Rotor cover plate
09677407 ยท 2017-06-13
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F01D5/3015
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
A cover plate for a rotor disk in a gas turbine machine includes a cylindrical body having multiple outward facing snaps and multiple inward facing snaps.
Claims
1. A gas turbine machine comprising: a compressor section; a combustor section in fluid communication with the compressor section; a turbine section in fluid communication with the combustor section; a shaft defining an axis and interconnecting said compressor section and said turbine section; a plurality of rotors within said turbine section and said compressor section, wherein each of said rotors is connected to said shaft; a cover plate connected to one of the plurality of rotors, wherein said cover plate includes: an outside surface snap that contacts a radially inward facing surface relative to said axis of the corresponding rotor, and that contacts the radially inward facing surface more tightly as the cover plate expands thermally with respect to the corresponding rotor; an inside surface snap that contacts a radially outward facing surface relative to said axis of the corresponding rotor, and that contacts the radially outward facing surface more tightly as the cover plate contracts thermally with respect to the corresponding rotor; and wherein said outside surface snap and said inside surface snap are not radially aligned; and wherein any heating or cooling of the cover plate and rotor disk causes one of the outside surface snap and the inside surface snap to radially contact the corresponding rotor more tightly.
2. The gas turbine machine of claim 1, wherein said one of the plurality of rotors comprises at least one rotor arm protruding axially away from said one of the plurality of rotors, and wherein said rotor arm interfaces with the cover plate.
3. The gas turbine machine of claim 2, wherein said rotor arm interfaces with said cover plate via a fastener.
4. The gas turbine machine of claim 3, wherein said fastener protrudes through said cover plate and said rotor arm.
5. The gas turbine machine of claim 1, wherein said cover plate further comprises a flexing portion operable to be flexed during installation.
6. The gas turbine machine of claim 1, wherein said cover plate comprises at least one sealing feature.
7. The gas turbine machine of claim 6, wherein said at least one sealing feature is a knife edge seal.
8. The gas turbine machine of claim 1, wherein said inside surface snap tightens as the cover plate cools.
9. The gas turbine machine of claim 1, wherein said outside surface snap tightens as the cover plate heats.
10. The gas turbine machine of claim 1, wherein said cover plate and a corresponding rotor are constructed of different materials having different thermal expansion rates.
11. The gas turbine machine of claim 1, further comprising a second cover plate connected to the one of the plurality of rotors.
12. The gas turbine machine of claim 1, wherein each of the plurality of inside surface snaps is situated at a radially innermost distal end of the cover plate.
13. The gas turbine machine of claim 1, wherein each of the plurality of outside surface snaps and each of the plurality of inside surface snaps are connected by an intervening radially and axially extending portion of the cover plate having an L-shaped cross-section.
14. The gas turbine machine of claim 1, wherein each of the radially inward facing surface and radially outward facing surface has a non-planar contour in the axial direction.
15. A cover plate for a rotor disk in a gas turbine machine comprising: a cylindrical body defining an axis; an opening in said cylindrical body wherein said opening is centered on said axis; a plurality of outwardly facing snaps each having a contact surface facing radially outward relative to said axis, and contacting a radially inward facing surface of the rotor disk, such that thermal expansion of the cover plate relative to the disk causes the outward facing surface of the outward facing snap to contact the inward facing surface of the disk more tightly; and a plurality of inwardly facing snaps each having a contact surface facing radially inward relative to said axis, and contacting a radially outward facing surface of the rotor disk, such that thermal contraction of the cover plate relative to the disk causes the inward facing surface of the inward facing snap to contact the outward facing surface of the disk more tightly; wherein any heating or cooling of the cover plate and rotor disk causes one of the plurality of inwardly facing snaps and the plurality of outwardly facing snaps to radially contact the rotor disk more tightly.
16. The cover plate for a gas turbine machine of claim 15, wherein said plurality of outwardly facing snaps and said plurality of inwardly facing snaps are not radially aligned.
17. The cover plate for a gas turbine machine of claim 15, wherein said cylindrical body further comprises a spring region operable to be flexed during installation.
18. The cover plate for a gas turbine machine of claim 15, wherein said cover plate comprises at least one sealing element.
19. The cover plate for a gas turbine machine of claim 18, wherein said sealing element is a knife edge seal.
20. The cover plate for a gas turbine machine of claim 15, wherein the inward facing surface of the inward facing snap has a non-planar contour in the axial direction.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(6) A schematic view of an industrial gas turbine engine 10 is illustrated in
(7) Within the rotor systems of the industrial gas turbine engine 10 are multiple rotor disks, each of which includes a cover plate supporting a sealing arrangement that reduces the amount of gases that cross the gap between a rotating piece and a static piece thereby reducing the amount of gases that can travel between secondary air systems and a gas path of the industrial gas turbine engine 10.
(8)
(9) With continued reference to
(10) The radially outward snap 150 contacts a surface 152 of the rotor disk 110. The surface 152 is radially inward facing relative to the engine centerline axis and prevents the cover plate 120 from shifting radially once the cover plate 120 is installed. The radially inward snap 140 of the cover plate 120 contacts a radially outward facing surface 132 of the rotor disk arm 130. The radially outward facing surface 132 also prevents the cover plate 120 from shifting radially due to contact with the radially inward facing snap 140.
(11) The cover plate 120 further includes two knife edge sealing elements 124 connected to the cover plate 120 via a webbing 126. The webbing 126 also connects each of the snaps 140, 150, and is the main body portion of the cover plate 120. The particular thickness, angles, and cross sections of a practical application of the webbing 126 are designed according to known principles to provide full support with minimal weight to the knife edge sealing elements 124. The illustrated thickness, angles, and cross sections are not to scale and are drawn for general illustrative effect.
(12) With continued reference to
(13) In order to allow for assembly of the rotor disk assembly 100 and to distribute centrifugal loading, the inner snap 140 and the outer snap 150, and specifically the snap contact surfaces 154, 144, are not aligned radially. That is, a single radial line normal to the centerline axis does not intersect both snaps 140 and 150. In alternate examples, the snaps are partially aligned, where a single radial line can intersect both snaps 140, 150 but does not pass through a center point of either snap 140, 150.
(14) In order to allow for assembly of the rotor disk assembly 100 and to distribute centrifugal loading, the inner snap 140 and the outer snap 150, and specifically the snap contact surfaces 153, 144, are not aligned radially. That is, a single radial line normal to the centerline axis does not intersect both snaps 140 and 150. In alternate examples, the snaps are partially aligned, where a single radial line can intersect both snaps 140, 150 but does not pass through a center point of either snap 140, 150.
(15) The cover plate 120 also includes a flexing region 160 within the webbing 126 connecting the inner snap 140 and the outer snap 150. The flexing region 160 is flexed during installation, easing the positioning of the snaps 140, 150 against the rotor disk 110 and between the contact surfaces 132 and 152. In an alternate embodiment, the flexing region 160 is located on the rotor disk arm 130, and the rotor disk arm 130 is flexed during installation to the same affect. In both examples, the flexing region 160 provides flexing within an elastic deformation range to allow the webbing 126 or the rotor disk arm 130 to return to a non-flexed shape without permanent deformation.
(16) During operation of the turbine engine 10, the rotor disk assembly 100 heats up and cools down depending on the operations mode of the turbine engine 10, and the speed of the rotation of the rotor systems within the turbine engine 10. The cover plate 120 has a significantly smaller mass than the rotor disk 110. As a result of the smaller mass, the cover plate 120 heats and cools faster than the rotor disk 110 when exposed to similar conditions. The disparity in heating and cooling rate necessarily includes a corresponding disparity in thermal expansion and contraction between the cover plate 120 and the rotor disk 110. Cover plates with a single snap instead of the illustrated double snap 140, 150 are installed with the single snap under a significant preload in order to prevent the snap from coming loose as the cover plate cools down and contracts relative to the rotor disk.
(17) By using opposing snap directions (radially inward facing and radially outward facing snaps 140, 150) the cover plate 120 ensures that at least one snap 140, 150 grows tighter as the cover plate 120 heats up relative to the rotor disk 110, and another snap 140, 150 grows tighter and contracts relative to the rotor disk 110 as the system cools down. In the illustrated example, the radially outward facing snap 150 grows tighter as the cover plate heats (expands) relative to the rotor disk 110 because expanding the cover plate 120 shifts each aspect of the cover plate 120 radially outward and the radially outward snap 150 is contacting (stopped by) a radially inward facing contact surface 152 of the rotor disk 110. Similarly, the radially inward snap 140 growiss tight as the cover plate 120 cools (contracts) relative to the rotor disk 110, because the contracting cover plate 120 shifts radially inward relative to the rotor disk 110 and the snap 140 contacts a radially outward facing surface 132.
(18) To further optimize for the disparate thermal expansion of the cover plate 120 and the rotor disk 110, some example rotor systems utilize a different material for the cover plate 120 then the rotor disk 110, with each of the materials having different thermal expansion coefficients. By designing the rotor systems to utilize different materials, a designer can exert greater control over the thermal expansion and contraction rates, and thus on the corresponding snap forces.
(19) As seen in
(20) It is further understood that while the illustrated example of