: a split ring fitted with internal projections housed inside corresponding orifices formed through said first end of the duct; a radial loading surface of the split ring made on the annular installation portion of the attachment case, the radial loading surface being tapered and narrowing along a first axial direction of the duct, and being in contact with a complementary tapered peripheral surface of the split ring; axial loading means of axially loading the split ring along said first direction, said axial loading means being blocked in the axial direction on the annular installation portion of the attachment case.
2. The assembly according to claim 1, wherein in the assembled configuration, the internal projections are stopped in the radial and axial directions in the orifices of said first end of the duct.
3. The assembly according to claim 1, wherein said axial loading means include a nut with an axial bearing surface and an internal thread cooperating with an external thread formed on the annular installation portion of the attachment case.
4. The assembly according to claim 3, wherein a closing plug at the first end of the duct, said plug including an external rim gripped in the axial direction between the split ring and the axial bearing surface of the nut.
5. The assembly according to claim 1, wherein the number of internal projections is between two and ten, each having an annular extent of between 10 and 40.
6. The assembly according to claim 1, wherein the cross-section of the internal projections reduces when moving radially inwards.
7. The assembly according to claim 1, wherein the ancillaries are oil ancillaries.
8. Turbine A turbine machine for an aircraft comprising a receiver for a pair of open rotor contra-rotating propellers, a gas generator and a reduction gear placed between the receiver and the gas generator preferably located downstream from the receiver, the turbine machine also including an assembly according to claim 1, with a duct passing through the reduction gear.
9. The turbine machine according to claim 8, further comprising a pitch variation device for the blades of at least one of the contra-rotating propellers, said pitch variation device including a hydraulic actuator supplied by at least one ancillary routed inside the assembly duct, said duct having a second end opposite the first end fixed on a fixed part of the actuator.
10. An installation method for an assembly according to claim 1, comprising the following steps: put the split ring into position axially facing the annular installation portion of the attachment case, and apply load to this split ring along the circumferential direction so as to increase its diameter; axial displacement of the duct through the annular installation portion of the attachment case and through the split ring, such that the orifices at the first end of the duct are axially facing the internal projections in the split ring; release the circumferential load on the ring, such that its internal projections penetrate into the corresponding orifices at the first end of the duct; relative axial displacement between the annular installation portion of the attachment case and the duct fitted with the split ring, such that the tapered radial loading surface provided on the annular installation portion comes into contact with the peripheral surface with a complementary tapered shape; installation of the axial loading means of the split ring, this installation possibly increasing contraction of the split ring contract in the hoop direction, due to cooperation between the tapered radial loading surface and the complementary tapered peripheral surface.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) This description will be made with reference to the appended drawings among which;
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(10) Firstly with reference to
(11) The gas generator 4 uses a classical design, including several components extending around a first longitudinal axis 8a. Starting at the upstream end and working towards the downstream end along a principal gas flow direction 5 through the turbine machine, it comprises a low pressure compressor 10, a high pressure compressor 12, a combustion chamber 14, a high pressure turbine 16, a low pressure turbine 18 and a free power turbine 20. The free power turbine opens up on an ejection nozzle 22 starting from which gases from the generator are ejected in the downstream direction into the atmosphere.
(12) The compressor 10 and the turbine 18 form a low pressure case being connected by a shaft 24, while the compressor 12 and the turbine 16 form a high pressure case being connected by a shaft 26. Another shaft 30 is connected to the free power turbine 20, and passes through the entire gas generator 4 to drive the differential reduction gear 6.
(13) The reduction gear 6 is provided with a classical planetary gearset comprising a sun gear 32 centred on a second longitudinal axis 8b parallel to the first axis 8a, a planet gear carrier 33, planet gears 34 and a ring gear 36. The shaft 30 drives the sun gear 32 of the planetary gearset through a reduction gear stage, while the planet gear carrier 33 and the ring gear 36 each drive one of the two contra-rotating propellers of the receiver 2.
(14) The receiver 2 comprises two open rotor contra-rotating propellers, specifically an upstream propeller 38b and a downstream propeller 38b, each fitted with blades 40. There is also a blade pitch variation device associated with each propeller 38a, 38b, and particularly a device 42 located at the forward end of the turbine machine and associated with the upstream propeller 38a. The device 42 can be used to vary the incidence of the blades 40 in a known manner, as a function of operating conditions. It comprises a hydraulic actuator 44 centred on the second axis 8b, as is the receiver assembly 2. Moreover, a kinematic connection 46 transforms the axial displacement of the sliding part of the actuator 44, into a rotation movement of the blades 40 about their axes 48 arranged transversely.
(15) The actuator 44 is supplied with fluid, preferably with oil, through ancillaries in the form of ducts 50 routed parallel to the second axis 8b, from the gas generator 4 as far as the actuator 44. More precisely, these pipes 50 are routed inside a duct 52 centred on the second axis 8b, this duct having an approximately circular cross-section and being fixed at its downstream end called the first end 52a to an attachment case 54. At its upstream end called the second end 52b, the duct 52 is fixed to a fixed internal part of the actuator 44, through a tapered flange 55. Thus, the duct 52 passes through the downstream propeller 38b and the reduction gear 6 to mechanically connect to the attachment case 54, forming a shroud around this reduction gear 6 and delimiting it in the downstream direction.
(16) A roller bearing 51 is arranged between the duct 52 and the hub of the upstream propeller 38a. The inner ring of this bearing 51, fixed to the duct 52, has a wide race.
(17) The attachment case 54 extends essentially in the transverse direction and is connected at one of its ends 54a to a upstream case 58 of the gas generator 6, this upstream case 58 itself lying along the upstream prolongation of a case of the low pressure compressor 10. At its other end 54b, the attachment case 54 connects to an outer casing 59 forming a nacelle.
(18) As can be seen on
(19) The pipes 50 are stabilised, protected and possibly cut off inside the duct 52, in a known manner. Vibrations of the pipes 50 are attenuated particularly as a result of internal retaining planes (not shown), and the risk of leakage is very much reduced.
(20) One of the special features of the invention lies in the manner in which the first end 52a of the duct 52 is installed on the attachment case 54 provided for this purpose. This special feature thus lies inside an assembly 60 comprising the duct 52, the pipes 50, the attachment case 54 and the means 62 of attaching the first end 52a of the duct to the case 54.
(21) These attachment means 62 specific to the invention are shown only diagrammatically on
(22) Firstly, note that the attachment case 54 comprises an annular installation portion 64, centred on the second axis 8b and surrounding the first end 52a of the duct 52. The portion 64 on which the invention is mounted can advantageously be the case 54 of the reduction gear, or more particularly the first stage of the reduction gear.
(23) The attachment means 62 comprise a split ring 66 surrounded by the annular installation portion 64. More precisely, this portion 64 comprises a radial loading surface 68 of the split ring 66, the surface 68 being tapered and becoming smaller with increasing distance along a first axial direction of the duct 52, in this case along the downstream direction. The ring also has a complementary tapered peripheral outer surface 70 at the upstream end, in contact with the surface 68. Cooperation between the shapes of these two surfaces 68, 70 blocks the ring 66 relative to the annular installation portion 64, along the axial direction in the upstream direction and outwards along the radial direction.
(24) The split ring 66 is fitted with internal projections 71, in the form of teeth. For example, there may be three of them with an angular extent of 10 to 40, being uniformly spaced relative to each other. They are housed inside corresponding orifices 72 formed on the first end 52a of the duct 52. The angular extent of the orifices 72 is practically the same as the angular extent of the teeth 71, and their shapes are practically complementary.
(25) As can be seen better on
(26) According to a different embodiment shown on
(27) Therefore the teeth 71 are stopped in the radial direction and in the axial direction in the orifices 72 in both cases, so that the axial position of the split ring 66 relative to the duct 52 is repeatable.
(28) The assembly 60 also comprises a closing plug 74 closing off the first end 52a of the duct 52. The oil pipes can also pass through this plug 74, comprising an outer rim 76 surrounding this end 52a. The outer rim 76 comprises an annular end 78 oriented transversely outwards and arranged to bear axially in the upstream direction in contact with the downstream side of the split ring 66.
(29) Thus the split ring 66 is blocked in the axial direction by the association between the bevels 71a and inclined complementary surfaces 72a, of the tapered surface 70 stopped in contact with the complementary tapered surface 68 of the case 64, and the plug 74 is stopped in the axial direction on the downstream lateral part of the ring, on a bearing surface reference 53.
(30) Moreover, the attachment means 62 include means 80 of applying axial load on the split ring, in the upstream axial direction. In this case, this is a nut 80 blocked in the axial direction on the annular installation portion 64 by means of a thread 82 formed on the outer surface of the portion 64 that cooperates with an inside thread 84 of the nut. In order to maintain the required axial load, the nut 80 has an axial bearing surface 86 that applies a pressure on the annular end 78, that is thus gripped in the axial direction between the split ring and the axial bearing surface 86 of the nut 80.
(31) We will now describe several successive steps in a method for installing the assembly 60, with reference to
(32) It comprises firstly a step to place the split ring 66 along the axial direction facing the annular installation portion 64 of the attachment case 54, downstream from this portion 64 as shown on
(33) Then, as can be seen on
(34) As shown on
(35) The method is continued by making a relative axial displacement between the annular installation portion 64 and the duct 52 fitted with the ring 66. This is done by displacing the duct 52 in the upstream direction, so that it moves back into its initial position also shown on
(36) The nut 80 is then installed and tightened, after installing the plug 74 on the first end 52a. In the above assumption whereby the teeth 81 are already at their axial and radial stops at the end of the previous step, installation of the plug 74 can then prevent all the means in position from moving in the axially downstream direction, thus preventing the teeth 71 from coming out of their orifices 72. In the other assumption in which the teeth 71 are not yet at their axial and radial stops in the orifices 72, installation of the plug 74 then forces the ring 66 to contract even further, once again due to cooperation between the tapered surfaces 68, 70. Screwing is stopped when the teeth 71 reach their axial and radial stops in their corresponding orifices 72 as can be seen on
(37) Finally, since the forces passing through the duct 52 originate from aerodynamic forces applied to the blades 40, these forces can easily be transmitted to the case 54 through the split ring 66.
(38) Obviously, an expert in the subject can make various modifications to the invention that has just been described solely as non-limitative examples.