MANUFACTURING PROCESS FOR BLADES OF A TURBO MACHINE AND BLADES FOR A TURBO MACHINE
20230055845 · 2023-02-23
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B22D27/045
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23P15/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22C21/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22C9/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A manufacturing process for blades of a turbomachine, e.g. a gas turbine engine for an aircraft. In the process: a) a ceramic core piece that comprises at least two ceramic core elements and a clamping part that connects the ceramic core elements, is positioned in a wax forming device, subsequently; b) a molten wax material is applied to the outside of the ceramic core piece in the wax forming device and the wax is allowed to solidify, and subsequently; c) at least two turbomachine blades are cast using a crystallographically-oriented metal casting process and the wax and the ceramic core piece are removed.
Claims
1. A process for manufacturing turbomachine blades (5), wherein: a) a ceramic core piece that comprises at least two ceramic core elements and a clamping part that connects the ceramic core elements, is positioned in a wax forming device, subsequently; b) a molten wax material is applied to the outside of the ceramic core piece in the wax forming device and the wax is allowed to solidify, and subsequently; c) at least two turbomachine blades are cast using a crystallographically-oriented metal casting process and the wax and the ceramic core piece are removed.
2. The process of claim 1, wherein the crystallographically-oriented casting process is a single crystal casting process, a directed solidification process, or an equiaxed grain casting process.
3. The process of claim 1, wherein the turbomachine blades are parts of a high pressure stage or an intermediate pressure stage in the turbomachine.
4. The process of claim 1, wherein the ceramic core piece has an axial length that is between 80 and 130 mm.
5. The process of claim 1, wherein the turbomachine blades have an axial length that is between 10 and 100 mm.
6. The process of claim 5, wherein the turbomachine blades have an axial length that is between 15 and 50 mm.
7. The process of claim 6, wherein the turbomachine blades have an axial length that is between 10 and 30 mm.
8. The process of claim 1, wherein the at least two ceramic core elements of the ceramic core piece are arranged collinearly along their longitudinal axes.
9. The process of claim 1, wherein four ceramic core elements are arranged by having two parallel rows of two collinearly arranged ceramic core pieces.
10. The process of claim 1, wherein two ceramic core elements are connected both in a tip-up position relative to the clamping part or one core element is in a root-up position and one core element is in a tip-up position.
11. The process of claim 1, wherein the two ceramic core elements are connected both in a tip-down position relative to the clamping part.
12. The process of claim 1, wherein the at least two ceramic core elements are formed to have a block, each block has openings that define channels, the channels define outlets at a trailing edge of each turbomachine blade.
13. The process of claim 1, wherein after the step (b) at least one coating layer is applied on an outer surface of the wax.
14. The process of claim 1, wherein the wax forming device is a wax mold device or a 3D wax printing device.
15. The process of claim 1, wherein the ceramic core piece is manufactured by an additive manufacturing process.
16. A turbomachine blade that is manufactured by the process of claim 1.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0031] Embodiments will now be described by way of example only, with reference to the Figures, in which:
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[0041] The following table lists the reference numerals used in the drawings with the features to which they refer:
TABLE-US-00001 Ref no Feature Figure 1 ceramic core piece 23 1′ first ceramic core element 29 1″ second ceramic core element 2456789 1‴ third ceramic core element 9 1⁗ fourth ceramic core element 9 2 clamping part 29 5 turbomachine blade 1 6 selector (“pig tail”) 1 7 starter block 1 8 dove tail section 1 9 tip exit 4567 10 blade section in wax mold 3 11 stabilizer 7 12 openings 8 13 block 8 14 channels 8 20 clamping section in wax mold 3 100 wax mold device, wax forming device 3 A longitudinal axis of the ceramic core piece 2 W wax 3
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DISCLOSURE
[0042] Aspects and embodiments of the present disclosure will now be discussed with reference to the accompanying figures. Further aspects and embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art.
[0043] The starting point for an embodiment described herein is the preparation of a ceramic core piece 1 for a single crystal casting process that is based on a lost wax casting process (investment casting).
[0044] The ceramic material of the ceramic core piece 1 may comprise ceramic powder such as fused silica, zircon powder and SiC. This ceramic powder is mixed with a binder e.g. comprising paraffin wax and stearic acid. The ceramic powder might take in the order of 80 vol% of the total ceramic material used for the ceramic core piece 1, 2. Other embodiments might deviate from data given here.
[0045] The ceramic core piece 1 is then given a shape representing the cooling channels and the cavities in the completed hollow turbomachine blade 5. The internal cooling of the turbomachine blades 5 e.g. allows an operation at e.g. 90% of the melting temperature of the alloy used.
[0046] The embodiments of the manufacturing process are specifically related to the arrangement of the ceramic core piece 1, the handling of it in the casting process and the further handling of the metal pieces after the removing of the wax W and the metal casting.
[0047] As an example of a crystallographically-oriented casting process, a Bridgeman process is described herein for the manufacturing of single crystal turbomachine blades 5.
[0048] In this generally known process, single crystals are formed from below a mold by keeping the molten metal above the melting point.
[0049] In the embodiment of the process described here, the ceramic core piece 1 is covered with wax material in a mold (see
[0050] The single crystal turbomachine blade 5 is grown from a starter block 7 via the selector 6 (“pig tail”) which eliminates unwanted crystal orientations. At the other end of the blade 5, the section that will be the dovetail section 8 or fir tree section of the blade 5 is located.
[0051] Generally, there is an increased demand for small aircraft engines, requiring small turbomachine blades 5 to be manufactured at a very competitive cost.
[0052] The embodiments described below use one ceramic core piece 1 (see
[0053] The ceramic core piece 1 is later removed in the investment casting process. But the cast turbomachine blades 5 are still connected (i.e. they form a blade cast piece) as the wax W has been covering the complete ceramic core piece 1. Therefore, the two turbomachine blades 5 are still in one piece after the casting, allowing a better handling of the two, often delicate, turbomachine blades 5. Only towards the end of the manufacturing process, the blade cast piece is separated into its two elements, the turbomachine blades 5.
[0054] As the turbomachine blades 5 can e.g. have a length of only 10 to 30 mm, the handling of larger pieces, i.e. the ceramic core piece 1 with the two ceramic core elements 1′, 1″ is quicker and easier. The blade cast piece is cut into two turbomachine blades 5 at the end of the manufacturing process, reducing the operation time / cost by at least half on many operations.
[0055] The embodiment described can be e.g. used to manufacture crystallographically-oriented turbomachine blades 5 for the first or second stage of a high pressure turbine or an intermediate pressure turbine.
[0056] In
[0057] The two ceramic core elements 1′, 1″ are joined at one of their respective ends with the clamping part 2 which can be used to better handle the complete double blade piece during the complete casting and manufacturing process. The clamping part 2 has a relatively large central area (e.g. in the shape of a block) for gripping and clamping and potentially for a dimensional alignment.
[0058] At the ends opposite to the clamping part 2, a complex passage arrangement (e.g. triple pass) in the form of a cantilevered arrangement is positioned in the ceramic core pieces 1′, 1″.
[0059] In this arrangement, the first ceramic core element 1′ will be cast tip-down, and the second ceramic core element 1″ will be cast tip-up. The tang section of the blade section is directly connected to the clamping section 2. In
[0060] The overall axial length of the ceramic piece 1 can e.g. be in the range of 80 to 130 mm, so that the two manufactured turbomachine blades 5 will each have a height in the range of 10 to 30 mm.
[0061] The clamping part 2 is thicker than the ceramic core element 1′, 1″ and essentially block-shaped. Therefore, the clamping part 2 can be efficiently handled, e.g. by robot. In general, the clamping part 2 does not have to be as small as the core, allowing a bigger surface to clamp on and get more repeatable positioning.
[0062] Subsequently, the ceramic core piece 1 will be covered in wax in a wax mold (see
[0063] In
[0064] Each half of the wax patterns may have a subtly different continuator / cast feeding arrangement, to compensate for casting porosity on top face in mold attitude. For example, one part would have a higher porosity on the platform top, the other would have a higher porosity on the platform bottom.
[0065] The double-wax pattern may have standard handling features for robotic handling allowing manual or automated assembly.
[0066] The double blade piece is subsequently fired, fettled and / or machined as one piece and prepped for dispatch (impregnated, buttered etc. as required).
[0067] The double blade piece can also have a simple coating applied e.g. by aluminizing. The bulk of the operating cost is handling, so the cost for this is also halved to get per-blade cost.
[0068] The shelling and casting process would follow he generally known procedure. The large volume tang is required once per two parts, saving alloy cost. Here, the tang is a large clamping face in the casting, which is later removed i.e. in-process scrap material. A small part needs a relatively large clamping face, so one would have to double the alloy volume. The embodiments shown require only one large clamping face per two blades, therefore it is more alloy efficient.
[0069] After the casting operation, the double blade piece is processed through core leach and heat treatment, and all finish dressing operations (if any), and all non-destructive examination preparation operations.
[0070] The large blade piece, originating from the ceramic core piece 1, is easier to handle, and the processing operations piece-cost is divided in two to get the per-blade cost.
[0071] The inspection scrutiny operations require equal attention on both turbomachine blades 5, but the handling and machine loading elements of the operation time is reduced as the larger part is easier to handle, and the loading cycle time is divided in two.
[0072] The double blade piece can be dispatched into machining as it is, and the relatively large area between the two small elements, the clamping part, serves as a clamping face e.g. for fir-tree machining, at the end of the turbomachine blades 5 opposite the tip.
[0073] The double blade piece can remain in one piece also e.g. through grinding and film cooling (and welding if required) as a double piece.
[0074] The process has been described in connection with a wax mold device 100, which is a form of a wax forming device. Alternative wax forming devices could use a 3D wax printing device.
[0075] In
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[0081] It will be understood that the invention is not limited to the embodiments above-described and various modifications and improvements can be made without departing from the concepts described herein. Except where mutually exclusive, any of the features may be employed separately or in combination with any other features and the disclosure extends to and includes all combinations and sub-combinations of one or more features described herein.