FLEXIBLE FRUSTOCONICAL INPUT SHAFT
20230057973 · 2023-02-23
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F02C7/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/4031
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2250/314
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2240/62
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D21/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D3/72
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D5/027
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D5/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2250/232
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02C7/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D21/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D5/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D5/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The present invention relates to a shaft for a propulsion system configured to rotate a reducing mechanism about a rotational axis, the shaft comprising: —a first end configured to engage with an input gear of the reducing mechanism, —a first bellows and a second bellows, the first bellows and the second bellows being rotationally symmetrical about the rotational axis, the first bellows extending between the first end and the second bellows, and —a frustoconical body mechanically connecting the first bellows and the second bellows.
Claims
1. A shaft for a propulsion system comprising: a first end, configured to engage an input pinion of a speed reduction mechanism; a first gusset and a second gusset, the first gusset and the second gusset being symmetrical in revolution about an axis of rotation of the input pinion, the first gusset extending between the first end and the second gusset; and a frustoconical barrel mechanically connecting the first gusset and the second gusset.
2. The shaft according to claim 1, wherein a half-angle at an apex of a truncated cone defined by the frustoconical barrel is greater than or equal to 5° and less than or equal to 25°.
3. The shaft according to claim 1, wherein the frustoconical barrel has a first diameter near the first gusset and a second diameter near the second gusset, the second diameter being strictly less than the first diameter.
4. The shaft according to claim 1, wherein a maximum diameter of the first gusset is between 80% and 120% of a maximum diameter of the second gusset.
5. The shaft according to claim 1, wherein the first gusset is attached to the first end by a first fillet, a radius of curvature of the first fillet being greater than or equal to 10 mm and less than or equal to 20 mm.
6. The shaft according to claim 1, wherein a portion of the first end is frustoconical.
7. The shaft according to claim 1, wherein the second gusset is connected to the frustoconical barrel in the region of at a second fillet, a radius of curvature of the second fillet being greater than or equal to 10 mm and less than or equal to 15 mm.
8. The shaft according to claim 1, wherein the frustoconical barrel has a first diameter near the first gusset and a second diameter near the second gusset, the second diameter being strictly greater than the first diameter.
9. The shaft according to claim 1, wherein the first end comprises grooves configured to engage teeth of the input pinion.
10. A drive assembly for a propulsion system comprising a shaft according to claim 1 and a speed reduction mechanism, wherein the speed reduction mechanism comprises an input pinion, the first end of the shaft engaging the input pinion of the speed reduction mechanism to drive the input pinion in rotation about the axis of rotation.
11. A propulsion system comprising a drive assembly according to claim 10 and a turbine section attached to the shaft so as to drive the shaft in rotation about the axis of rotation.
12. An aircraft including at least one propulsion system according to claim 11.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0041] Other characteristics, aims and advantages of the invention will emerge from the following description which is purely illustrative and non-limiting and which must be considered with respect to the appended drawings, in which:
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[0052] In all figures similar elements have identical reference numerals.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0053] In the present application the upstream and downstream are defined relative to the direction of normal flow of gas in the fan and through the propulsion system.
[0054] The propulsion system 1 for an aircraft 100 conventionally comprises a fan 2 and a primary body. In the direction of flow of gas in the propulsion system 1, the primary body comprises an inlet channel extending immediately downstream of the fan 2, a low-pressure compressor 4 (or booster), a high-pressure compressor 5, a combustion chamber, a high-pressure turbine 7, a low-pressure turbine 9 and a gas discharge pipe. The high-pressure turbine 7 drives the high-pressure compressor 5 in rotation by means of a high-pressure shaft 8 while the low-pressure turbine 9 drives the low-pressure compressor 4 and the fan 2 in rotation by means of a low-pressure shaft 10.
[0055] The fan 2 comprises a fan disc 43 provided with fan blades 11 at its periphery which, when set in rotation, guide the air flow in the primary and secondary flow spaces of the propulsion system 1.
[0056] The invention applies to any type of aeronautic dual-flow propulsion system 1, whether the fan 2 is ducted or unducted, with fixed blades or variable-pitch blades.
[0057] The propulsion system 1 has a high bypass ratio. High bypass ratio here means a bypass ratio greater than or equal to 10, for example between 10 and 80 (including an order of magnitude for the case of a motor of which the fan is unducted). For this, the fan 2 is uncoupled from the low-pressure turbine 9 to independently optimise their respective rotation speed by means of a speed reduction mechanism 12 placed between the upstream end (relative to the direction of flow of gases in the propulsion system 1) of the low-pressure shaft 10 and the fan 2. The fan 2 is then driven by the low-pressure shaft 10 by means of the speed reduction mechanism 12 and a fan shaft 13 which is fixed between the speed reduction mechanism 12 and the disc of the fan 2. The fan shaft 13 is mobile in rotation about an axis of rotation X coaxial to the axis of rotation X of the low-pressure shaft 10.
[0058] To calculate the bypass ratio, the secondary flow rate and the primary flow rate are measured when the propulsion system 1 is stationary in the take-off regime in a standard atmosphere (as defined by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) Manual, Doc 7488/3, 3rd edition) and in the maritime region.
[0059] The speed reduction mechanism 12 comprises, as described above: [0060] a sun gear 14, mounted mobile in rotation about an axis of rotation X, at the centre of the reducer, [0061] a ring gear, coaxial to the sun gear 14, and [0062] planet gears, mounted on a planet carrier, each planet gear being meshed on the one hand with the central pinion and on the other hand with the ring gear.
[0063] To provide robustness to the mechanical strength of the low pressure shaft for its connection with the speed reduction mechanism 12 while complying with flexibility specifications, the propulsion system 1 comprises a shaft 15, called flexible shaft, configured to drive the speed reduction mechanism 12 in rotation about the axis of rotation X, and comprising: [0064] a first end 16, or upstream end 16, configured to engage with the sun gear 14 of the speed reduction mechanism 12, [0065] a first gusset 17 and a second gusset 18, the first gusset 17 and the second gusset 18 being symmetrical in revolution about the axis of rotation X, the first gusset 17 extending between the first end 16 and the second gusset 18, [0066] a barrel 19 mechanically connecting the first gusset 17 and the second gusset 18, and [0067] a second end 20, or downstream end 20, extending downstream of the second gusset 18 opposite the upstream end 16 and configured to be fixed on a bearing of the propulsion system 1, typically a front bearing of the low-pressure shaft 10. A scope with such a bearing is referenced 20P in
[0068] The barrel 19 of the shaft 15 is frustoconical, such that the place of maximum static load (framed A) is decorrelated from the place of maximum dynamic load (framed B), as shown in
[0069] The angle of inclination and the orientation of the truncated cone forming the barrel 19 are dimensioned according to the absolute misalignment which may exist upstream and downstream of the shaft 15. Absolute misalignment is understood here to mean misalignment resulting solely from the upstream (respectively downstream) movement of the shaft 15, as opposed to relative misalignment of the shaft 15, which corresponds to the sum of the absolute misalignments seen by the shaft 15.
[0070] In particular, when, in a given propulsion system 1, absolute misalignments are greater upstream of the shaft 15 (that is, in the region of the speed reduction mechanism 12) than downstream (that is, in the region of the bearing on the upstream side of the low-pressure shaft), the frustoconical barrel 19 converges from upstream to downstream. In other terms, the diameter of the frustoconical barrel 19 is greater in the region of the first gusset 17 than in the region of the second gusset 18 (
[0071] However, in a given propulsion system 1, when absolute misalignments are more significant downstream of the shaft 15 than upstream, the frustoconical barrel 19 diverges from upstream to downstream. In other terms, the diameter of the frustoconical barrel 19 is smaller in the region of the first gusset 17 than in the region of the second gusset 18 (
[0072] Here, diameter means the diameter measured in a plane normal to the axis of rotation X.
[0073] Hereinbelow, the invention will be described more particularly in the case of a converging frustoconical shaft 15, that is, the largest diameter of which is positioned near the downstream flank of the first gusset 17. As has just been specified, this is however not limiting, as the frustoconical shaft 15 can be divergent, as illustrated in
[0074] In an embodiment, the slope of the truncated cone forming the barrel 19 has a half-angle α at the apex between 5° and 25°. Half-angle α at the apex here means the angle α formed between the axis of rotation X and the external surface of the barrel 19.
[0075] Each gusset 17, 18 has an upstream flank and a downstream flank. The upstream flank 21 of the first gusset 17 is attached to the upstream end 16 of the shaft 15 by means of a first upstream fillet 22 and its downstream flank 23 is connected to the barrel 19 by means of a first downstream fillet 24. Similarly, the upstream flank 25 of the second gusset 18 is connected to the barrel 19 by means of a second upstream fillet 26 and its downstream flank 27 is attached to the downstream end 20 of the shaft 15 by means of a second downstream fillet 28.
[0076] In an embodiment, because the barrel 19 has a greater diameter in the region of the downstream flank 23 of the first gusset 17, the maximum diameter D1 of the first gusset 17 can be increased in comparison with conventional shafts so that the first gusset 17 remains sufficiently supple. In fact, the flexibility of a gusset depends on the first order of its maximum radial extent (that is, its height given the diameter at the apex of the gusset to be compared to the diameter of the shaft to the radially internal side of the downstream flank 21 of said first gusset 17). It follows that the radius of curvature of the first upstream 22 and downstream 24 fillets can likewise be augmented, reducing the static loads in these first fillets 22, 24.
[0077] Typically, the maximum diameter D1 of the first gusset 17 is between 80% and 120% of the maximum diameter D2 of the second gusset 18, for example between 90% and 100%.
[0078] Also, the radius of curvature of the first upstream fillet 22 can be greater than or equal to 10 mm and less than or equal to 20 mm. The radius of curvature of the first downstream fillet 24 can be greater than or equal to 5 mm and less than or equal to 15 mm.
[0079] It should be noted in particular that the greater the half-angle α of the truncated cone forming the barrel 19, the greater the maximum diameter D1 of the first gusset 17 (to remain iso-flexible and to respect the compromise between the mechanical strength of the shaft 15 and the flexibility specifications relative to the propulsion system, without modifying the length of the shaft 15) and the greater the radii of curvature of the first upstream 22 and downstream 24 fillets can be.
[0080] Optionally, so as to further reduce static loads in the region of the first upstream fillet, the upstream end 16 can comprise a frustoconical portion 222 (see especially appended
[0081] In reference to
[0082] A shaft 15 having a frustoconical barrel 19 flaring from downstream to upstream, as shown in
[0083] In an embodiment, the shaft 15 is made of steel, for example stainless steel, or a superalloy based on nickel and comprising chrome, iron, niobium and molybdenum, for example about 19 or 20 percent nickel and also 19 or 20 percent chrome and likewise 19 or 20 percent iron and for example also a few percent niobium and molybdenum. In the case of a shaft 15 made from such an alloy with the proportions hereinbelow NiCr19Fe19Nb5Mo3, the thickness of the barrel 19 can for example be between 4.0 mm and 8.0 mm and the thickness of the gussets can be of the order of 2.5 and 5.0 mm, close to 10%. The maximum diameter D1 of the first gusset 17 can be greater than 170 mm, for example less than 250 mm, remaining for example greater than the maximum diameter D2 of the second gusset 18. The maximum diameter D2 of the second gusset 18 can be greater than or equal to 150 mm and for example less than 240 mm, for example remaining less than the maximum diameter D1 of the first gusset. The radius of curvature of the second upstream fillet 26 can be between 5 mm and 10 mm. The radius of curvature of the second downstream fillet 28 can be likewise between 5 mm and 10 mm. In general, the gusset which is adjacent to the barrel at its end having its largest diameter can have a maximum external diameter greater than the gusset which is adjacent to the barrel at its end having its smallest diameter.
[0084] It is likewise evident that the frustoconical shape of the shaft 15 makes its manufacturing conditions easier. In fact, the gussets 17, 18 are generally made by removing material using a tool from the inside of the barrel 19, which constitutes a delicate operation. The frustoconical shape of the barrel 19 makes for easier access to the internal zone of the shaft 15 and clears up space for the machining tools.
[0085] As a variant, such as shown in
[0086] The invention has been illustrated in relation to a dual-flow ducted motor (cf.