Heat-managing composite structures
09920530 ยท 2018-03-20
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F01D5/147
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D5/187
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2230/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2250/313
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2250/28
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/2214
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2230/31
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
E04C2/34
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
F01D9/065
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2250/314
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/2212
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
E04C2002/3472
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
F05D2230/234
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2250/75
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
B60H1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E04C2/36
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
Abstract
Light-weight, heat-managing structures feature open-cell lattice, honeycomb, and/or corrugated (prismatic) arrangements in their substructures, combined with heat pipe/heat plate arrangements for managing heat to which the structures are subjected. The structures are well suited to aerospace applications and may be employed in the leading edge of wings or other airfoil-shaped components; gas turbine engine components; rocket nozzles; and other high-heat, high-stress environments.
Claims
1. A structural arrangement, comprising: an open-cell lattice-structure core; a surface layer comprising a cellular sub-structure; and a heat-transferring working fluid disposed within said core or said surface layer; wherein the surface layer further comprises an outer arrangement that has lower thermal conductivity than the cellular sub-structure of said surface layer.
2. The structural arrangement of claim 1, wherein a heat-transferring working fluid is disposed within each of said core and said surface layers.
3. The structural arrangement of claim 1, wherein the lattice structure of said core is selected from the group consisting of tetrahedral, pyramidal, three-dimensional Kagome; diamond or textile weave; square, collinear hollow truss; and diamond, collinear hollow truss structural arrangements.
4. The structural arrangement of claim 1, wherein the lattice structure of said core is formed from solid struts.
5. The structural arrangement of claim 4, wherein said heat-transferring working fluid is present in wicking material disposed within the interstices of the lattice structure of said core.
6. The structural arrangement of claim 1, wherein the lattice structure of said core is formed from hollow struts.
7. The structural arrangement of claim 6, wherein said heat-transferring working fluid is disposed within said hollow struts in a manner such that the hollow struts function as heat pipes.
8. The structural arrangement of claim 7, wherein said heat-transferring working fluid is present in wicking material disposed within said hollow struts.
9. The structural arrangement of claim 1, wherein the cellular sub-structure of said surface layer is an open-cell lattice structure.
10. The structural arrangement of claim 9, wherein the open-cell lattice structure of said surface layer is selected from the group consisting of tetrahedral, pyramidal, three-dimensional Kagome; diamond or textile weave; square, collinear hollow truss; and diamond, collinear hollow truss structural arrangements.
11. The structural arrangement of claim 1, wherein said heat-transferring working fluid is disposed within interstices of the cellular sub-structure of the surface layer.
12. The structural arrangement of claim 1, wherein the outer arrangement consists of a thermal barrier coating.
13. The structural arrangement of claim 1, wherein the cellular sub-structure of the surface layer is fabricated from carbon/carbon, silicon-carbon/silicon-carbon, or intermetallic material.
14. The structural arrangement of claim 1, wherein said arrangement is incorporated in the leading edge of a wing or other airfoil-shaped body.
15. The structural arrangement of claim 1, wherein said arrangement is incorporated in a component of a gas turbine engine.
16. The structural arrangement of claim 15, wherein said component is a stator or rotor blade.
17. A structural arrangement, comprising: a substrate; and an outermost face layer spaced from and joined to the substrate by means of a cellular structure, the outermost face layer being fabricated from a material having a thermal conductivity that is lower than a thermal conductivity of said cellular structure.
18. The structural arrangement of claim 17, wherein the outermost face layer is fabricated from fiber-reinforced, ceramic matrix composite; thermal barrier composition; or a closed cell structure made from a material having a thermal conductivity that is lower than a thermal conductivity of said cellular structure.
19. The structural arrangement of claim 17, wherein the cellular structure comprises an open-cell lattice structure.
20. The structural arrangement of claim 19, wherein the open-cell lattice structure is selected from the group consisting of tetrahedral, pyramidal, three-dimensional Kagome; diamond or textile weave; square, collinear hollow truss; and diamond, collinear hollow truss structural arrangements.
21. The structural arrangement of claim 19, wherein the lattice structure is formed from solid struts.
22. The structural arrangement of claim 19, wherein the lattice structure is formed from hollow struts.
23. The structural arrangement of claim 22, wherein the hollow struts are filled with heat-transferring working fluid.
24. The structural arrangement of claim 23, further comprising wicking material disposed within said hollow struts.
25. The structural arrangement of claim 17, wherein the cellular structure is a corrugated or prismatic structure.
26. The structural arrangement of claim 25, wherein the corrugated or prismatic structure is selected from the group consisting of triangular, diamond, and Navtruss corrugation arrangements.
27. The structural arrangement of claim 17, wherein portions of said cellular structure are embedded within the outermost face layer.
28. The structural arrangement of claim 17, wherein said cellular structure is diffusion bonded, brazed, or welded to said substrate.
29. The structural arrangement of claim 17, further comprising a phase change material disposed within interstices of the cellular structure.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention will now be described in greater detail in connection with the Figures, in which:
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EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION
(10) Structures according to the invention utilize thermal management concepts including heat plate and/or heat pipe concepts. Additionally, they utilize cellular and/or lattice-type, metal structural arrangements. Accordingly, it is beneficial to explain such concepts and structures before describing structural embodiments according to the invention which utilize them.
(11) First, a heat pipe or heat plate is a sealed system which transfers heat nearly isothermally via the evaporation and condensation of a working fluid. For example, a basic heat pipe arrangement is illustrated schematically in
(12) Next, cellular metals and simple methods for making them have been developed. Open cell, lattice structures have been found to be highly efficient load-supporting structuresespecially those associated with carrying bending loads when configured as the core of a sandwich panel. Examples of such open cell, lattice structures are shown in
(13) Further structural arrangements that may be employed in the context of the invention are honeycomb structures and corrugated (prismatic) structures. Exemplary honeycomb structures include hexagonal cell (
(14) Turning now more specifically to the application of these concepts according to the present invention, a passive, multifunctional heat pipe leading edge would greatly reduce the severe thermal gradients, and corresponding mechanical stresses, experienced during re-entry of an orbital vehicle or by a hypersonic vehicle during atmospheric travel. This may be accomplished using heat pipes to cool the stagnation region by transferring heat to surface locations aft of the stagnation region, thereby raising the temperature aft of the stagnation region above the expected radiation equilibrium temperature. When applied to leading-edge cooling, heat pipes operate by accepting heat at a high rate over a small area near the stagnation region and radiating it at a lower rate over a larger surface area. The use of heat pipes results in a nearly isothermal leading edge surface, thus reducing the temperatures in the stagnation region and raising the temperatures of both the upper and lower aft surfaces.
(15) One example 100 of such a structural arrangement, which may be utilized in the leading edge or over the entire extent of the wing if desired, is illustrated in
(16) For hypersonic vehicle applications, the very outermost surface 110 of the skin layer 104 is suitably provided as a low thermal conductivity material, e.g., a thick TBC or micro-honeycomb material of some sort, to limit the amount of heat that reaches the core portion 102 of the structure 100. On the other hand, the core or skeleton 108 of the skin layer 104 is suitably manufactured from high thermal conductivity materiale.g. carbon/carbon, silicon-carbon/silicon-carbon, or intermetallic materialto facilitate the transport away of heat that does penetrate into the skin layer 108.
(17) Furthermore, working fluid-saturated wicks 112, 114 are provided in the interstices of the honeycomb or lattice skeleton of the skin layer 104 as well as in the interstices of the lattice structure of the core 102. Thus, with the overall structure 100 shown in
(18) As noted, such a structural arrangement may exemplarily be utilized as the leading edge of a hypersonic or orbital vehicle. Additionally, such structure may be utilized for gas turbine engine components, in which case the subcomponents likely would be fabricated from typical superalloy material, or rocket engine components, in which case the components likely would be fabricated from copper alloys.
(19) Another example 200 of such a structural arrangement, which may be utilized in the leading edge or over the entire extent of the wing if desired, is illustrated in
(20) In operation, either of the structural arrangements 100, 200 spreads thermal energy that has been applied locally to the outer surface of the structure, thereby creating a near isothermal outer structure. This reduces the maximum temperature experienced by the component and may enable increases in the overall operating temperature of the wing, engine, rocket nozzle, etc. When a cooling gas or fluid or phase change material is available, the transfer of thermal energy to this gas or fluid or phase change material will be increased because the product of the temperature difference between the structure and coolant and the area of contact between the cooling medium and the cellular heat pipe/plate system is increased.
(21) Another exemplary structure 300 according to the invention is illustrated in
(22) Furthermore, coolant material is located in the interstices of the truss structure 306. More particularly, the coolant material may be cooling flow of gas or liquid, or it may be some other phase change material that fills the open spaces between the trusses of the cellular structure.
(23) With this arrangement 300, the low thermal conductivity material of the face layer 302 minimizes or reduces the thermal flux transported into the underlying structure. The heat that does propagate through the thermal insulator is dispersed by the cellular structure 306 and is then removed by the coolant located in the interstices between the trusses. Furthermore, cellular interconnecting structures 306, fabricated like those shown in
(24) Thus, more generally, such a thermal protection concept reduces the heat flow into the interior of the structure. The heat that does reach the cellular structure is then spread across the heat pipe structure and transferred to the coolant material for removal from the system. The cellular lattice structure can be used to isolate the displacements arising from thermal expansion of the outer material from the substrate; this will increase the thermal cyclic life of the system and allow operation in very high thermal flux environments.
(25) Finally, as alluded to above, the various structures described herein may be employed in gas turbine engine components. Such an application is illustrated in
(26) The foregoing disclosure is only intended to be exemplary of the apparatus of the present invention. Departures from and modifications to the disclosed embodiments may occur to those having skill in the art. The scope of the invention is set forth in the following claims.