Turbomachine with coaxial propellers
11542891 · 2023-01-03
Assignee
Inventors
- Adrien Dubois (Moissy-Cramayel, FR)
- Anthony BINDER (Moissy-Cramayel, FR)
- Laurence Francine Vion (Moissy-Cramayel, FR)
Cpc classification
B64D2027/005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F04D29/682
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02T50/10
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
B64C11/48
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64C2230/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F05D2260/96
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/606
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K3/072
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2240/128
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B64C21/025
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F04D29/684
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D19/024
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D29/324
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C6/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
The invention relates to a nubomachine with a longitudinal axis, comprising two, respectively upstream (122) and downstream, coaxial outer propellers (122), characterised in that at least some of the blades (148) of the upstream propeller (122) comprise at least one internal air circulation chimney (150) that communicates with air-bleeding openings (152) in tire boundary layers of the blades (148), and communicates with air outflow openings (158) on the radially outer end thereof, the air-bleeding openings (152) leading to opening inlets (152a) on tire passive surfaces (156) of the blades (148), the inlets (152a) of the air-bleeding openings being radially arranged in an area (H1) contained between 10% and 45% of the radial dimension (H2) of the blades (148), measured above turd from the radial height of the blades for which the tangent of the leading edge (138) of the blades is orthogonal to the longitudinal axis, and the inlets (152a) of the air bleeding openings being arranged in an area contained between 0% and 30% of the local chord of the blades (148), measured at the level of said inlets (152a) and from the leading edges (138) of tire blades (148).
Claims
1. A turbomachine with a longitudinal axis, comprising two, respectively upstream and downstream, coaxial outer propellers, wherein at least some blades of the upstream propeller comprise at least one internal air circulation chimney that communicates on the one hand with air-bleeding orifices in boundary layers of the at least some of the blades, and communicates on the other hand with air outflow orifices on a radially outer end thereof, the air-bleeding orifices opening at orifice inlets on suction sides of the at least some of the blades, the orifice inlets of the air-bleeding orifices being radially arranged only in a first area contained between 10% and 45% of a radial dimension of the at least some of the blades, the radial dimension is measured above and from a radial height of the at least some of the blades for which a tangent of a leading edge of the at least some of the blades is orthogonal to the longitudinal axis, the orifice inlets of the air-bleeding orifices being arranged only in a second area contained between 0% and 30% of a local chord of the at least some of the blades, measured at the level of said orifice inlets and from the leading edges of the at least some of the blades.
2. The turbomachine according to claim 1, wherein said at least one internal air circulation chimney is substantially radial.
3. The turbomachine according to claim 1, wherein the air-bleeding orifices have an elongated or oblong cross-section.
4. The turbomachine according to claim 1, wherein the air outflow orifices opening at the outside of the at least some of the blades at the level of orifice outlets, said orifice outlets being arranged in a third area contained between 0% and 60% of the local chord of the at least some of the blades, measured at the level of said orifice outlets and from the leading edges of the at least some of the blades.
5. The turbomachine according to claim 1, wherein the air outflow orifices open at the outside of the at least some of the blades at orifice outlets, said orifice outlets being arranged radially in a fourth area contained between 85% and 100% of the radial dimension of the at least some of the blades, and measured from roots of the at least some of the blades.
6. The turbomachine according to claim 5, wherein said air outflow orifices are arranged only in said fourth area of the radial dimension of the at least some of the blades.
7. The turbomachine according to claim 1, wherein the air outflow orifices open at the suction sides of the at least some of the blades.
8. The turbomachine according to claim 7, wherein the air outflow orifices are oriented towards the top of the at least some of the blades so that, in axial section, an angle between a radial axis of the at least some of the blades and a direction of air ejection is between 0° and 90°.
9. The turbomachine according to claim 7, wherein the air outflow orifices are oriented on a side of the suction sides of the at least some of the blades in such a way that, in radial section, an angle between the radial axis of the at least some of the blades and a direction of air ejection is between 0° and 90°.
10. The turbomachine according to claim 1, wherein the upstream and downstream propellers have substantially the same outer diameter.
11. The turbomachine according to claim 1, wherein the upstream and downstream propellers are unducted and counter-rotating.
12. The turbomachine according to claim 1, wherein the upstream and downstream propellers are ducted and counter-rotating or non-counter-rotating.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF FIGURES
(1) The invention will be better understood and other details, characteristics and advantages of the invention will appear when reading the following description made as a non-limitative example and with reference to the annexed drawings in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(12)
(13) Each of these downstream turbines 18, 20 is secured in rotation to an outer propeller 22, 24 which extends radially outside the nacelle 26 of the turbomachine, this nacelle 26 being substantially cylindrical and extending along the axis X around the compressor 12, the combustion chamber 14, and the turbines 16, 18 and 20.
(14) The air flow 29 entering the compressor 12 is compressed and then mixed with fuel and burned in the combustion chamber 14, the combustion gases then being injected into the turbines to rotate the propellers 22, 24 which provide most of the thrust generated by the turbomachine. The combustion gases (arrows 31) exit the turbines and are finally expelled through a nozzle 30 to increase this thrust.
(15) The propellers 22, 24 are arranged coaxially one behind the other. In a known manner, each of these propellers 22, 24 comprises a plurality of blades which are evenly distributed around the axis X of the turbomachine, each blade extending substantially radially and comprising an upstream leading edge, a downstream trailing edge, a radially inner end forming the root of the blade, and a radially outer end forming the top of the blade.
(16) The upstream propeller 22 has substantially the same diameter as the downstream propeller 24 so that these propellers provide the same thrust in operation and the entire airflow passing between the blades of the upstream propeller also passes between the blades of the downstream propeller.
(17)
(18) The power lines 32 flowing over the radially inner end portions of the blades are substantially parallel to each other. In contrast, the power lines 34, 36 flowing on the radially outer end portions tend to converge towards each other, this phenomenon which becomes more intense as one approaches the tops 42 of the blades. The power lines 36 passing at the blade tops wind up around each other and form swirls 44 which impact the blades of the downstream propeller 24 (
(19) The purpose of the invention is to reduce, at the source, the intensity of the swirl that develops at the power lines 34 of the blades of the upstream propeller 22, by sucking this swirl before it binds to the top swirl formed by the power lines 36. The invention also aims to reduce the intensity of the top swirl.
(20) The invention proposes to equip the blades of the upstream propeller 22 with air suction or air-bleeding orifices in the boundary layers of the blades, in central areas of the suction sides close to the leading edges 38, the air bleed being then ejected outside the upstream propeller 22 to destructure the swirls 42 of lower intensity which form at the blade tops.
(21) As shown in
(22) In order for all air-bleeding orifices 152 to be active, i.e. to suck in the swirl, there must be a positive pressure difference between the inlet of the orifices 152 and where they open to. To achieve this, each air-bleeding orifice 152 is in the form of a channel which is connected to an internal air circulation chimney 150 which runs inside the blade and opens close to its peak 142, e.g. close to the leading edge, and on the suction side 156, where the pressure is lower than at the inlets 152a of the orifices 152.
(23) A solution for the design of the assemblies of the air-bleeding orifices 152-chimney 150 is the use of so-called fugitive fibres. These are three-dimensionally woven fibres, typically carbon fibres, held together by resin, which are then dissolved by a chemical process to form said assemblies. One could also consider weaving the blades 148 around small-diameter pipes and in a material similar to that of the fugitive fibres in order to dissolve them by the same chemical process. The diameter D of these designs will be sized according to the suction flow required to reduce the intensity of the swirl of the leading edge.
(24) The internal chimneys 150, e.g. one per blade, are elongated in radial direction and are substantially parallel to the radial shape of the blades 148.
(25) The inlets 152a of the air-bleeding orifices 152 are radially arranged in an area H1 contained between 10% and 45% of the height H2 of the blade, i.e. between 0.1 H2 and 0.45 H2 (
(26) For best suction performance, an optimum pressure difference should be maintained. For this purpose, the inlets 152a of the air-bleeding orifices 152 are advantageously arranged axially in an area L1 contained between 0% and 30%, and in particular contained between 10% and 30%, of the local chord L2, measured from the leading edge 138. By local chord, we mean the chord measured at the radial height of the inlet 152a considered. The chord L2 is thus, for a given orifice inlet 152a height, the shortest path/line that connects the leading edge 138 to the trailing edge 140. Similarly, the outlets of the air bleed orifices 158 are advantageously arranged axially within a range of 0% to 60% (preferably 0% to 15%) of the local chord, measured from the leading edge. The 0% of the area corresponds to the outlets of air outflow orifices 158 arranged on the leading edge.
(27) Advantageously, the air inflow orifices 152a are arranged only in the areas H1 and L1 of the blade 148 and the air outflow orifices 158 are arranged only in the area H3 in order to effectively reduce the leading edge swirls of the upstream blade before they bind to the top swirl of the downstream blade.
(28) The leading edge swirl forms at the leading edge 138 as the name implies and tends to move away from it as it moves up and down the blade. The objective is to suck in/reduce the energy of this swirl and send the flow towards the top of the blade with a direction that follows the arrow of the blade.
(29) The ejection of the flow should also help to reduce the intensity of the blade top swirl and move its position radially away from its direction of flow. As shown in
(30) The angle α1, α2 of air ejection at the top of the blade is advantageously oriented towards the trailing edge 140 of the blade 148 and also towards the top of the blade 148. The direction of air ejection is illustrated by the arrows 160 (
(31) This angle α1, α2 of air ejection with respect to the longitudinal axis X of the turbomachine, or equivalently with respect to the radial axis Y, is thus advantageously between 0° and 90°. As shown in
(32) It is about 40° in
(33) The invention thus has several advantages: a reduction in the interaction noise of the leading edge swirl: acoustic gain, a reduction in the interaction noise of the blade end swirl: acoustic gain, a reduction in leading edge swirl losses: gain in performance of the turbomachine, a reduction in blade end swirl losses: gain in performance of the turbomachine.
(34) The system according to the invention reduces the boundary layer that develops at mid-span on the suction side of the upstream blade by placing the suction ports between 10% and 45% of the height of the blade above the arrow zero and, near the leading edge, between 10% and 30% chord. This reduces the swirl at its source at the lower side of the blade. The air outflow orifices advantageously open at the suction side of the upstream blades, close to the leading edges and the peaks of the blades, thus reducing the intensity of the top swirl, as close as possible to where it is created.
(35) The advantages of the invention are: a reduction in the energy of the top swirl, thanks to the holes which open at as close as possible to the place where the top swirls are created, at the leading edge of the upstream blade, a reduction of the detachment on the suction side of the upstream vane, thanks to the suction holes positioned in the blade, a reduction of the interaction noise at the low speed points, by reducing the swirl created at the lower side of the blade, thanks to the suction of the boundary layer on the suction side at this span of the blade.
(36) The intensity of the top swirl is also reduced by blowing at the top blade.
(37) In the above description, the upstream and downstream propellers of the turbomachine are described as unducted and counter-rotating in a turbomachine. However, the invention is not limited to this configuration and also concerns turbomachines comprising ducted upstream and downstream propellers, whether counter-rotating or non-contra-rotating. An example of a turbomachine 10 comprising a duct C, extending around upstream and downstream propellers 122, 24, is illustrated in