Method of fabricating a composite material blade having internal channels, and a composite material turbine engine blade
10180069 ยท 2019-01-15
Assignee
Inventors
- Dominique Coupe (Le Haillan, FR)
- Bruno Jacques Gerard Dambrine (Le Chatelet en Brie, FR)
- Jean-Noel Mahieu (Paris, FR)
Cpc classification
F01D5/187
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B29B11/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T29/49337
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
B29L2031/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C70/48
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F01D5/282
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B29D99/0025
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F05D2260/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2300/224
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B29C70/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
F01D5/28
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B29D99/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C70/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F01D5/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A turbine engine blade made of composite material including fiber reinforcement obtained by weaving a first plurality of yarns with a second plurality of yarns, the yarns of the first plurality of yarns being arranged in successive layers and extending in a longitudinal direction of the fiber blank corresponding to a longitudinal direction of the blade, the reinforcement being densified by a matrix. The blade includes one or more internal channels extending in the longitudinal direction of the blade.
Claims
1. A method of fabricating a turbine engine blade out of composite material comprising fiber reinforcement densified by a matrix, the method comprising: making a fiber blank by weaving a first plurality of warp yarns with a second plurality of weft yarns, the warp yarns of the first plurality being arranged in successive layers and extending in a longitudinal direction of the fiber blank corresponding to a longitudinal direction of the blade to be made, one layer of warp yarns in the first plurality of warp yarns being woven with the second plurality of weft yarns and including one or more yarns fully consisting of sacrificial material; shaping the fiber blank to obtain a preform of the blade to be made; densifying the preform by impregnating the preform with a liquid composition including a precursor for the material of the matrix to obtain a blade having fiber reinforcement constituted by the preform and densified by the matrix; and after the preform has been densified, completely eliminating the one or more yarns fully consisting of sacrificial material to form an internal channel in the blade, wherein the internal channel extends in the longitudinal direction of the blade and includes a first end at a bottom surface of a root of the blade and a second end at a tip of an airfoil of the blade, and wherein the one layer of warp yarns including the one or more yarns fully consisting of sacrificial material is an internal layer of warp yarns situated between two surface layers forming a skin of the blade.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the sacrificial material is selected from at least one of the following materials: a hot-melt material; and a material that can be dissolved by a solvent.
3. The method according to claim 2, wherein the one or more yarns of sacrificial material are eliminated by heat treatment or by applying a solvent.
4. The method according to claim 1, wherein the fiber blank is made by three-dimensionally weaving at least yarns of the second plurality of weft yarns linking together yarns of the first plurality of warp yarns over a plurality of layers.
5. The method according to claim 4, wherein the three-dimensional weaving is multi-layer weaving with a weave of a type selected from at least one of the following weaves: satin, multi-satin, multi-plain, and interlock.
6. The method according to claim 1, wherein the yarns of the first plurality of warp yarns other than the one or more yarns made of sacrificial material, and the yarns of the second plurality of weft yarns, are made of ceramic or carbon material.
7. The method according to claim 1, wherein weights of the yarns of sacrificial material is determined as a function of sizes of the internal channels formed in the blade.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention can be better understood from the following description given by way of non-limiting indication with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
(2)
(3)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(8) The invention is applicable to various types of turbine engine blade, in particular compressor blades and turbine blades of various gas turbine spools, e.g. a rotor wheel blade of a low pressure (LP) turbine, such as the blade shown in
(9) The blade 10 of
(10) The blade 10 is mounted on a turbine rotor (not shown) by engaging the root 30 in a housing of complementary shape formed in the periphery of the rotor.
(11) In accordance with the invention, the blade 10 also includes three internal channels 21, 22, and 23 for sucking in air via the root 30 and for blowing it out via the tip 20c of the airfoil 20.
(12)
(13) The blank 100 is obtained by three-dimensional weaving or by multi-layer weaving, and after it has been shaped it is to constitute a preform for the airfoil and for the root of a blade.
(14) The blank 100 is made in the form of a strip extending generally in a direction X corresponding to the longitudinal direction of the blade that is to be made. The blank 100 presents thickness that varies and that is determined as a function of the thickness of the airfoil profile of the blade that is to be made. In its portion that is to form a root preform, the fiber blank presents extra thickness 103 determined as a function of the thickness of the root of the blade that is to be made. The blank 100 has a width l that is selected as a function of the developed (laid out flat) length of the profile of the airfoil and of the root of the blade that is to be made.
(15) One way of three-dimensionally weaving the fiber blank 100 is described below in greater detail.
(16) It is assumed that the weaving is performed with warp yarns that extend in the longitudinal direction X of the blank, i.e. in the longitudinal direction of the blade that is to be made, it being observed that weaving using weft yarns that extend in this direction is also possible.
(17) The enlarged portion 102 providing the variation in the thickness of the blank 100 across its width is obtained by using warp yarns of varying weight. In a variant, or in addition, it is possible to vary the count of the warp yarns (the number of yarns per unit length in the weft direction), a smaller count enabling greater thinning while the preform is being shaped by molding.
(18) Thus, in order to obtain a blade airfoil profile as shown in flat projection in
(19) In one embodiment, the yarns used, other than those for forming internal channels in the manner explained below, may be yarns made of carbon or of silicon carbide (SiC), e.g. having a weight (number of filaments) of 0.5K (500 filaments). In order to form the thickness variation 102, yarns of greater weight are used, e.g. of weight equal to 1K. If 1K yarns are not available, they may be obtained by uniting two 0.5K yarns by wrapping.
(20) Naturally, depending on the weights of the available yarns, various combinations of numbers of layers of yarns and variations in count and in weight may be adopted for the profile that is to be obtained.
(21)
(22) The strip of the fiber blank 100 comprises a set of warp yarn layers, with the number of these layers in this example being equal to three (layers C.sub.11, C.sub.12, C.sub.13). The warp yarns are linked together by weft yarns t.sub.1, by three-dimensional weaving.
(23) In the example shown, the weaving is multi-layer weaving performed using a satin or multi-satin type weave. Other types of three-dimensional weaving could be used, for example a multi-layer weave using a multi-plain weave or an interlock weave. The term interlock is used herein to mean a weave in which each layer of weft yarns links together a plurality of layers of warp yarns with all of the yarns in a given weft column having the same movement in the weave plane.
(24) Various ways of performing three-dimensional weaving are described in particular in document WO 2006/136755, the content of which is incorporated herein by way of reference.
(25) In accordance with the invention, three 1K yarns F.sub.C1, F.sub.C2, and F.sub.C3 of the layer C.sub.12, i.e. the internal layer of warp yarns that is situated between the warp yarn layers C.sub.11 and C.sub.13, are made of a sacrificial or temporary material, i.e. a material that is suitable for being eliminated after the preform has been densified, e.g. by being evaporated or dissolved. The yarns F.sub.C1, F.sub.C2, and F.sub.C3 may be of different weights depending on the sizes of the internal channels to be made within the blade.
(26) Naturally, the number of warp yarn layers may be greater depending on the intended thickness and mechanical properties. Whatever the number of warp yarn layers in the fiber blank (greater than or equal to 3), the sacrificial yarns may be inserted in any layer of warp yarns situated between the two surface layers of warp yarns that are to form the skin of the blade.
(27) The yarns F.sub.C1, F.sub.C2, and F.sub.C3 may in particular be formed with the following sacrificial materials: a hot-melt material such as polyvinyl acetate or polyethylene; or a material that is suitable for being dissolved by a solvent (water, alcohol, etc.) such as a soluble polymer, e.g. a PVA.
(28) When forming fiber reinforcement with ceramic fibers and forming a matrix by impregnation with a liquid, it is possible to use for the sacrificial yarns a silicone that is eliminated by being evaporated.
(29) The extra thickness 103 may be obtained by using weft yarns of greater weight and additional layers of weft yarns, the three warp yarns F.sub.C1, F.sub.C2, and F.sub.C3 being also present in the extra thickness 103 in an internal layer of weft yarns.
(30) Naturally, various combinations of weft yarn numbers and weft yarn weights may be adopted to form the extra thickness 103.
(31)
(32) In
(33) A fiber preform 200 of the blade that is to be made is then obtained by molding the strip 102, while deforming it so as to reproduce the curved and twisted profile of the blade airfoil, as shown in
(34) More precisely, the fiber preform 200 is obtained by densifying the fiber blank 100 with a matrix.
(35) Densification of the fiber blank consists in filling the pores of the blank throughout all or part of its volume with the material that constitutes the matrix.
(36) The matrix of the composite material constituting the blade may be obtained in known manner using the liquid technique. The liquid technique consists in impregnating the fiber blank with a liquid composition containing an organic precursor of the matrix material. The organic precursor is usually in the form of a polymer, such as a thermoplastic or thermosetting resin, possibly diluted in a solvent. The blank is placed in a mold that may be closed in leaktight manner, and having a recess with the final shape of the molded part, which recess is capable in particular of presenting a twisted shape that corresponds to the final shape of the blade. Thereafter, the mold is closed and the liquid precursor of the matrix (e.g. a resin) is injected to fill the entire recess so as to impregnate all of the fiber portion of the preform.
(37) The precursor is transformed into an organic matrix, i.e. it is polymerized, by applying heat treatment, generally by heating the mold, after eliminating any solvent and curing the polymer, the preform being kept continuously within the mold that is of a shape corresponding to the shape of the blade. The organic matrix may be obtained in particular starting from epoxy resins, such as the high-performance epoxy resin sold by the supplier Cytec under the reference PR 520, or liquid precursors for carbon or ceramic matrices. Under such circumstances, if the sacrificial yarns F.sub.C1, F.sub.C2, and F.sub.C3 are made of a hot-melt material, the material is selected so as to melt at a temperature that is higher than the temperature for the polymerization heat treatment, which temperature usually lies in the range approximately 180 C. to 200 C.
(38) The matrix may also be a ceramic matrix obtained by impregnating the fiber blank with a ceramic precursor resin, e.g. such as a polycarbosilane resin that is a precursor of silicon carbide (SiC), or a polysiloxane resin that is a precursor of SiCO, or a polyborocarbosilazane resin that is a precursor of SiCNB, or a polysilazane resin that is a precursor of SiCN.
(39) According to an aspect of the invention, the fiber blank may be densified by the well-known resin transfer molding (RTM) method. In the RTM method, the fiber blank 100 is placed in a mold presenting the outside shape of the blade. A thermosetting resin is injected into the inside space of the mold that contains the fiber blank. A pressure gradient is generally established in that inside space between the location where the resin is injected and the orifices for evacuating the resin so as to control and optimize the impregnation of the blank by the resin.
(40) By way of example, the resin used may be an epoxy resin. Resins adapted to RTM methods are well known. They preferably present low viscosity so as to make it easier to inject them amongst the fibers. The temperature class and/or the chemical nature of the resin is/are determined as a function of the thermomechanical stresses to which the part is to be subjected. Once the resin has been injected throughout the reinforcement, it is polymerized by heat treatment in accordance with the RTM method.
(41) After injection and polymerization, the part is unmolded. In the end, the part is trimmed in order to remove excess resin and its chamfers are machined. No other machining is needed since, given that the part is a molded part, it complies with the required dimensions.
(42) Once densification has been completed, the warp yarns F.sub.C1, F.sub.C2, and F.sub.C3 are eliminated. The treatment used to eliminate these yarns depends on the sacrificial material constituting the yarns F.sub.C1, F.sub.C2, and F.sub.C3. By way of example, the elimination treatment may correspond to heat treatment performed at a temperature greater than or equal to the temperature at which the material vaporizes, or it may correspond to soaking the preform in a solution that serves to dissolve the material of the yarns that are to be eliminated.
(43) After the yarns F.sub.C1, F.sub.C2, and F.sub.C3 have been eliminated, the blade 10 of