ATTACHMENT OF AN ACOUSTIC SHROUD TO A HOUSING SHELL FOR AN AIRCRAFT TURBINE ENGINE
20220333496 · 2022-10-20
Inventors
- Thomas DUPAYS (MOISSY-CRAMAYEL, FR)
- Clement BOUROLLEAU (MOISSY-CRAMAYEL, FR)
- Coline POULENC (MOISSY-CRAMAYEL, FR)
- Anwer Siraj (Moissy-Cramayel, FR)
Cpc classification
F05D2300/603
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D29/522
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/96
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2300/614
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2240/11
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D11/122
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
International classification
Abstract
The invention relates to a method for manufacturing an aircraft turbine engine housing, the housing (23) comprising: an annular shell (29) with axis A; —an annular element (24; 253, 254) attached to the inside of the shell (29), the annular element comprising a body (25) made of NIDA-type cellular material and comprising a downstream portion (252) covered with an abradable material (26), and an upstream portion (251) without abradable material, the body (25) extending in a continuous manner from the upstream portion (251) to the downstream portion (252), the method comprising: —manufacturing the annular element in the form of a continuous annular body, —cutting the annular body into segments (253, 254), —attaching the segments to the shell, and —depositing the abradable material (26) onto the inside surface (25a) of the downstream portion (252).
Claims
1. A method for manufacturing an aircraft turbine engine housing, the housing comprising: an annular shell extending about an axis A; an annular element, attached to an inside surface of the shell, the annular element comprising a body which is made of a NIDA-type cellular material and which comprises a downstream portion having a first inside surface covered with a layer of abradable material, and an upstream portion having a second inside surface without abradable material, the body extending continuously from the upstream portion to the downstream portion, the manufacturing method comprising: a step of manufacturing the annular element as a continuous annular body, a step of cutting the continuous annular body into body segments, a step of attaching the body segments to the inside surface of the shell, and a step of depositing a layer of abradable material on the inside surface of the downstream portion of the body.
2. The manufacturing method according to claim 1, wherein the abradable material of the abradable material layer is a resin comprising a filler in the form of hollow beads, preferably a resin comprising a filler in the form of hollow glass beads, more preferably an epoxy resin filled with hollow glass microspheres.
3. The manufacturing method according to claim 1, wherein the step of attaching the body segments on the inside surface of the shell comprises a step of filling gaps between the ring body segments with an abradable filling material.
4. The manufacturing method according to claim 3, wherein the filling material is a resin comprising a filler in the form of hollow beads, preferably a resin comprising a filler in the form of hollow glass beads, more preferably an epoxy resin filled with hollow glass microspheres.
5. The manufacturing method according to claim 3, wherein the abradable filling gaps material is the same abradable material as the material making up the abradable material layer.
6. The manufacturing method according to claim 5, wherein at the downstream portion the abradable material layer is integral with the filling material.
7. A housing for an aircraft turbine engine manufactured by the method of claim 1.
8. The housing according to claim 7, wherein the annular element is attached by adhesion to the inside surface of the shell.
9. The housing according to claim 7, wherein the abradable material layer is disposed in a recess of the downstream portion of the body.
10. The housing according to claim 7, wherein the abradable layer has an inside surface which extends in the axial extension of the second inside surface.
11. The housing according to claim 7, wherein a film based on fibres covers the first and second inside surfaces of the body made of cellular material, the film itself being covered by the abradable material layer at the first inside surface.
12. The housing according to claim 7, wherein the downstream portion of the body has a greater axial dimension than the upstream portion.
13. The housing according to claim 7, wherein the abradable layer has a radial thickness measured with respect to said axis A which is between 2 and 20% of the radial thickness of said body.
14. The housing according to claim 7, wherein the shell is made of a composite material comprising woven fibres embedded in a resin.
15. The housing according to claim 7, wherein the number of segments of the body is between two and ten.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0053] Further features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following detailed description, for the understanding of which reference is made to the attached drawings in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0067] In the following description, the invention is applied to a fan housing 23, for example similar to the fan housing 3 shown in
[0068] The housing 23 to which the invention applies has a generally annular shape about an axis A (see for example
[0069] The housing 23 comprises: [0070] an annular shell 29 extending around the axis A and made of a composite material comprising woven fibres embedded in a resin, and [0071] a shroud 24 provided and configured to be disposed inside the shell 29 in a so-called installed state, and to cover an inner annular surface 29a of a front section of the shell 29 (
[0072] The shroud 24 comprises a main body 25 of sound insulating material, forming a sound insulation module, or sound attenuation module, and a layer of abradable material 26.
[0073] The main body 25 has an upstream portion 251 and a downstream portion 252. The upstream 251 and downstream portion 252 extend continuously with each other. The downstream portion 252 has a first inside surface 25a and the upstream portion 251 has a second inside surface 25b.
[0074] The body 25 has, continuously in this order, the first inside surface 25a, a shoulder 25e, the second inside surface 25b, an upstream annular edge 25c, an outside surface 25d.
[0075] The first and second inside surfaces 25a and 25b are annular and extend longitudinally about the axis A. The second inside surface 25b is provided forward, or upstream, of the first inside surface 25a according to the intended forward-rearward orientation F of the shroud 24 when installed in the turbine engine 1. The transition from the first inside surface 25a to the second inside surface 25b is provided by the inward shoulder 25e, i.e. this transition corresponds locally to a reduction in the diameter of the inner cross-section of the body 25. The first inside surface 25a thus forms, together with the shoulder 25e, an outward recess 250 relative to the second inside surface 25b (
[0076] The abradable material layer 26 is formed on the main body 25. More specifically, the abradable material layer 26 is provided in the recess 250, so as to cover the first inside surface 25a of the main body 25. Preferably, the abradable material layer 26 is shaped such that an inside surface 26a thereof is flush with the second inside surface 25b, i.e. the inside surface 26a of the abradable layer 26 extends in axial extension of the second inside surface 25b.
[0077] Preferably, the main body 25 comprises a cellular material, the pockets (not shown) preferably being arranged in a honeycomb structure. Such a material is also known as NIDA.
[0078] The main body 25 further comprises at least one film 27, or fabric for example laminated, based on fibres, preferably based on carbon fibres. Preferably, the body 25 comprises several films 27 superimposed by draping. For the sake of readability, only one film 27 will be mentioned below.
[0079] The film 27 based on fibres covers the first and second inside surfaces 25a and 25b of the body 25. The film 27 is itself covered by the abradable material layer 26 at the first inside surface 25a, i.e. in the recess 250. Preferably, the film 27 is folded upstream and also covers the upstream annular edge 25c of the body 25.
[0080] Preferably, the outside surface 25d of the body 25, which is radially opposite the inside surfaces 25a, 25b, is free of the film 27 based on fibres. This latter feature can contribute greatly to limiting the mass of the shroud 24 and limits the draping time of the body 25.
[0081] The shroud 24 is glued into the shell 29, i.e. on an inside surface 29a of the shell 29. A thickness of adhesive 28 is thus arranged between the shroud 24 and the shell 29 (
[0082] Preferably, the shroud 24 is manufactured as a continuous annular body, i.e. the shroud 24 is a piece extending 360 degrees when manufactured. The shroud 24 is preferably then cut into ring segments which can then be installed on the inside surface 29a of the shell 29.
[0083] The number of ring segments may be, for example, between two and ten. For example, the shroud shown in
[0086] Once the ring segments 253, 254 have been bonded to the surface 29a, gaps 30 may appear between the segments 253, 254, specifically between ends 25f of each segment 253 and 254 (
[0087] The gaps 30 are preferably filled with a filling or covering material 33 (
[0088] The abradable material of the layer 26 and/or the filling material 33 is/are a resin comprising a filler in the form of hollow balls (e.g. glass). The abradable material may be an epoxy resin filled with hollow glass microspheres (e.g. that marketed under the reference DM R76-059, Scotch-Weld EC-3524 B/A Black).
[0089] It is noted that in
[0090] The invention provides advantages at several levels. From a technical point of view, in particular from a mechanical point of view: [0091] the housing shell does not undergo machining, for example of the type of the counterbores of the prior art. The integrity of the composite material of the shell is therefore not altered and the continuity of the fibres therein is preserved, which avoids the concentration of stresses in the shell; [0092] the interface between the OPB and the layer of abradable material of the prior art, which causes aerodynamic disturbances, is eliminated; [0093] the connection by adhesion of the shroud to the shell increases the overall stiffness of the housing and improves the general vibratory behaviour thereof and the turbine engine; [0094] the aforementioned connection by adhesion is of the surface type, unlike the point connections of the prior art, which limits the mechanical stresses during operation; [0095] the elimination of the metal bonds, the carbon fold of the outer face of the acoustic insulation module, the downstream edge of the OPB and the upstream edge of the support layer of the abradable material are accompanied by a gain in mass.
[0096] From an acoustic point of view: [0097] the elimination of the metal connections allows to dispense with the related grooves in the body of the acoustic attenuation module, thus allowing the acoustic insulation material comprising the honeycomb structure to have a constant height in an azimuthal manner, i.e. over the entire circumference of the acoustic insulation module in a plane perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the shroud and the turbine engine; all the pockets of the honeycomb structure are thus of the same height in an azimuthal manner, which eliminates the azimuthal disturbance of the prior art and enables the acoustic insulation module to offer a better acoustic insulation efficiency; [0098] the acoustically treated surface is increased.
[0099] From an industrial point of view: [0100] the fusion of the acoustic insulation module with the abradable layer module, distinct in the prior art, generally reduces the industrial costs (one part to be produced, transported, etc. instead of two); [0101] the elimination of machining on the inside surface of the shell reduces the manufacturing cycle time; [0102] the elimination of mechanical connection parts reduces the number of components to be purchased, stored and managed (brackets, screws, rivets, washers, nuts, seal at the interface between the sound insulation module and the abradable material support layer); [0103] the manufacture of the sound insulation module and more generally of the combined shroud is simplified (uniformity of the honeycomb material which does not require specific machining, elimination of the folds on the outer face of the sound insulation module, simplified fold draping) and the number of three-dimensional checks is significantly reduced; [0104] there is no longer any need for specific tooling for the assembly and disassembly of the connections, unlike the screwed connections of the prior art (e.g. torque spanners, spanner extensions).
[0105] In addition, the disappearance of the bracket connections is accompanied by the disappearance of the problems and constraints inherent to them: cracks and residual tensile stresses (resulting from bending), the need for numerous visual checks, adjustment of assembly clearances (static constraints), risk of imbalances and related vibration problems.