Heat exchanger for a turbo engine
09863320 ยท 2018-01-09
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F05D2200/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F3/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D2021/0021
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D25/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/185
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D2021/0049
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02T50/60
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
F05D2260/2214
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/205
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D1/0233
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F3/048
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2250/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/221
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/22141
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2250/38
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F2215/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/98
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2210/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02C7/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D1/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F3/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The invention relates to a heat exchanger of an air circulation channel of a turbomachine, the heat exchanger being configured so as to have fluid to be cooled passing through it and including a plurality of fins protruding from a support surface, the heat exchanger being characterized in that each fin includes a base and a preferably continuous leading face which extends axially from the base in the air circulation direction while tapering from upstream to downstream along an axis parallel with the support surface.
Claims
1. A heat exchanger of an air circulation channel of a turbomachine, the heat exchanger being configured so that a fluid to be cooled passes through the heat exchanger and includes a plurality of fins protruding from a support surface of the turbomachine into the air circulation channel to be in heat exchange relationship with an air flow within the air circulation channel, wherein each fin includes a base and a continuous leading face which extends axially from the base, in an air circulation direction to a trailing edge of the fin, wherein each fin tapers both vertically from the base to a peak of the fin and horizontally from a leading edge of the fin to the trailing edge of the fin such that a spacing between adjacent fins increases from the leading edge to the trailing edge.
2. The heat exchanger according to claim 1, wherein the leading face of each fin rises from the base of said each fin in contact with the support surface up to a maximum height along an axis perpendicular to the support surface.
3. The heat exchanger according to claim 1, wherein each fin rises from the base according to a parabolic profile defined in a median plane perpendicular to the support surface, the parabolic profile being followed by a straight profile parallel to the support surface.
4. The heat exchanger according to claim 3, wherein the parabolic profile is convex or concave.
5. The heat exchanger according to claim 1, wherein each fin extends from the leading edge at incidence to the fluid to be cooled, the leading edge extending from the base of the fin, the leading edge being defined by a conic function having a tangent at the base forming a positive angle with an axis perpendicular to the support surface.
6. The heat exchanger according to claim 5, wherein the positive angle with an axis perpendicular to the support surface is comprised between 0 and 60.
7. The heat exchanger according to claim 1, wherein each fin tapers along an axis z perpendicular to the support surface according to a function f(x, z)=b/2*(1z/h).sup.2+g(x, z)+const, where g(x, z)=a/2*(1x/L)2.Math.z,h is a taper along an axis x parallel to the air circulation direction, y is an axis perpendicular to the air circulation direction and parallel to the support surface, L is an axial length of a fin, b is a width of the base of the fin, h is a maximum height of the fin, and z,h is a Kronecker delta function.
8. The heat exchanger according to claim 1, wherein the base of each fin is rectangular.
9. A turbomachine including a heat exchanger according to claim 1.
10. The turbomachine according to claim 9, including an air circulation channel delimited between a first fixed annular structure and a second fixed annular structure, the support surface of the heat exchanger being a surface of one of the fixed structures.
11. The heat exchanger according to claim 5, wherein each fin includes two lateral faces connecting the leading edge to the trailing edge at a downstream end of the fin.
12. The heat exchanger according to claim 5, wherein the positive angle with the axis perpendicular to the support surface is equal to 30.
Description
PRESENTATION OF THE FIGURES
(1) Other features, aims and advantages of the invention will emerge from the description that follows, which is purely illustrative and not limiting, and which must be read with reference to the appended drawings wherein:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7) In all the figures, similar elements bear identical reference symbols.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(8) Hereafter, turbomachine is considered to mean any machine allowing conversion of the heat energy of a working fluid into mechanical energy by expansion of said working fluid in a turbine. More particularly, this working fluid can be a combustion gas resulting from the chemical reaction of a fuel with air in a combustion chamber. Thus turbomachines, as described here, include single-flow and bypass turbojets, turboprops, turbine engines or gas turbines, among others.
(9) Hereafter, the terms upstream and downstream are defined in relation to the normal air circulation direction in the air circulation channel of the turbomachine. The air circulation channel is for example defined between an outer, particularly annular, fixed structure and an inner fixed annular structure of the turbomachine. Naturally, the air circulation channel can be non-annular.
(10)
(11) The turbojet includes a heat exchanger 12. In this example, the heat exchanger is a SACOC type air-oil heat exchanger 12. In the example, the heat exchanger 12 is positioned at the entrance of the circulation channel 10.
(12) In addition, the turbojet includes an outer fixed annular structure 14, hereafter called outer fixed structure in the description, and an inner fixed annular structure 16, hereafter called the inner fixed structure in the description. The air circulation direction in the turbomachine is embodied by the arrow A.
(13) The heat exchanger 12 includes, in this example, an annular body 18 forming part of the outer fixed structure 14. The heat exchanger 12 is therefore partly integrated into the outer fixed structure 14, the outer surface 18S of the body 18 defining a portion of the structure 14S of the outer fixed structure 14. In other embodiments, the heat exchanger 12 can be partly integrated into the inner fixed structure 16.
(14) The heat exchanger 12 includes fins 20 connected to the body 18. Each fin 20 protrudes from the surface 14S of the fixed outer structure 14 and extends in height into the air circulation channel 10. The fins 20 are preferably mutually parallel. The surface 14S of the outer fixed structure 14 is hereafter called the support surface.
(15)
(16) The body 18 of the heat exchanger 12 comprises an entry channel 24 for hot oil to be cooled, a plurality of channels 26 wherein the hot oil circulates, as well as an exit channel 28 allowing recovery, of cold oil. The body 18 of the heat exchanger 12 can, however, include other oil entry, circulation and exit channels.
(17) As can be seen in part in
(18) The fins 20 are positioned at the channels 26 for circulation of the hot oil. The hot oil which arrives in the body 18, and which requires to be cooled, passes through the plurality of circulation channels 26. The heat emitted by the hot oil is transferred to each fin 20 protruding into the air circulation channel 10, wherein cold air circulates. Thus, the heat energy stored in each fin 20 is transferred via a heat exchange surface of each fin 20 to the cold air.
(19) As illustrated in
(20) Moreover, as illustrated more specifically in
(21) In relation to
(22) In particular, still in relation to these figures, the leading face 201 rises from the base 200 of the fin 20 in contact with the support surface 14, 16 up to the maximum height h along an axis z perpendicular to the support surface (above the support surface 14, 16).
(23) The peak of the fin 37 is thus at the height h and the trailing edge 32 is thus at the downstream end of the fin 20.
(24) The base 200 of the fin 20 is preferably rectangular.
(25) As can be seen in
(26) The trailing edge 32 is of any shape, triangular for example, perpendicular to the base 200 of the fin 20. Thus, as will be understood, the leading face 201 of the fin tapers vertically and horizontally with respect to the support surface of the fin 20.
(27) In relation to
(28) The positive angle with an axis perpendicular to the support surface is comprised between 0 and 60, typically equal to 30.
(29) Advantageously, each fin 20 tapers along an axis z perpendicular to the support surface according to the following function
f(x,z)=b/2*(1z/h).sup.2+g(x,z)+const,
where b is the width of the base 200 of the fin 20, h the maximum height of the fin 20, const a predetermined value, y an axis perpendicular to the air flow direction and parallel to the support surface, g(x, z) the taper along an axis parallel to the air flow direction (that is to say the profile of the edges of the fin 20) defined by the following function:
g(x,z)=a/2*(1x/L).sup.2.Math..sub.z,h,
where a is the width of the fin at the end from which the fin extends only along the axis x parallel to the support surface, y is an axis perpendicular to the air flow direction and parallel to the support surface, L is the axial length of a fin, by is the width of the base of the fin 20, h is the maximum height of the fin 20, and .sub.z,h is the Kronecker delta function: .sub.z,h=1 if and only if z=h and 0 otherwise.
(30) Preferably: the axial length L of each fin 20 is comprised between 7 cm and 16 cm; the width b of the base 200 of each fin 20 is comprised between 0.5 mm and 1.5 mm; the width a of each fin 20 at the end from which each fin extends only along the axis x parallel to the support surface is comprised between 0.2 mm and 1 mm; the maximum height h of each fin 20 is comprised between 12 mm and 23 mm.