VALVE DEVICE AND JET ENGINE WITH A VALVE DEVICE
20170145858 ยท 2017-05-25
Inventors
Cpc classification
F05D2260/605
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K15/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K15/025
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D25/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K17/0466
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/608
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D25/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/609
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K1/38
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K9/58
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F01D25/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K17/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K9/58
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A valve device of a jet engine includes a body, a seat and a flow path between an inlet and an outlet that can be closed and opened. Depending on an actuating force that results from a fluid pressure at a front surface of the body facing the inlet, as well as from a closing force applied to the body, the body can be transferred between open and closed states, and can be transferred into an operational state in which the flow path is opened by a setting device depending on an ambient pressure. The flow path can be opened via the setting device such that a flow cross-section of the flow path corresponds to at least 80% of the flow cross-section of the flow path in the area of the inlet across the entire extension of the flow path between the inlet and the outlet.
Claims
1. Valve device with a valve body that is acting together with a valve seat and via which a flow path for an air-oil volume flow that carries oil droplets can be closed and at least partially opened between a valve inlet and a valve outlet, wherein the valve bodydepending on an actuating force which acts at the valve body as a function of the operational state and which results from a fluid pressure that is applied in the area of a front surface of the valve body that is facing towards the valve inlet as well as from a closing force that is applied to the valve body and by means of which the valve body can be actuated in the direction of an operational state in which the flow path is closedcan be transferred between operational states in which the flow path is closed and in which the flow path is at least partially opened, and can be transferred by a setting device into an operational state in which the flow path is opened depending on an ambient pressure as well as independently of the resulting actuating force, characterized in that the flow path can be opened at least via the setting device to such an extent that the flow cross-section of the flow path corresponds to at least 80% of the flow cross-section of the flow path in the area of the valve inlet across the entire extension of the flow path between the valve inlet and the valve outlet.
2. Valve device according to claim 1, wherein the flow path can be opened at least via the setting device to such an extent that the flow cross-section corresponds to at least 100% of the flow cross-section of the flow path in the area of the valve inlet across the entire extension of the flow path between the valve inlet and the valve outlet.
3. Valve device according to claim 1, wherein the areas of the valve body and/or of the valve seat that delimitate the flow path have respectively at least one radius of curvature, the value of which respectively corresponds to at least the one hundred fiftieth fraction of the value of the flow cross-section of the flow path in the area of the valve inlet.
4. Valve device according to claim 3, wherein the radii of curvature are respectively at least 1.5 mm in size.
5. Valve device according to claim 1, wherein the front surface of the valve body that is facing towards the valve inlet has a surface that is embodied in an at least approximately spherical manner at least in certain areas.
6. Valve device according to claim 1, wherein a wall is provided that surrounds the valve body and the valve seat at least in certain areas and that is formed with outlet openings that are arranged downstream of the valve seat with respect to the valve inlet and at a distance to each other in the circumferential direction.
7. Valve device according to claim 6, wherein the wall is arranged radially inside a housing that is arranged coaxially to the wall, and in that it is arranged at a distance from the housing in the radial direction, wherein the housing has at least one discharge opening of the valve outlet.
8. Valve device according to claim 1, wherein the setting device has setting element that can be shifted between a first position and a second position and that acts together with the valve body, wherein in the first position of the setting element the valve body can be transferred into an operational state in which the flow path is closed, while in the second position of the setting element the valve body is transferred into an operational state in which the flow path is opened.
9. Valve device according to claim 8, wherein an actuator is provided, by means of which the setting element can be shifted between the first position and the second position.
10. Valve device according to claim 9, wherein the setting element can be shifted electromagnetically via the actuator.
11. Valve device according to claim 1, wherein the setting device is carried out with a bellows that delimits an air-tight hollow space, wherein a height of the bellows varies in the setting direction of the valve body depending on an ambient pressure of the bellows.
12. Valve device according to claim 8, wherein the setting device has a pressure chamber to which compressed air can be applied and which is delimitated by the setting element at least in certain areas.
13. Valve device according to claim 8, wherein a spring force of a spring appliance acts at the setting element of the setting device in the direction of the second position of the setting element.
14. Valve device according to claim 1, wherein a spring force that acts in the direction of its closed position is applied to the valve body via a spring appliance.
15. Jet engine with an appliance for separating oil droplets from an air-oil volume flow, with a tank device and a valve device according to one claim 1 that is arranged in the area of the tank device, wherein an air-oil volume flow can be introduced into the valve device through the valve inlet of the valve device and is provided for being separated via a conduction device from the valve outlet of the valve device to the appliance.
Description
[0035] Further advantages and advantageous embodiments of a valve device according to the invention or of a jet engine according to the invention follow from the patent claims and the exemplary embodiments that are described in principle in the following by referring to the drawings, wherein, with a view to clarity, the same reference signs are used for structural components having the same design and functionality.
[0036] Herein:
[0037]
[0038]
[0039]
[0040]
[0041]
[0042]
[0043]
[0044]
[0045]
[0046]
[0047] In the present case, the turbine device 8 has three rotor devices 9, 10 and 11, which are configured in a substantially comparable design and are connected to an engine shaft 12.
[0048] The jet engine 1 is embodied with an auxiliary unit gear appliance 13 in an outer engine shroud 14 that delimits the bypass flow channel 2 and represents the outer circumferential area of the jet engine 1. In the present case, the auxiliary unit gear appliance 13 is connected to the engine shaft 12 via a drive shaft 15 that is extending in the radial direction of the jet engine 1 and via an inner gear 16A, and is thus driven or provided with a torque by the engine shaft 12 during operation of the jet engine 1. The auxiliary unit gear appliance 13 supplies different auxiliary units 16 and an appliance for separating oil droplets from an air-oil volume flow that is embodied as an oil separator 17, which is also referred to as a breather, with a torque to a desired degree. In addition, in the area of the auxiliary unit gear appliance 13, also a tank device 18 is provided that represents a hydraulic fluid reservoir from which oil for cooling and lubricating various areas of the aero engine 1, such as bearing appliances, gear wheel pairs of the inner gear 16A and the auxiliary unit gear appliance 13 as well as further assembly groups of the aero engine 1 that need to be cooled and lubricated, is extracted.
[0049]
[0050] An air-oil volume flow or an air-oil mixture can respectively be conducted via a conduit 22 or 23 from the front bearing chamber 20 and the rear bearing chamber 21 in the direction of a common conduit 28, which in turn opens into the tank device 18 or the oil tank. Connected to the tank device 18 is a conduction device that is embodied as a conduit 29 here and via which in the present case an air-oil volume flow is supplied to the oil separator 17 from the tank device 18.
[0051] A porous area 26, through which the air-oil volume flow flowing out of the tank device 18 can flow, is arranged in a rotatable manner in an interior space of the oil separator 17. In the present case, the porous area 26 can be driven by the auxiliary unit gear appliance 13 via a gear wheel 27, and acts as a centrifuge in order to be able to reduce the share of the oil in the air-oil volume flow flowing through the porous area 26 as far as possible. Here, the share of oil in the air-oil volume flow is reduced in the oil separator 17 in the area of the porous area 26 on the one hand like when an impact filter is passed, and on the other hand by separating the oil from the air like in the area of a centrifuge through the rotation of the porous area 26. The oil that is filtered out of the air-oil volume flow in the area of the porous area 26 is suctioned off in the exterior area of the oil separator 17 by means of a pumping appliance in a manner that is not shown in any more detail, and is conducted back into the tank device 18. The air flow that is flowing out from the oil separator 17 in the direction of the environment 50 has an oil load that is reduced with respect to the oil load of the air-oil volume flow that is supplied to the oil separator 17.
[0052] In
[0053] The valve device 32, which in the present case is embodied so as to be substantially rotationally symmetrical to a central axis 38, has a valve seat 33 and a valve body 34 that is provided for the purpose of acting together with the valve seat 33, wherein the valve seat 33 as well as the valve body 34 are arranged inside a wall 35 that has a substantially circular cross-section. What is further provided is a valve inlet 37 that in the present case has a circular flow cross-section and multiple outlet openings 39 that are arranged in a circumferentially distributed manner with respect to the central axis 38, wherein between the valve inlet 37 and the outlet openings 39 a flow path 40 is formed for the air-oil volume flow that is supplied to the valve device 32 from the tank device 18.
[0054] In addition, the valve device 32 has a spring appliance 41 that applies a force to the valve body 34, by which the valve body 34 is pressed into its operational state or into its closed position, which is shown in
[0055] As shown in a schematic manner in
[0056] Since the housing 42 forms a part of the valve device 32, the flow path 40 of the valve device 32 extends from the valve inlet 37 up to the valve outlet 52. As an alternative hereto, the housing 42 can for example be formed by an adjoining structural component that is embodied with a bore.
[0057] If an air-oil volume flow is supplied via the conduit 28 to the tank device 18 during operation of the jet engine 1, and if the valve body 34 is in closed position, the pressure increases in the interior space 31 of the tank device 18. In this way, a force that is acting on a front surface 36 of the valve body 34 in the opening direction of the valve device 32 increases, counteracting the spring force of the spring appliance 41 that acts at the valve body 34.
[0058] If the opening force that results from the pressure present in the interior space 31 of the tank device 18 exceeds the spring force of the spring appliance 41, the valve body 34 is shifted counter to the spring force of the spring appliance 41 from its closed position into an operational state in which the flow path 40 is at least partially opened, or into an open position, which is shown in an exemplary manner in
[0059] If the valve body 34 is in an open position and an air-oil volume flow flows through the valve device 32, the pressure decreases inside the interior space 31 of the tank device 18. As soon as the force that results from the pressure that is applied to the valve body 34 is smaller than the spring force of the spring appliance 41, the valve body 34 is re-transferred into its closed position through the spring force of the spring appliance 41, whereby the valve device 32 is closed and a flow is prevented from passing the flow path 40 of the valve device 32.
[0060] Further, the valve device 32 has a setting device 44 with a setting element 45 that together with the valve body 34 and the wall 35 delimits a chamber 46 that forms the interior space of the valve device 32. Here, a bellows 48 is arranged on a side of the setting element 45 that is facing away from the valve body 34, with the bellows 48 being embodied in an air-tight manner and having a defined volume. On the one side, the bellows 48 is connected to the setting element 45 and, on the other side, to a wall 49 that is arranged at a side of the setting element 45 that is facing away from the valve body 34. Depending on the external pressure, the bellows 48 changes an extension or a height in the direction of the central axis 38, so that a distance between the wall 49 and the setting element 45 can be varied by means of the bellows 48.
[0061] The states of the valve device 32 that are shown in
[0062] As the flying altitude decreases, the pressure inside the chamber 46 that corresponds to the ambient pressure of the jet engine 1 increases. If a force that results from the pressure inside the chamber 46 and that is applied to the setting element 45 exceeds the spring force of the bellows 48, the setting element 45 is shifted into a second position that is shown in more detail in
[0063] The setting element 45 is connected to the valve body 34 via a stop collar 51 that is only shown in a schematic manner, wherein the stop collar 51 surrounds the valve body 34 at least in certain areas. The stop collar 51 facilitates a movement of the valve body 34 between its closed position and its open position. In addition, the stop collar 51 is designed in such a manner that the valve body 34 is in the first position of the setting element 45 and in its closed position, with a low pressure of the tank device 18 being applied to the valve body 34. If the setting element 45 is shifted into its second position, the stop collar 51 moves the valve body 34 together with the setting element 34 into the open position that is shown in
[0064] The functionality of the oil pump can also be insured in a simple manner if the flow path 40 is opened, if the spring force of the bellows 48 is chosen in such a manner that the flow path is opened only if a pressure inside the interior space 31 of the tank device 18 is sufficiently high for providing a desired conveying capacity of the oil pump.
[0065] Here, it can be set at which atmospheric pressurewhich correlates with a flying altitudethe setting element 45 is shifted between its first position and its second position based on the chosen spring force of the bellows 48. For example, the bellows 48 can be embodied in such a manner that the setting element 45 is transferred from the second position into the first position in the event that a flying altitude of approximately 6000 meters or more is exceeded, and is transferred from the first position into the second position in the event that the flying altitude falls below this height.
[0066] In principle, oil droplets are reduced in size to a lesser degree when flowing through the flow path 40 in the area of the valve device 32 in the second position of the setting element 45, in which the valve body 34 opens the flow path 40 independently of an actuating power which is acting thereat and which results from the spring force of the spring appliance 41 and the pressure in the oil tank 18 that is respectively applied to the valve body 34, than in an operational state of the valve device 32 in which the setting element 45 is in the first position. This is due to the fact that the flow path 40 is permanently opened by the valve body 34 in the second position of the setting element 45 due to the continuing actuation of the valve body 34 by the setting appliance, and that the oil droplets are subject to a lesser mechanical load and are atomized to a lesser degree as they flow through the valve device 32.
[0067] In contrast to this, a mechanical impact on the droplet size of oil droplets that are conducted through the valve device 32 or through its flow path 40 in the opened operational state of the valve device 32, with the setting element 45 being present in its first position, is higher, since in this case the valve body 34 is adjusted between a position in which the flow path 40 is opened and its closed position only depending on the actuating power which acts thereat and which results from the spring force of the spring appliance 41 and the pressure that acts in the interior space 31 of the oil tank 18 and performs an oscillating movement in the course of unfavorable operational states. Such an oscillating movement of the valve body 34 increases the degree of atomization of the oil droplets that are conducted through the valve device 32, because, on the one hand, they are accelerated to an undesired degree in the area between the valve body 34 and the valve seat 33 that is acting together therewith inside the flow cross-section of the flow path 40 which varies in that case, and, on the other hand, are subject to increased mechanical loads.
[0068] Due to the fact that, in the area of the oil separator 1, it is easier to separate larger oil droplets than smaller oil droplets from the air-oil volume flow that is supplied to the oil separator 17 based on aspects of functionality, the cleaned air that is discharged into the environment 50 has a lower oil load downstream of the oil separator 17 in the second position of the setting element 45 than in the first position of the setting element 45. In this manner, the occurrence of a so-called oil mist is avoided in the second position of the setting element 45.
[0069] A degree of atomization or decrease in size of the oil droplets of the air-oil volume flow that is conducted through the valve device 32 is very small with the valve device 32 in the second position of the setting element 45 also due to the fact that a flow cross-section of the flow path 40 is larger or equal to 80%, in particular 100%, of the flow cross-section of the valve inlet 37 in every area. Through this measure, an undesirably strong acceleration of the air-oil volume flow in the area of the valve device 32 is avoided in a simple manner, whereby a breakdown of larger oil droplets into smaller oil droplets is avoided, or is at least very low.
[0070] The flow cross-section in the flow path 40 can for example be calculated in the area of the valve body 34 and of the valve seat 33 by summing up surfaces that are identified more specifically by the reference sign 47 in
[0071] In order to further minimize the decrease in size of the oil droplets of the air-oil volume flow that is conducted through the valve device 32 in the first position or in the second position of the setting element 45, areas of the valve device 32 that adjoin the flow path 40 that connects the valve inlet 37 to the valve outlet 52, in particular the surfaces of the valve seat 33 and of the valve body 34, have no sharp edges, but are rather embodied with radii of curvature 54 through which in particular planar surface areas that are adjoining the flow path 40, preferably of the valve seat 33 and of the valve body 34, are connected to each other. In order to prevent the decrease in oil droplet size in a particularly effective manner, the radii of curvature 54 are embodied so as to be as large as possible. Here, the radii of curvature 54 are larger than the value of the flow cross-section of the valve inlet 37 divided by 150 and larger than 1.5 mm. The radii of curvature 54 are preferably embodied so as to be as large as possible.
[0072] In the present case, a surface of the valve body 34 that is facing towards the valve seat 33 is embodied in a spherical manner, wherein the valve seat 33 is adjusted to the shape of the valve body 34. Also in this way, a breakdown of large oil droplets into smaller oil droplets can be advantageously reduced as the air-oil volume flow flows through the valve device 32.
[0073]
[0074] The valve device 60 differs from the valve device 32 in that the setting device 44 has an electromagnetic actuator 61 and a further spring appliance 62 on a side of the setting element 45 that is facing away from the valve body 34. By means of the actuator 61, which can be actuated by an engine control unit of the jet engine 1, the setting element 45 can be actively shifted between the first position and the second position, so that the valve body 34 can be shifted between the basic position and the open position independently of any currently acting external pressure.
[0075] In the shown embodiment, the further spring appliance 62 is supported at the setting element 45 as well as at the wall 49, so that the setting element 45 is in its first position when the actuator 61 is not actuated. In order to transfer the setting element 45 from the first position into the second position, the actuator 61 is selected in such a manner that a magnetic element 63 that is arranged in the area of the setting element 45 and a magnetic element 64 that is arranged in the area of the wall 49 attract each other counter to the spring force of the further spring appliance 62, and in particular in such a manner that they come into abutment with each other according to
[0076] In the valve device 70 a pressure chamber 71 is formed by the setting element 45, the wall 49 and the lateral wall 35, which can be supplied with compressed air or compressor air depending on the operational state. Further, an additional spring appliance 72 is provided, which on the one hand is supported at the setting element 45 and on the other hand at an element 73 that is connected to the wall 35 in a fixedly attached manner. Thus, the additional spring appliance 72 presses the setting element 45 in the direction of its second position, in which the valve body 34 opens the flow path through the valve device 70 independently of a pressure that is present in the interior space 31 of the tank device 18.
[0077] In the present case, the setting element 45 is in the second position in the unpressurized state of the pressure chamber 71, whereas the setting element 45 is present in its first position if the pressure chamber 71 is pressurized with compressor air.
[0078] It can also be provided that the pressure chamber 71 is supplied with compressor air in every operational state. Because the pressure of the compressor air decreases during a flight in a greater height, it can be achieved that the setting element 45 is shifted between the first position and the second position without a separate control if the spring force of the additional spring appliance 72 is chosen correspondingly.
[0079] In an embodiment of a valve device that is alternative hereto, it can also be provided that the valve body is present in its open position in the pressurized state of a pressure chamber, and that it is present in its closed position in the unpressurized state of the pressure chamber.
[0080] In alternative embodiments of the invention, the tank device and the oil separator can principally be arranged in any suitable area of the jet engine, wherein the tank device is connected to the oil separator in particular in the form of at least one conduit through which an air-oil volume flow that is discharged from the tank device via the valve device can be supplied to the oil separator.
PARTS LIST
[0081] 1 aircraft engine, jet engine [0082] 2 bypass flow channel [0083] 3 inlet area [0084] 4 fan [0085] 5 engine core [0086] 6 compressor appliance [0087] 7 burner [0088] 8 turbine device [0089] 9, 10, 11 rotor device [0090] 12 engine shaft [0091] 13 auxiliary unit gear appliance [0092] 14 engine shroud [0093] 15 drive shaft [0094] 16 auxiliary units [0095] 16A inner gear [0096] 17 appliance for separating oil; oil separator [0097] 18 tank device; oil tank [0098] 19 air-oil system [0099] 20, 21 bearing chamber [0100] 22, 23 conduit [0101] 24 interior space of the auxiliary unit gear appliance [0102] 25 housing of the auxiliary unit gear appliance [0103] 26 porous area of the oil separator [0104] 27 gear wheel [0105] 28, 29 conduction device; conduit [0106] 31 interior space of the tank device [0107] 32 valve device [0108] 33 valve seat [0109] 34 valve body [0110] 35 wall [0111] 36 front surface of the valve body [0112] 37 valve inlet [0113] 38 central axis [0114] 39 outlet opening [0115] 40 flow path [0116] 41 spring appliance [0117] 42 housing [0118] 43 annular space [0119] 44 setting device [0120] 45 setting element [0121] 46 chamber [0122] 47 surface [0123] 48 appliance; bellows [0124] 49 wall [0125] 50 environment [0126] 51 stop collar [0127] 52 valve outlet [0128] 54 radius of curvature [0129] 60 valve device [0130] 61 actuator [0131] 62 further spring appliance [0132] 63, 64 magnetic element [0133] 70 valve device [0134] 71 pressure chamber [0135] 72 additional spring appliance